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EDL 318 Curriculum Project
Engaging and Embracing Your Community- 5:00 PM Shriver MPR
Cody Dye
Quentin Russell
Allyson Klovekorn
Erin Worrell
Mission Statement: The mission of our curriculum is to create a community within
the walls of the school by connecting with the community outside of the school;
engaging and embracing the community is the end goal.
Abstract: This curriculum project focuses on fostering a sense of community within
the school walls via engagement through service learning in the community.
Students, faculty members, and community members are all free to interact and
participate in this program that stresses a mutual benefit. The final objective of this
curriculum is to show the importance of service to others and create a lasting impact
among the students and their community.
Rationale:
The rationale for this project is based on our teaching platform.
Fundamentally we believe in relation-centered pedagogy and organic learning
experiences.
We believe that learning comes most powerfully and most sincerely in
relation to people. With Harvard and Yale and many others releasing so many good
resources for learning online and for free, simple access to information is not the
goal of education. To simply give students access to knowledge could then be as
easy as giving them all iPhones. This is all to say that our current education system
is not only a resource for more information, but an environment in which learning is
made most effective. The fundamental difference between going to class and just
Googling information would then be teachers and peers. That is, relationships give
education power.
Relationships allow students to receive personal guidance that is made more
and more effective with growing trust. This requires a teacher who can give
individual attention to each student. Peers can also learn together and group up in
order to achieve growth that would normally be difficult or even impossible when
alone (two heads are better than one).
This is directly connected with our curriculum because the Service Learning
projects with which each student is involved is heavily influenced by both teacher
guidance and peer support. It is certainly valuable to try to give to the community
out of one’s own resources and time, but without a community surrounding that
giving, it defeats the very purpose. At least part of the intent of education is to teach
students how to be vibrant, productive citizens. So no matter whether the project
that students pick for this curriculum is a local newspaper, a soup kitchen, a library,
an environmental protection project, or anything else, the implicit push of this
curriculum is that the content is important, but it is vital to the health of society to
work together and that true progress does not come from purely the quality of
ideas, but the quality of relationships. This project will be a great source for students
to find teammates and mentors to help them pursue diverse goals.
Organic learning is also a crucial element to the community engagement
project. With the onset of the Information Age, it is becoming more and more
important to boil information into its most fundamental components. The problem
with systematizing information so heavily is that students are not computers; while
a list of commands with no variation in format may perfect for a computer to
function well, it is terrible for humans. No matter how much we want to change that
fact, human beings are emotional creatures before they are logical ones. The
implication here is that learning is fundamentally a contextualized process.
Further, this means that the community engagement project is a fantastic
foundation for organic learning. Students are not memorizing lists of different
aspects of their community or just reading about their community as if it is in outer
space. The goal of the community engagement project is to send students outside of
the school into the world-at-large in order to let them genuinely mesh themselves
into the fabric of the world directly in front of them. Rather than making students
memorize formulas for persuasive business letters or create a presentation on facts
about the endangerment of species, we want students to actually write persuasive
letters to businesses and research and test the environment in which they are living.
The hope is that instead of filling heads with facts that will be forgotten in less than
a semester, the project will give students a growing base of knowledge on how to
interact with the world around them that they will use for the rest of their lives.
Description:
Our mission statement, or the purpose of our curriculum, is to create a
community within the walls of the school by connecting with the community outside
of the school. During the students’ junior year of high school they will be required to
create and implement a project in the school's community. The project will last for
one full academic year. One semester (two quarters) will be used to prepare for the
project and one semester (two quarters) to implement it.
During the fall semester the students will be put into groups and brainstorm
ideas about how to create a project that engages students into their school’s
community. The students will be a given a quarter to brainstorm their ideas with
their group members. By the end of quarter one they will submit their ideas to the
teacher. Throughout the first quarter, students will have multiple opportunities to
share their initial ideas with the teacher and make revisions or changes.
Once the teacher approves of their ideas then the students will create a
professional-looking poster board or tri-fold that explains their idea and how it can
be applied to their community. The teacher or district will provide all of the
necessary materials to create their presentations. In addition, the students will
create their presentations in the classroom. The purpose of having the students
complete their group work during class time is to ensure that the teacher, who will
facilitate collaboration and peer dialogue, supervises the students. Furthermore, it
gives the students the opportunity to work together without trying to find time
outside of class to complete the project.
