What Works in Public Education

Applying Learning to the Real World: A School Puts Project Learning at the Forefront

This maverick Texas-based school exemplifies the benefits of project learning.

by Edutopia Staff

Print Forward Share Comments(0) Comment RSS

Alice Carlson Applied Learning Center in Fort Worth, Texas, was the first school in the district to open its doors to students from anywhere in the city. The school distinguishes itself by an emphasis on applied learning -- an approach to education that connects classwork to the world beyond school and allows children to make choices and assume responsibilities.

"We teach through projects," explains first-grade teacher Elizabeth Donaldson. "We don't just have children working from a book." Students learn data collection and graphing skills, for instance, while working on a local weather project. And, with the support of telecommunications technologies, they work with peers to integrate their findings into larger projects.

Teams of educators, parents, community members, and students share decision-making responsibilities for all aspects of the school's operation, from instructional programs to purchases. Alice Carlson operates on a year-round calendar with three-week breaks between nine-week regular sessions. During the spring and fall breaks, students can register for workshops taught by teachers or members of the community on topics ranging from enriched academics to arts and crafts.

This article originally published on 7/1/1997

Post a comment

Sign in or create an account now, or after you post.

Sign In

Thanks for your comment. It will be posted once you've signed in to your account. Please sign in here
Not yet a member of the Edutopia community? Create an Account

Create an Account

Almost there! As soon as your account is created, your new comment will be posted.
Mollom CAPTCHA (play audio CAPTCHA)
By creating an account, you agree to Edutopia's terms of use.

Advertisement

@edutopia on Twitter Edutopia on Facebook RSS feed link

Advertisement