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Meaningful Professional Development and Innovative Teaching Strategies. Britta Culbertson Einstein Distinguished Educator Fellow Washington, DC, USA. Who am I?. H igh school teacher in 9 th and 10 th integrated science and visual arts 10 years of classroom experience
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Meaningful Professional Development and Innovative Teaching Strategies Britta Culbertson Einstein Distinguished Educator Fellow Washington, DC, USA
Who am I? • High school teacher in 9th and 10th integrated science and visual arts • 10 years of classroom experience • Taught for 8 years at an arts-integrated high school in Seattle, WA • Currently serving as an Einstein Fellow at National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in Washington, DC
What do I do at NOAA? • Give presentations at NSTA, work at NOAA booth in exhibit hall • Science on a Sphere (SOS) curriculum, teacher professional development, help organize network meeting • Review space weather poster and curriculum • Collect government resources for APES • And more!
India Summer Teacher Program • Short-term, exchange opportunity for U.S. HS teachers of English, Mathematics and Science • Collaborate and team-teach in your subject area with an Indian counterpart in a school in Kolkata • Medium of instruction is English • U.S. and Indian educators to work together on issues of mutual interest to their communities, schools and students
India Summer Program KV Rangpuri, New Delhi
India Summer Teacher Program Eligibility: • U.S. citizen, full-time employee in a U.S. school • Minimum of 3 years teaching experience (at time of application) • High school teacher of English, Math or Science Details: • Length: ~5 weeks including orientation in Washington, DC • Price: Grant includes airfare, per diem, accommodations, and shipping stipend for materials This year’s timeline: • Application opens in fall, application deadline: January 7, 2013 • Selection: February-April • D.C. Orientation: June 27-28, India: June 30-August 4 • Website: http://www.americancouncils.org/program/44/ISP/
Other PD Opportunities that Have Shaped My Teaching • Toyota International Teachers Program in the Galapagos • Local PD at NW Association for Biomedical Research – Bioinformatics in Seattle • Worked on Powers of Minus Ten App
Innovative Teaching Strategies What skills do scientists need?
Scientist’s Habits of Mind Museum of Paleontology (UC Berkeley) NSF Funded Project called “Understanding Science” (2012) • Question what you observe • Investigate further • Be skeptical • Try to refute your own ideas • Seek out more evidence • Be open-minded • Think creatively
What are Artist Habits of Mind? Harvard’s Project Zero presents the following eight artist’s habits of mind (2003): • Develop Craft • Engage and Persist • Envision • Express • Observe • Reflect • Stretch and Explore • Understand Art World
Research Supports Arts Integration DeMossand Morris (2002) discovered that arts-integrated lessons compared to non-integrated lessons promoted: • intrinsic motivation • learning for understanding • greater problem solving opportunities for students
Use Art To Articulate Science Concepts • Botanical illustrations • Physics of balance - mobiles • Design a species • Comic strips • Illustrated timelines and flowcharts • Analogy projects • Children’s stories • Illustrated field guides • Theater, vignettes, tableau • Infographics
Alexander Calder Inspired Mobiles m1d1=m2d2
Newton’s Laws In comic strip form
Cell City Analogy Students used favorite pop culture topics to create analogies (e.g. LOST and Harry Potter’s Marauder’s Map)
Cell Factory Drawing Fritz Kahn – Man as Industrial Palace
Creating Infographics Rachel Zupke’s students created infographics in Chemistry class on various topics with help from Kelsey King (a guest graphic designer) and Suzi Tucker (chemist, graphic designer and set designer) Photos courtesy of Rachel Zupke, The Center School
Infographics: Final Product Images courtesy of Rachel Zupke, The Center School
FREE! Online Infographic Generators • easel.ly • visual.ly • infogr.am • labs.good.is/ • piktochart.com/ Infographic found on easel.ly
Bring Science into the Art Classroom • Anatomical drawings • Drawings from microscope images • Investigate artists’ depictions scientific topics and environmental messages
Japanese Woodblock Prints of Cells Guest Artist: Francesca Lohmann
#3 Deconstruct and recreate through trial and error
Deconstruct and Recreate Through Trial and Error • Use the design process to build a sculpture or mechanical object • Create something from scratch – original ideas • Create an emulation – work through the design process to recreate a piece • Find inspiration from TED talks, Pinterest, Blogs, museum sites
Theo Jansen’s Strandbeests A student was inspired by a TED talk and built his own beast using trial and error
Emulation Van Gogh, Starry Night
Collaborate with an Arts Instructor, Another Teacher, or a Guest to Create an Artful and Innovative Lesson • Art teacher teaches the techniques, science teacher provides content • Can collaborate with the art teacher or a guest artist • Have the art teacher teach the skill and use art students to teach your students
Arctic Information Poster Project: Reference Material KenojuakAshevak US Office of War, 1943 Theresa McFarland MitzieTestani
Trompe L’Oeil Sidewalk Art Teachers WynPottinger-Levy and Nathan Chipps used art in math by using the principles of geometry to create perspective drawings
Bonus: Integrate Science, Art, and Technology • Bring in experts! • My students worked with visualization expert Laura Lynn Gonzalez in the development of the app “Powers of Minus Ten” • They were introduced to a career possibility in the process!
“But I can’t draw” • Collage from magazines • Use Photoshop or clip-art • Cut construction paper shapes • Use word processor to print words • Have student propose an alternative
Arts Integration Research "Artist Habits of Mind." Minneapolis Public Schools (host Site): Artist Habits of Mind. Project Zero of Harvard University, 2003. Web. 04 Feb. 2013. <http://opd.mpls.k12.mn.us/uploads/T-ARTIST_HABITS_OF_MIND.pdf>. DeMoss, K. & Morris, T. (2002). How arts integration supports student learning: Students shed light on the connections. Chicago, IL: Chicago Arts Partnerships in Education (CAPE). Grotzer, T.A. (1996). Math/Science matters: Issues of instructional technique in math and science learning. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Project on Schooling and Children, Exxon Education Foundation. [Essay #1: Learning the Habits of Mind that Enable Mathematical and Scientific Behavior]. Stevenson, L. & Deasy, R.J. (2005). Third Space: When Learning Matters. Washington, DC: Arts Education Partnership. Tishman, S., Jay, E. & Perkins, D.N. (1992). Teaching thinking dispositions: From transmission to enculturation. Theory into Practice, 32(3), 147-153. Winner, E., Hetland, L. Veenema, S., Sheridan, K., Palmer, P., Locher, I. et al. (2006). Studio thinking: How visual arts teaching can promote disciplined habits of mind. New directions in aesthetics, creativity, and the arts, 189-205.
Thanks for coming! Please contact me with any questions! culbertsonb@einsteinfellows.org