The students will present their ideas at the annual community engagement
fair, which will be held during the first week of quarter two. This fair will take place
at each high school in the district after school hours to allow the members of the
community, who might be working during the day, to attend. Also, it gives them the
opportunity to participate in the decision making process of picking the “best”
community engagement project. At the fair the students will discuss their
presentations and have the chance to view other presentations. At the end of the
event, the audience and students will decide together on the best project to be
implemented.
After the fair, the students will have the rest of quarter two to concentrate on
the project that was selected. During this time the class will adjust the project as
necessary and be ready to implement it by the beginning of quarter three. This
process of refining the project will involve collaboration on a larger scale, which is
vital for students to experience. Quarter three and four will then be used to fully
implement their project into their community.
Each student will be graded based on participation, completion, and applying
their project to the community. The purpose of this project is to ensure that both
parties (students and community) are mutually benefiting and learning from
another. This course will be integrated into the curriculum, rather than simply an
add-on, and a graduation requirement for all students.
When describing a “best” project, one must take into consideration the
practicality and potential effectiveness of such a project. On one hand, the project
that tackles the largest communal issue or is on the grandest scale may not very well
be feasible. However, a project that may be smaller in terms of impact might be the
most sustainable and end up affecting the most people in a positive manner. This is
one of the primary reasons the community will play a large role in determining the
project of choice.
Engaging and Embracing Your
Community
Relational Pedagogy
Service to Others Working w/ Others
Organic Learning
Student Interest
Real World Experience
Exploring Passions
Individualism
Working for
a cause
Facilitating
Organizing
Service
Learning
Reflection
Changes Impact
Purpose
For whom For what
Building
Community
In School Out of School
Working as one Reduce bullying
and singling out
Impact
neighborhood
Collaborate
w/residents
Example of How Core Ideas of the Curriculum Might Look in Practice:
Shawn is a hardworking, engaged young man who, “Likes going to school, but
hates homework.” He does most of his work except for when he forgets to finish a
math problem or every now and again “forgets”.
Most evenings or weekends, Shawn will spend time with his friends or
family, but he also really enjoys playing piano. His family is very interested in the
Arts and often they all go to see the local orchestra or a jazz ensemble at a nearby
club. Of course, Shawn regrets that he cannot make piano more involved in his life,
but school is focused on subjects like Math and Literature.
However, now that Shawn is a Junior in his high school, in his new
Community Engagement class, he is very excited to try to develop a project of his
own in order to work on it throughout the year. His first thought is to work with
piano in some way, but he is not sure how to work this into his project. He talks with
his teacher, Mr. Smith;
“I don’t know what project to suggest for the Community Engagement class.”
“Is there anything you like to do in your free time that you could use to
connect with your community on a deeper level?”
“Well I play piano… But I don’t know how to make that into a community
project.”
“That’s actually a great idea! Do you ever go to piano performances?”
“Yeah, my family always goes to the orchestra and sometimes the local jazz
club! I really like seeing different concerts! Do you think I could do something with
the concerts? That’s part of the community, right?”
“That’s wonderful! That would work perfectly for this project; unfortunately I
don’t know very much about the local music scene. You should use your research
time to find out ways to engage in that further.”
Shawn uses his first quarter to do research and compile information that will
help him to find a project to choose.
“Mr. Smith, I found out online that the city concert hall is being turned into a
highway within the next five years. A lot of people are really upset about it. Could I
use my community engagement project to get involved with the concert hall?”
Shawn is excited to begin developing a plan for getting more people
interested in the local concert hall. He plans on using Social Media to promote the
concert hall and distribute a petition to as many people as he can in order to
convince the city not to tear it down.
“This is pretty good,” says Mr. Smith, “But how can we make it more of a
multicultural project? How can we get more people to be able to use the concert hall
for more activities?”
Shawn does more research on the city and finds out that while the concert
hall is in jeopardy, the local jazz musicians rarely play at the concert hall, let alone
many other performances of theatre or music that tend toward higher percentages
of minority representation. That is to say, the concert hall for some reason usually
only plays the local symphony and the local theatre group, but rarely makes room
for more diverse productions.
With the help of Mr. Smith, Shawn refines his petition and his goals so that
the push is not only to save Concert Hall, but to improve it and draw more
performances to the center.
