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Getting to Our Best Ideas: Towards Transdisciplinary Curriculum in the Middle School Mark Silberberg [email protected] - @silberbergmark Sarah Barlow & Sara-Momii Roberts [email protected] & [email protected]

Towards a Transdiciplinary Curriculum

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Page 1: Towards a Transdiciplinary Curriculum

Getting to Our Best Ideas:

Towards Transdisciplinary Curriculum in the Middle School

Mark [email protected] - @silberbergmark

Sarah Barlow & Sara-Momii [email protected] & [email protected]

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• For the purpose of this exercise “best” idea is moving towards a more integrated curriculum.

• Write down your response to the question (anonymously or you can sign).

• Put your card on the table and take a card put down by one of your colleagues.

• On the back of the card, write a response that turns the worst consequence into an opportunity in support of the "best" idea (i.e., see obstacles as opportunities).

“What is the worst consequence of your best idea?” - Chris Lehmann

Page 3: Towards a Transdiciplinary Curriculum

Are You Out of Sync With Your Values?

-from Edgar Schein

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Are You Out of Sync With Your Values?

When all three levels are in alignment, you have a powerful organizational culture.

“What we say is how we behave and the stuff around us supports the cultural experience.”

Page 5: Towards a Transdiciplinary Curriculum

Some espoused values at LREI: Inquiry . . .

• a recursive questioning process

• a tool to unpack meaning

• opens us to the wonder inspired by the world around us

• an incubator for our innate ability to be curious and to seek connections

• as structure to help us to live in the uncomfortable space where we don't know the answer

• as vehicle for transforming culture

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Where we want to be . . .•More teacher conversation/co-planning

•Co-teaching interdisciplinary units

•Teaching around "affinities and passions"

•Learning with students

•Working on really rich problems.

•Seeing kids for longer blocks of time.

•More authentic; more like the real world

•Content serving problems/projects/skills

• Inquiry driving authentic learning

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Where kids want to be . . .• Investigating topics of personal interest

independently• Investigating topics of personal interest in a group

with others who are interested in the same topic• More “making" things and more connections across

classes• More independent work time; more time for working

on projects• A broader audience to share my work with• Deciding what homework I need to do to improve my

learning

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From disciplines as silos to lenses

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5th through 8th grade context for our social justice

inquiry work

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5th Grade: Examine ancient civilizations through the lens of archaeological inquiry.

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What is civilization/culture?

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Contemporary connection: Social justice implications of modern food production.

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6th Grade:Exploration of Europe and Middle East in the Middle Ages

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Religion as lens for inquiryCulture/civilization as dynamic process

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Contemporary connection: How does an understanding of historic social justice issues inform our understanding of the present condition?

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7th Grade:Examines pre-colonial US history through drafting of the Constitution

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Cultures in contact: Native Americans, Africans, EuropeansHistory as narrative - whose story is represented?

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Contemporary connection: Utopia vs.dystopia - How are the ideals expressed in the Charters of Freedom reflected in our current American society?

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8th Grade: Exploration of Civil War though Civil Rights Era around the theme of "Choosing to Participate."

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Power and politics as lens for inquiryWho has power and how is power contested?

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Our thematic exploration of individuals who had "chosen to participate" raised a compelling problem for us . . .

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We had not created a meaningful context for students to "choose to participate"

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A starting place . . .

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Students learn letter writing, phone calling, email and interview skills that they use to identify partner organizations

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Some of our partners . . .

• New York Immigration Coalition

• Mercy Corps Action Center

• Geoffrey Canada,

• Promise Academy, Harlem Children’s Zone

• UN Conference on the Millennium Goals

• NYC Million Trees

• Patricia McCormick

• SPARK

• Common Ground

• Office of Disarmament Affairs at the United Nations

• Housing Works

• Invisible Children

• Ishmael Beah Foundation

• “It Gets Better" Project

• GLSEN (Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network)

• The Innocence Project

• CAPP (Child Abuse Prevention Program)

• GEMS (Girls Education and Mentoring Services)

• Global Kids

• Food Bank of New York

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Groups create web sites on our Elgg social media site to document their work

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They blog about their site visits, interviews and their developing understanding of the issues. Peers and partners comment on their posts.

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They join in with and initiate actions to support their partner organizations

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They create PSA in their art class

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They plan workshops to teach 5th-7th graders about their issue for our annual Social Justice Teach-In

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And in the end . . .

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Narrowing the distance between the classroom and world beyond . . .

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Our Obstacles and Opportunities

• Where does the project demonstrate integration of various disciplines?

• Where are there gaps? How can we better integrate with other disciplines?

• Where have turned obstacles into opportunities?• What's been tricky? What's been great? Where has this been

pushed?• Privilege piece• Logistics piece• Time/Schedule piece for fieldwork and joint planning with other

teachers• “Do the kids really care?” piece and/or what do they gain?

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from “Unstuck”, SYP Partners

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Getting to Our Best Ideas:

Towards Transdisciplinary Curriculum in the Middle School

Mark [email protected] - @silberbergmark

Sarah Barlow & Sara-Momii [email protected] & [email protected]