1 / 17

HTH Design Principles Personalization Common Intellectual Mission Adult World Connection

HTH Design Principles Personalization Common Intellectual Mission Adult World Connection Teacher as Designer. The Six A’s of Powerful Projects Academic Rigor

abdalla
Download Presentation

HTH Design Principles Personalization Common Intellectual Mission Adult World Connection

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. HTH Design Principles • Personalization • Common Intellectual Mission • Adult World Connection • Teacher as Designer

  2. The Six A’s of Powerful Projects • Academic Rigor • Projects address key learning standards identified by the school or district and helps students develop habits of mind and work associated with academic and professional disciplines. • Authenticity • Projects use a real world context (e.g., community and workplace problems) and address issues that matter to the students. • Applied Learning • Projects engage students in solving semi-structured problems calling for competencies expected in high-performance work organizations (e.g., teamwork, problem-solving, communication, etc.). • Active Exploration • Projects extend beyond the classroom and connect to work internships, field-based investigations, and community explorations. • Adult Connections • Projects connect students with adult mentors and coaches from the wider community. • Assessment Practices • Projects involve students in regular exhibitions and assessments of their work in light of personal, school and real-world standards of performance.

  3. Academic Rigor Projects: • Address key learning standards identified by the school or district • Pose essential question(s) of relevance to student • Span multiple disciplines and subject areas • Develop habits of mind and work associated with academic and professional disciplines (e.g., to think like a scientist)

  4. Applied Learning Projects: • Engage students in solving semi-structured problems • Call for competencies expected in high-performance work organizations (e.g., teamwork, problem-solving, communication, etc.). • Require students to develop organizational and self-management skills

  5. Active Exploration Projects: • Extend beyond the classroom • Connect to field-based investigations, community explorations, and work internships • Require real investigations using a variety of methods, media, and sources

  6. Authenticity Projects: • Use a real world context (e.g., community and workplace problems) • Emanate from a problem that has meaning to students • Result in a product or performance that has personal and/or social value

  7. Adult Connections Projects: • Connect students with adult mentors and coaches from the wider community • Expose students to adults with relevant expertise • Engage adults in the design and assessment of student projects

  8. Assessment Practices Projects: • Provide milestones/checkpoints • Involve lots of reflection for students and teachers • Result in exhibitions and performances • Are grounded in personal, school and real-world standards of performance

  9. Powerful Projects Foster Significant Learning • Projects connect students to the “adult world” and authentic reasons for learning. • Projects require students to be active learners. • Students learn important skills such as critical thinking, collaboration, and communication.

  10. Project Photos • Share the photo • Why did you pick it? • How might it connect to the 6As

  11. Moving Forward

  12. Develop an initial plan for the project On a the poster paper: Describe or list: • A Passion • Topic or Essential Question • Product students will creat • Exhibition

  13. Project Idea

  14. Gallery Walk Guiding Questions • What strikes you? • What questions do have? • What suggestions might you have?

  15. Gallery Walk Norms • Hard on Content, Soft on People • Be Kind, Helpful and Specific • Reserve Judgment

  16. Moving Forward • Write a Project Description and List of Benchmarks-Once you have something down on paper, you can refine it based on your experiences making the prototype and expert feedback. • Make a Prototype-Whatever you want the students to make, do it yourself first. • Contact Experts-Contact experts in the community early such as local scientists, artists, or veteran teachers. They will help you make your project more authentic. They may also have ideas on how to exhibit your project. • Share with Others-Talk about your project ideas with as many people as possible: your colleagues, your spouse, your friends.

More Related