When the students each submit their ideas for community engagement
projects, there are many good ideas. One student proposed expanding the local
library and holding more events there, as well as collecting more books. Another
proposed adopting a relationship with a foreign school and interacting and engaging
between schools and students. So the votes were close, and perhaps next year’s
students will get to try out many of these other ideas, but Shawn’s Concert Hall
effort ended up being the winner. The students drew together and wrote plans and
goals for repurposing the concert hall.
Students began finding other bands and theatre troupes to perform a wide
variety of shows and broaden the vision of the concert hall. Others helped to create
blogs and connect with members of the community to get an active conversation
moving in regard to the city’s plan to tear down the building. Some students spoke
with the local jazz musicians and managed to pull together a benefit concert for the
city’s local art scene in the concert hall. Even artists who painted or sculpted helped
by displaying some of their art in the hall during the concert.
Not everyone in the community supported the effort; a good deal of people
genuinely believed a highway would be better for the city.
In the end, the city would not decide to simply keep the concert hall, but
allowed it to remain for the next few years until a different highway budget was
discussed by the state. Perhaps the hall is safe, but perhaps not.
Shawn was a little discouraged at first because he wanted a more influential
project.
“That’s actually a really big deal, Shawn,” Mr. Smith said, “You’ve all learned
a lot about how your community functions and what matters to it and how to help
make it better. The concert hall never would have hosted (and promise to continue
hosting) such a wide variety of musical style concerts without this project. The city
isn’t sure yet how they will react to the music scene here until the budget is changed
again by the state, but communities are always changing and growing.”
Shawn realizes he has learned a lot more about the structure of the world
than he thought; he got so swept away with the project that he did not notice how
much new information he had learned and the skills he had developed.
In his blog reflections, he is excited to see how quickly he began to develop;
the very first post seemed unsure and nervous about the project, but only a little
while later recounts one in which he and several of his classmates met with an
important local politician in order to see if it was possible to simply cancel the
highway construction. The last post is simple, but profound. “I enjoy playing piano,
but I’ll bet a lot of other people play music too. If we can keep music and other art in
our community, people will be able to do things with their lives that they really love
to do.”
Assessment:
While the goal of the project is not focused around student assessment, there
are numerous ways in which we will be evaluating students’ individual work.
During the first quarter, there will be checkpoints in which students have to submit
initial research, ideas, and plans. For these assignments, there will be small grades
basically based on submission and participation; we want to ensure that students
are doing work in class so they don’t have to worry about anything outside of class.
Also, this gives the teacher the opportunity to give students direct feedback on their
actual ideas and nudge them in the right direction, if necessary.
In the second quarter, the main grade will be for the poster project presented
at the fair. Students will be evaluated on how professional it looks, if it flows
logically, if they are able to answer questions of those passing by their project, etc.
We want to students to utilize this opportunity to learn about designing effectively
but also about presenting to audiences outside of the school walls. This will also give
them the chance to take pride in their hard work and show the community all of
their great ideas.
In the third and fourth quarters, when students are actually implementing
the chosen project, we intend to make use of reflective writing. As students work in
their community implementing their ideas, we want them to deeply reflect on their
experiences, both good and bad. To do their reflections, we will use online blogs; we
feel that using blogs allows for more creative writing versus formal essays, thus
engaging the students much more. Also, they will have the opportunity to comment
on each other’s blogs (all positive feedback or useful criticism of course), building a
stronger classroom environment in the process. For these reflections, small grades
will be given for thoughtful reflection and comments, to ensure that students
complete these assignments.
Reflections:
Allyson Klovekorn
Being able to collaborate effectively with classmates is a very important skill
to have as a student but is also something that is necessary in being a teacher leader.
Throughout this semester, we read and discussed the positive benefits of
collaboration among teachers within an entire school; when teachers work together,
learning on another level can occur. In the work for this project, this element of
teacher leadership definitely played a role. When developing our curriculum, we
brainstormed a lot of ideas and tried to think of what overall would benefit students
the most. Without truly working together, we would not have been able to create a
truly cohesive curriculum project.
My group members might disagree but I did not personally experience any
conflict. I thought that we all worked well together, building off of one another’s
ideas versus shooting each other down (which has happened with other groups I’ve
had). Also, something that is huge in every group project is participation. Everyone
in my group not only always showed up to class, but they also came prepared to
work. Throughout our working class days, everyone was always doing something
valuable (though we occasionally would get off topic- a little laughter can’t hurt,
right?).
