One of the main tenets of the Empowerment Academy initiative is to afford students opportunities to dive deep into career exploration. The 6th grade Enrichment Classes have been studying career possibilities by considering the 16 National Career Clusters. The classes have been reorganized so students can work alongside students with similar interests. A career fair will give students the opportunity to share their learning with local community members, parents and 5th grade students from the adjacent elementary school.
In preparation for their career fair display, students have been busy writing interview questions and surveying local professionals in their chosen field of study. After refining questions, students are conducting interviews through email and by phone with contagious excitement with each successful reply. Students are learning about job demands, necessary schooling and/or training required for the job and various perks like company cars, all while working on soft skills like listening and speaking. The 6th grade career fair will be held ????
One of the other main tenets of the Empowerment Academy initiative is to offer students rich learning opportunities through the use of project-based learning. I witnessed several PBL examples in various stages of development during this school visit. Mrs. Smith’s 6th grade students are designing their own country and learning about governments in the process. Mrs. Smalls science classes recently completed a project on designing structures to withstand earthquakes. Select students shared their structures with me and explained the process used to simulate an earthquake. This project had the added bonus of being launched with the help of engineering professionals from the community. Great ideas are being implemented in several classes!!
So how does Edgar Allan Poe fit into science class? Eighth grade teachers Angie Johnson (English) and Suha Beck (Science) spontaneously collaborated on a unique project that I am hopeful they will elaborate on with their own comments. Mrs. Johnson’s students explored the writings of Poe and hypothesized his cause of death based on the undertones of his writings and known facts about his life. Students created visual displays of their conclusion and generated a list of possible causes of death. Mrs. Beck extended the project by creating forensic science labs for students to examine the validity of the proposed causes of death. Equipped with pig body parts, Mrs. Beck simulated various illnesses and diseases for students to reach their own conclusions on the cause of death. I mean talk about critical thinking skills!!!!
Picture to the left below is from Mrs. Johnson’s class. The picture to the right is from Mrs. Beck’s class showing the result of a class vote on the cause of death.
Have I mentioned how lucky I am to be involved with this work?
–Steve
Hi! I am Suha Beck. I teach 8th grade science at Westwood Middle School. I had the privelege of working with my friend and colleague Angela Johnson on a PBL about the famous Edgar Allen Poe. We did not plan as well as we could have because it was a spontaneous decision to partner up and create this PBL. There is plenty of room for improvement for next year.
After learning and being exposed to Edgar Allen Poe and his literature, students in science class hypothesized how the famous poet may have died. Since we will never know the true cause of death, we learned about polling and made graphs of the most popular hypotheses of his death. The question at hand was, "If Edgar Allen Poe had an autopsy to investigate the cause of death, How did he die?"
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1DOGTaGfOiBktx2Fe4NtjkOxffi2lKD6FxxlybEdVpAo/edit?usp=sharing
Students learned about forensic autopsy reporting and the career of Pathology. Internal pig organs were used as simulated Poe body parts. Students observed lungs, a heart, stomach content, liver, brain and eyes. Students referenced poems as clues to what may have been ailing Mr. Poe.
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1-3Stzwl0qzxQiSxOr8gp3Fa1VYt7oS-w?usp=sharing
You will find pictures of organs observed in the above link.
Student feedback was, "This was the grossest and funnest lab we have ever did!!"
Thank you for sharing Suha and Angie!!
Grossest and funnest- love it. Great thinking on your collective feet to find ways to extend poetry into their curiosity and career exploration- they may never forget that connection!