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Assessment

PBL: Picking a Start of the Year Project

July 23, 2010

Just as school started to wrap up in June, I decided that at the beginning of next year we would be picking a local cause and trying to solve it. I was entertaining the thought that the kids would pick their own cause, but I'm thinking of building up to that later on. I think instead we'll start with a common cause -- one that we might actually make an impact on.

My school is currently under construction. Despite the fact that things are tight and we are a Title I district, our community voted to pass a bond that could update our school's desperately inadequate facilities.

So we're getting a new media center (although budget cuts have cut back our librarian's position), a new field to share with the community recreational center, and a new administration building at the front of the school. And we are grateful.

The Project

But what little green exists on our campus is under threat, including our few trees. In fact, the biggest and oldest tree which can be seen from the front of our school, which kids hang out under waiting to be picked up after school, and under which students read, is smack dead in the center of the scheduled covered walkway. (I'm not sure why in Southern California we need a covered walkway, but, shrug, I guess that's what was decided.)

So I think we should try to save the tree. I know it sounds all tree huggy, but schools need green. Right now, there's only one grassy strip on our campus and it seems to be where all the dogs in our city go to do their business.

This grassy strip leads up to the tree, and a huge indicator as to the plans to disrupt the grass and its tree is the fact that it hasn't been watered in months, and the browning has begun. My classroom and three others happen to sit right next to this anemic strip of nature, and we used to complain that the industrial size grass trimmer seemed to always appear on testing days.

But I swear, if we can save this patch, we won't complain about the distracting noise again.

I started by just trying to get an answer as to when the tree and grass were scheduled to be cut for good. This is proving difficult. So far, there's been no response from the administration or from the director of the construction on campus (growl).

Normally, I would be having students do this portion of research, but I want to know that when we return, there will be a tree still there to fight for.

Creating a Plan and Setting Goals

Once I get that answer, it will give me a timeline for our project. I can backwards plan due dates and students can set goals appropriately. We can begin preparing for a writing campaign, a publicity campaign, and oral speaking activities. We can stage informational lunchtime classes and even create a blog, perhaps create a petition. By the time the kids arrive, they will be the creators of the tree-saving movement, however, not I.

I'm starting with a local, applicable topic so that students can see the difference their efforts may make (hopefully). The immediacy may help them in their own learning. From there, later in the year, we'll move into student choices of topics, the further development of polls, and the writing of an executive summary.

On a side note: It's a pity that the test scores of one single setting can't reflect the learning that will occur in training our students to be advocates for a cause.

Regardless of the cause, we want our students to be adults that can stand for something and who will put their abilities to use in society. So far, no bubble test I know can capture the deep learning that can occur within a unit of PBL. (Interested in starting down that PBL road? Join the Edutopia group Project-Based Learning for ideas and resources.)

Anyway, I'll give you an update, dear readers, as soon as school starts and the battle really begins!

Meanwhile, what PBL do you have planned for your students in fall?

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  • Assessment
  • Curriculum Planning
  • 6-8 Middle School

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