I worked specifically on the assessment portion of the paper along with
helping Cody brainstorm the concept map. Quentin made significant contribution to
the paper, writing the rationale and the example portions. I simply read through his
work, providing light edits when necessary. Erin wrote the description portion of
the paper, and again the rest of us read through to make sure we agreed. Ultimately,
before writing, we had all talked about all of our ideas and made sure we were on
the same page. When a question came up, we addressed it and continued on. Overall,
I had a great experience with this project.
Cody Dye
Throughout this course and, as an extension, this project, discussion and
deliberation have been key concepts. As a group we were required to work together
and sift through our own preconceived notions and interests to narrow down our
choice for an organizing center, despite the endless possibilities that some of us saw
if we had gone in a different direction.
There weren’t any major conflicts that came about as a result of our work,
although slight disagreements here and there were not uncommon. In general, I
would say that this group was one of the best I have worked with during my time
here at Miami in terms of being on the same page and working together to tackle a
large chunk of information. More often than not the work falls onto the shoulders of
one person but that was definitely not the case this time around.
I think that each and every one of our group members had considerable
contributions to the overall project, although I think my single largest contribution
that I tackled by myself was the concept map. Although this only takes up one page
of the report, it was extremely time consuming and relatively difficult to format in
order to get all of the information in place.
As a group, we worked together to format and formulate all of the material
that is present above with Quentin taking the brunt of the force on the narrative,
Allyson tackling the assessment, and Erin doing the work on the description page.
By divvying up the work we were able to accomplish each of the sections, not by
approaching it as a checklist, but rather as a way to communicate and interact with
each other and the material we were working on.
I felt that we did work well as a unit and, contrary to how we sometimes
acted towards each other, enjoyed the company of those around us. It can be tough
working on a project as large as this for hours on end but we made it work and I’m
proud of our product.
Quentin Russell
This project helped to play out different aspects in our teacher-leadership
primarily via interpersonal problem solving. Everyone had their own goals for the
project and it was really cool to get to work with a group that was so willing to work
with each other. It forced us to give and take with each other so that no one person
took over the project or was trampled by the group. We all were able to make our
opinions known without enforcing them or letting them fall flat.
A few conflicts arose over picking which topic our project would cover and
the exact steps that the project would take for the student. These ended up being
very minor issues, but there were some disagreements in the early stages of
planning. The problem was that each person in the group was very passionate about
very different possibilities that school could offer. So really, this ended up being less
of a legitimate problem with our ability to work together and closer to just trying to
fit a lot of brilliant concepts into a single project. It was difficult to pick any one topic
that completely explored each person’s vision for what a school could be and how to
get there. But like I mentioned earlier, we all wanted the group to work more than
we wanted to get our ideas to dominate the project, so we had a really good time
synthesizing several of our ideas into one big project.
Most of the work I did with this project was in brainstorming and putting
together heavily conceptual work. Whereas Allyson, Cody, and Erin were all really
good at the practical elements of the project, I tend to be more of a generalist and
struggle getting my feet on the ground. That means just that I worked really heavily
in the rationale and outlining the meaning of the project, while the rest of the group
helped to ground it in a little more measurable steps that could work practically in a
school setting and how to present the project in an understandable way.
Erin Worrell:
The conflict that the group experienced was trying to focus the project. The
group knew that the project should focus on community engagement but because it
was such a broad theme it was difficult to create specific guidelines for the
curriculum. Later, we were eventually able to come to a conclusion and fixed this
minor issue. We had a few ideas about implementing community engagement into
the curriculum and everything worked out in our favor. We did not experience many
conflicts besides the one mentioned above. We knew what the focus of the project
should be and how it should be implemented. Therefore, everyone was on the same
page because the focus of the project incorporated all of the content areas of the
group members.
I believe that everyone contributed equally to the project whether it was
keeping each other on task, brainstorming ideas, and writing notes about our
discussions. However, my significant contribution to the project was typing the
description of the curriculum, but everyone contributed to what the description
should entail. Others contributed to typing the rationale, concept map, assessment,
and creating a narrative for the core ideas of the curriculum. Every single group
member contributed the specifics of the project, but different group members typed
different sections on the googledoc. For example, Quentin typed the rationale and
the narrative for the core ideas of the curriculum. Allyson created the guidelines for
the assessment. Also she and Cody edited the entire document. In addition, Cody
created the concept map. Before he created the map, the group brainstormed ideas
about what the concept map should be. Then, after we all came to an agreement
then he created the concept map.
In conclusion, everyone worked well with one another and each group
member had something valuable to contribute to the curriculum project.

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EDL 318 Curriculum Project

  • 1. EDL 318 Curriculum Project Engaging and Embracing Your Community- 5:00 PM Shriver MPR Cody Dye Quentin Russell Allyson Klovekorn Erin Worrell Mission Statement: The mission of our curriculum is to create a community within the walls of the school by connecting with the community outside of the school; engaging and embracing the community is the end goal. Abstract: This curriculum project focuses on fostering a sense of community within the school walls via engagement through service learning in the community. Students, faculty members, and community members are all free to interact and participate in this program that stresses a mutual benefit. The final objective of this curriculum is to show the importance of service to others and create a lasting impact among the students and their community.
  • 2. Rationale: The rationale for this project is based on our teaching platform. Fundamentally we believe in relation-centered pedagogy and organic learning experiences. We believe that learning comes most powerfully and most sincerely in relation to people. With Harvard and Yale and many others releasing so many good resources for learning online and for free, simple access to information is not the goal of education. To simply give students access to knowledge could then be as easy as giving them all iPhones. This is all to say that our current education system is not only a resource for more information, but an environment in which learning is made most effective. The fundamental difference between going to class and just Googling information would then be teachers and peers. That is, relationships give education power. Relationships allow students to receive personal guidance that is made more and more effective with growing trust. This requires a teacher who can give individual attention to each student. Peers can also learn together and group up in order to achieve growth that would normally be difficult or even impossible when alone (two heads are better than one). This is directly connected with our curriculum because the Service Learning projects with which each student is involved is heavily influenced by both teacher guidance and peer support. It is certainly valuable to try to give to the community out of one’s own resources and time, but without a community surrounding that giving, it defeats the very purpose. At least part of the intent of education is to teach
  • 3. students how to be vibrant, productive citizens. So no matter whether the project that students pick for this curriculum is a local newspaper, a soup kitchen, a library, an environmental protection project, or anything else, the implicit push of this curriculum is that the content is important, but it is vital to the health of society to work together and that true progress does not come from purely the quality of ideas, but the quality of relationships. This project will be a great source for students to find teammates and mentors to help them pursue diverse goals. Organic learning is also a crucial element to the community engagement project. With the onset of the Information Age, it is becoming more and more important to boil information into its most fundamental components. The problem with systematizing information so heavily is that students are not computers; while a list of commands with no variation in format may perfect for a computer to function well, it is terrible for humans. No matter how much we want to change that fact, human beings are emotional creatures before they are logical ones. The implication here is that learning is fundamentally a contextualized process. Further, this means that the community engagement project is a fantastic foundation for organic learning. Students are not memorizing lists of different aspects of their community or just reading about their community as if it is in outer space. The goal of the community engagement project is to send students outside of the school into the world-at-large in order to let them genuinely mesh themselves into the fabric of the world directly in front of them. Rather than making students memorize formulas for persuasive business letters or create a presentation on facts about the endangerment of species, we want students to actually write persuasive
  • 4. letters to businesses and research and test the environment in which they are living. The hope is that instead of filling heads with facts that will be forgotten in less than a semester, the project will give students a growing base of knowledge on how to interact with the world around them that they will use for the rest of their lives. Description: Our mission statement, or the purpose of our curriculum, is to create a community within the walls of the school by connecting with the community outside of the school. During the students’ junior year of high school they will be required to create and implement a project in the school's community. The project will last for one full academic year. One semester (two quarters) will be used to prepare for the project and one semester (two quarters) to implement it. During the fall semester the students will be put into groups and brainstorm ideas about how to create a project that engages students into their school’s community. The students will be a given a quarter to brainstorm their ideas with their group members. By the end of quarter one they will submit their ideas to the teacher. Throughout the first quarter, students will have multiple opportunities to share their initial ideas with the teacher and make revisions or changes. Once the teacher approves of their ideas then the students will create a professional-looking poster board or tri-fold that explains their idea and how it can be applied to their community. The teacher or district will provide all of the necessary materials to create their presentations. In addition, the students will create their presentations in the classroom. The purpose of having the students complete their group work during class time is to ensure that the teacher, who will
  • 5. facilitate collaboration and peer dialogue, supervises the students. Furthermore, it gives the students the opportunity to work together without trying to find time outside of class to complete the project. The students will present their ideas at the annual community engagement fair, which will be held during the first week of quarter two. This fair will take place at each high school in the district after school hours to allow the members of the community, who might be working during the day, to attend. Also, it gives them the opportunity to participate in the decision making process of picking the “best” community engagement project. At the fair the students will discuss their presentations and have the chance to view other presentations. At the end of the event, the audience and students will decide together on the best project to be implemented. After the fair, the students will have the rest of quarter two to concentrate on the project that was selected. During this time the class will adjust the project as necessary and be ready to implement it by the beginning of quarter three. This process of refining the project will involve collaboration on a larger scale, which is vital for students to experience. Quarter three and four will then be used to fully implement their project into their community. Each student will be graded based on participation, completion, and applying their project to the community. The purpose of this project is to ensure that both parties (students and community) are mutually benefiting and learning from another. This course will be integrated into the curriculum, rather than simply an add-on, and a graduation requirement for all students.
  • 6. When describing a “best” project, one must take into consideration the practicality and potential effectiveness of such a project. On one hand, the project that tackles the largest communal issue or is on the grandest scale may not very well be feasible. However, a project that may be smaller in terms of impact might be the most sustainable and end up affecting the most people in a positive manner. This is one of the primary reasons the community will play a large role in determining the project of choice.
  • 7. Engaging and Embracing Your Community Relational Pedagogy Service to Others Working w/ Others Organic Learning Student Interest Real World Experience Exploring Passions Individualism Working for a cause Facilitating Organizing Service Learning Reflection Changes Impact Purpose For whom For what Building Community In School Out of School Working as one Reduce bullying and singling out Impact neighborhood Collaborate w/residents
  • 8. Example of How Core Ideas of the Curriculum Might Look in Practice: Shawn is a hardworking, engaged young man who, “Likes going to school, but hates homework.” He does most of his work except for when he forgets to finish a math problem or every now and again “forgets”. Most evenings or weekends, Shawn will spend time with his friends or family, but he also really enjoys playing piano. His family is very interested in the Arts and often they all go to see the local orchestra or a jazz ensemble at a nearby club. Of course, Shawn regrets that he cannot make piano more involved in his life, but school is focused on subjects like Math and Literature. However, now that Shawn is a Junior in his high school, in his new Community Engagement class, he is very excited to try to develop a project of his own in order to work on it throughout the year. His first thought is to work with piano in some way, but he is not sure how to work this into his project. He talks with his teacher, Mr. Smith; “I don’t know what project to suggest for the Community Engagement class.” “Is there anything you like to do in your free time that you could use to connect with your community on a deeper level?” “Well I play piano… But I don’t know how to make that into a community project.” “That’s actually a great idea! Do you ever go to piano performances?”
  • 9. “Yeah, my family always goes to the orchestra and sometimes the local jazz club! I really like seeing different concerts! Do you think I could do something with the concerts? That’s part of the community, right?” “That’s wonderful! That would work perfectly for this project; unfortunately I don’t know very much about the local music scene. You should use your research time to find out ways to engage in that further.” Shawn uses his first quarter to do research and compile information that will help him to find a project to choose. “Mr. Smith, I found out online that the city concert hall is being turned into a highway within the next five years. A lot of people are really upset about it. Could I use my community engagement project to get involved with the concert hall?” Shawn is excited to begin developing a plan for getting more people interested in the local concert hall. He plans on using Social Media to promote the concert hall and distribute a petition to as many people as he can in order to convince the city not to tear it down. “This is pretty good,” says Mr. Smith, “But how can we make it more of a multicultural project? How can we get more people to be able to use the concert hall for more activities?” Shawn does more research on the city and finds out that while the concert hall is in jeopardy, the local jazz musicians rarely play at the concert hall, let alone many other performances of theatre or music that tend toward higher percentages of minority representation. That is to say, the concert hall for some reason usually
  • 10. only plays the local symphony and the local theatre group, but rarely makes room for more diverse productions. With the help of Mr. Smith, Shawn refines his petition and his goals so that the push is not only to save Concert Hall, but to improve it and draw more performances to the center. When the students each submit their ideas for community engagement projects, there are many good ideas. One student proposed expanding the local library and holding more events there, as well as collecting more books. Another proposed adopting a relationship with a foreign school and interacting and engaging between schools and students. So the votes were close, and perhaps next year’s students will get to try out many of these other ideas, but Shawn’s Concert Hall effort ended up being the winner. The students drew together and wrote plans and goals for repurposing the concert hall. Students began finding other bands and theatre troupes to perform a wide variety of shows and broaden the vision of the concert hall. Others helped to create blogs and connect with members of the community to get an active conversation moving in regard to the city’s plan to tear down the building. Some students spoke with the local jazz musicians and managed to pull together a benefit concert for the city’s local art scene in the concert hall. Even artists who painted or sculpted helped by displaying some of their art in the hall during the concert. Not everyone in the community supported the effort; a good deal of people genuinely believed a highway would be better for the city.
  • 11. In the end, the city would not decide to simply keep the concert hall, but allowed it to remain for the next few years until a different highway budget was discussed by the state. Perhaps the hall is safe, but perhaps not. Shawn was a little discouraged at first because he wanted a more influential project. “That’s actually a really big deal, Shawn,” Mr. Smith said, “You’ve all learned a lot about how your community functions and what matters to it and how to help make it better. The concert hall never would have hosted (and promise to continue hosting) such a wide variety of musical style concerts without this project. The city isn’t sure yet how they will react to the music scene here until the budget is changed again by the state, but communities are always changing and growing.” Shawn realizes he has learned a lot more about the structure of the world than he thought; he got so swept away with the project that he did not notice how much new information he had learned and the skills he had developed. In his blog reflections, he is excited to see how quickly he began to develop; the very first post seemed unsure and nervous about the project, but only a little while later recounts one in which he and several of his classmates met with an important local politician in order to see if it was possible to simply cancel the highway construction. The last post is simple, but profound. “I enjoy playing piano, but I’ll bet a lot of other people play music too. If we can keep music and other art in our community, people will be able to do things with their lives that they really love to do.”
  • 12. Assessment: While the goal of the project is not focused around student assessment, there are numerous ways in which we will be evaluating students’ individual work. During the first quarter, there will be checkpoints in which students have to submit initial research, ideas, and plans. For these assignments, there will be small grades basically based on submission and participation; we want to ensure that students are doing work in class so they don’t have to worry about anything outside of class. Also, this gives the teacher the opportunity to give students direct feedback on their actual ideas and nudge them in the right direction, if necessary. In the second quarter, the main grade will be for the poster project presented at the fair. Students will be evaluated on how professional it looks, if it flows logically, if they are able to answer questions of those passing by their project, etc. We want to students to utilize this opportunity to learn about designing effectively but also about presenting to audiences outside of the school walls. This will also give them the chance to take pride in their hard work and show the community all of their great ideas. In the third and fourth quarters, when students are actually implementing the chosen project, we intend to make use of reflective writing. As students work in their community implementing their ideas, we want them to deeply reflect on their experiences, both good and bad. To do their reflections, we will use online blogs; we feel that using blogs allows for more creative writing versus formal essays, thus engaging the students much more. Also, they will have the opportunity to comment on each other’s blogs (all positive feedback or useful criticism of course), building a
  • 13. stronger classroom environment in the process. For these reflections, small grades will be given for thoughtful reflection and comments, to ensure that students complete these assignments. Reflections: Allyson Klovekorn Being able to collaborate effectively with classmates is a very important skill to have as a student but is also something that is necessary in being a teacher leader. Throughout this semester, we read and discussed the positive benefits of collaboration among teachers within an entire school; when teachers work together, learning on another level can occur. In the work for this project, this element of teacher leadership definitely played a role. When developing our curriculum, we brainstormed a lot of ideas and tried to think of what overall would benefit students the most. Without truly working together, we would not have been able to create a truly cohesive curriculum project. My group members might disagree but I did not personally experience any conflict. I thought that we all worked well together, building off of one another’s ideas versus shooting each other down (which has happened with other groups I’ve had). Also, something that is huge in every group project is participation. Everyone in my group not only always showed up to class, but they also came prepared to work. Throughout our working class days, everyone was always doing something valuable (though we occasionally would get off topic- a little laughter can’t hurt, right?).
  • 14. I worked specifically on the assessment portion of the paper along with helping Cody brainstorm the concept map. Quentin made significant contribution to the paper, writing the rationale and the example portions. I simply read through his work, providing light edits when necessary. Erin wrote the description portion of the paper, and again the rest of us read through to make sure we agreed. Ultimately, before writing, we had all talked about all of our ideas and made sure we were on the same page. When a question came up, we addressed it and continued on. Overall, I had a great experience with this project. Cody Dye Throughout this course and, as an extension, this project, discussion and deliberation have been key concepts. As a group we were required to work together and sift through our own preconceived notions and interests to narrow down our choice for an organizing center, despite the endless possibilities that some of us saw if we had gone in a different direction. There weren’t any major conflicts that came about as a result of our work, although slight disagreements here and there were not uncommon. In general, I would say that this group was one of the best I have worked with during my time here at Miami in terms of being on the same page and working together to tackle a large chunk of information. More often than not the work falls onto the shoulders of one person but that was definitely not the case this time around. I think that each and every one of our group members had considerable contributions to the overall project, although I think my single largest contribution that I tackled by myself was the concept map. Although this only takes up one page
  • 15. of the report, it was extremely time consuming and relatively difficult to format in order to get all of the information in place. As a group, we worked together to format and formulate all of the material that is present above with Quentin taking the brunt of the force on the narrative, Allyson tackling the assessment, and Erin doing the work on the description page. By divvying up the work we were able to accomplish each of the sections, not by approaching it as a checklist, but rather as a way to communicate and interact with each other and the material we were working on. I felt that we did work well as a unit and, contrary to how we sometimes acted towards each other, enjoyed the company of those around us. It can be tough working on a project as large as this for hours on end but we made it work and I’m proud of our product. Quentin Russell This project helped to play out different aspects in our teacher-leadership primarily via interpersonal problem solving. Everyone had their own goals for the project and it was really cool to get to work with a group that was so willing to work with each other. It forced us to give and take with each other so that no one person took over the project or was trampled by the group. We all were able to make our opinions known without enforcing them or letting them fall flat. A few conflicts arose over picking which topic our project would cover and the exact steps that the project would take for the student. These ended up being very minor issues, but there were some disagreements in the early stages of planning. The problem was that each person in the group was very passionate about
  • 16. very different possibilities that school could offer. So really, this ended up being less of a legitimate problem with our ability to work together and closer to just trying to fit a lot of brilliant concepts into a single project. It was difficult to pick any one topic that completely explored each person’s vision for what a school could be and how to get there. But like I mentioned earlier, we all wanted the group to work more than we wanted to get our ideas to dominate the project, so we had a really good time synthesizing several of our ideas into one big project. Most of the work I did with this project was in brainstorming and putting together heavily conceptual work. Whereas Allyson, Cody, and Erin were all really good at the practical elements of the project, I tend to be more of a generalist and struggle getting my feet on the ground. That means just that I worked really heavily in the rationale and outlining the meaning of the project, while the rest of the group helped to ground it in a little more measurable steps that could work practically in a school setting and how to present the project in an understandable way. Erin Worrell: The conflict that the group experienced was trying to focus the project. The group knew that the project should focus on community engagement but because it was such a broad theme it was difficult to create specific guidelines for the curriculum. Later, we were eventually able to come to a conclusion and fixed this minor issue. We had a few ideas about implementing community engagement into the curriculum and everything worked out in our favor. We did not experience many conflicts besides the one mentioned above. We knew what the focus of the project should be and how it should be implemented. Therefore, everyone was on the same
  • 17. page because the focus of the project incorporated all of the content areas of the group members. I believe that everyone contributed equally to the project whether it was keeping each other on task, brainstorming ideas, and writing notes about our discussions. However, my significant contribution to the project was typing the description of the curriculum, but everyone contributed to what the description should entail. Others contributed to typing the rationale, concept map, assessment, and creating a narrative for the core ideas of the curriculum. Every single group member contributed the specifics of the project, but different group members typed different sections on the googledoc. For example, Quentin typed the rationale and the narrative for the core ideas of the curriculum. Allyson created the guidelines for the assessment. Also she and Cody edited the entire document. In addition, Cody created the concept map. Before he created the map, the group brainstormed ideas about what the concept map should be. Then, after we all came to an agreement then he created the concept map. In conclusion, everyone worked well with one another and each group member had something valuable to contribute to the curriculum project.