Monday, February 23, 2015

Preparing Learners for Their Future

College, Career, and Life Readiness

It is our belief that it is never too early to prepare children for the future, so as a creative team (admin, teachers, staff and other community stakeholders), we facilitate the college, career and citizenship readiness beginning the very first day of kindergarten.  As written in our vision framework, we believe that is it essential to equip learners for their future by providing them a learning environment through a personalized education where students become collaborators, critical and creative thinkers, and communicators. Learners are invested in their own learning path. 


We believe learning goes beyond the four walls of school, into the community and that to best prepare our learners, it is important we create an educational experience to mirror the real world. We believe the development of communication skills through unique community partnerships provides students opportunities to learn transferable skills for college, career, and life readiness. Examples include first graders working with health experts to create a health calendar for the Liberty community (online), second graders creating a butterfly garden from neglected memorial garden in our community, third graders addressing the global water crisis by hosting a silent auction, fourth grader proposing design ideas for an empty building to revitalize Liberty Square, and fifth graders hosting an Empty Bowls evening to raise awareness about hunger in Clay County.


As we navigate through the 21st century, there is an incredible sense of urgency to foster a culture of leaders who will continue developing our complex world. It is our responsibility and obligation to teach students the acquisition process of developing new ideas and redesigning existing ideas. We believe it is essential to empower creativity, equip learners and engage communities. We seek to develop and sustain a dynamic innovative culture for all those part of our EPiC journey. We are preparing learners for jobs not yet created and for an unknown future. If we build on the pillars of P21 skills, we are developing transferable skills that would be helpful in any industry. If we build on the strength of learners, we can help them apply their learning in any situation as they navigate an unknown future. And as we cultivate these skills and confidence within students, they will have the foresight and thought to help transform the world.


Our success as a school is built upon the foundation of engaging key stakeholders, both in and outside the organization, and authentic processes that constructed the components of our building and learning environment. It is essential we continue to include these stakeholders in our conversations and work and share our story freely across all leaders and stakeholder groups.

 “People driven by pursuit that push them on the edges are often not on the periphery, but on the frontier, testing the limits of what it is possible to withstand and discover.” - Sarah Lewis

Monday, November 24, 2014

The Importance of Need to Know

Challenge: How do we make real work when we have standards we are required to "cover" and "teach?"

One of the eight essential elements of project-based learning is significant content. Clustered standards across all disciplines, weaving together content that reflects the way we learn as adults.  But how do unpack those standards with our students? We are used to delivering content with direct instruction, with a video, with a worksheet, and maybe some inquiry. But with project-based learning, we uncover the deeper learning with our students through a Need to Know. Teachers facilitating discussion, empowering students to ask questions and figure out by themselves what it is they need to learn.
Here is a little peek into Studio 1. For their study on plants earlier this year, students discovered the natural community outside of EPiC and spent time as a community brainstorming and naming the important concepts they wanted to learn in order to become experts.
pbl first grade need to know
This past month, Studio 1 embarked on a quest to discover what it was to be a leader. Students began their study by unpacking the question, "What is a Leader?" 
After discussion and inquiry, students decided they wanted to interview various leaders in the community, both adults and high school students, to learn what it means to be a leader and what it entails to actually lead others. After a series of interviews with community members, students reflected on their own leadership abilities--how had they lead in the past, how were leading now in the present, and how did they they hope to lead in the future. Students wrote personal essays about their leadership abilities and crafted their own handmade books to publish their writing. Students also identified ways they could lead and share with others, such as as a talent or something they felt they could teach others. Having learned to write a procedure (peanut butter and jelly sandwich), they wrote and produced video tutorials to help and lead others.




Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Community Engagement Explored


Driving Question: How can we rethink education where students engage in the cultural, historic and civic amenities of Liberty and the greater KC area to deepen and extend their learning and provide purposeful experiences and focused reflection to discover knowledge, embrace skills and integrate values into their life?

As we have unpacked this driving question, we have identified three key areas to help us facilitate relevant learning experiences. We are excited to see this unfold this year. 

SERVICE LEARNING IN COMMUNITY
Discover: Service learning teaches civic responsibility by integrating meaningful service into the learning process, empowering and inspiring students to be citizens and architects of a better world. Through their service-learning activities, students apply classroom knowledge in practical settings to deepen their understanding of significant content.

Embrace: Students gain academic knowledge and skills, interpersonal skills, and self confidence. Service-learning provides students with opportunities to develop communication and collaboration skills. They can also gain important experience working with diverse members of the community.

Integrate: Students may better understand themselves and know their gifts and talents as they explore and develop ways to contribute to their communities. They can develop self confidence and an enhanced commitment to serving others.

Resources:
Examples thus far this year:
  • Studio 4 has identified non-profits that need help, and they are committed to advocating for these non-profits as change makers. 
  • Coming soon--Studio 5 will explore hunger within the community and how they can help. 


COMMUNITY AS RESOURCE: EXPLORATORY, EXPERTS, CREATIVITY
Discover: Community as resource teaches students to explore their world around them and inquire about different topics and interests as it relates to the “real world.” It also gives students access to the world beyond the classroom so students learn relevance and usefulness of content both in and out of school. Moving beyond the classroom walls diversifies learning opportunities, connecting school with daily life and real problems.

Embrace: Students explore their own passions and interests and use the world around them to enhance the learning process.

Integrate: Students gain the experience of working with experts in the community. They develop a sense of self-efficacy as they pursue interests, work with experts, and experience work in the real world.

Resources:
Examples thus far this year:
  • Butterfly garden experts for Studio 2
  • Chefs and other visitors on STEM careers in Studio 5
  • KMBC anchor for Studio 1 Recess Report and broadcasting skills


COMMUNITY IN PARTNERSHIP
Discover: Community in Partnership is an action-based approach, requiring students to partner with local businesses and act as consultants or freelancers, with the goal of framing a problem or opportunity, collecting data and research, providing and creating solutions, and possibly implementing ideas.

Embrace:  Students infuse their passions and skills into the action-based approach, identifying gifts and talents within themselves as they grow and learn.

Integrate: Students learn transferrable skills such as literacy, collaboration, and communication, along with real life partnerships and real life work that is deeply embedded in customized significant content.

Resources:
Examples thus far this year:
  • Studio 3 explored the water crisis in the world and, as a result of their awareness, created works of art to sell and raise money for water.org

Equipping Students: Personalized Learning

Equip Students: EPiC provides a learning environment through a personalized education where students become collaborators, critical and creative thinkers, and communicators.
We believe students learn in different ways and at different paces. For so long, in education, we have taught whole groups, small groups, differentiated in a designated RTI time. But what if students could work at their own pace, on their own time, working towards mastery? EPiC students learn through an integrated curriculum at a personalized pace utilizing technology and dynamic teacher instruction.
As part of our vision, we have challenged ourselves to create a learning environment that personalizes the learning process for each student. Through extensive research and observations all across the country, we identified key adaptive technology programs that would support personalized learning:
We also looked deeply at project-based learning and how to best cultivate voice and choice. So what does this mean for us as educators? How do we teach 50 different students at their level when they are ready to learn?
Using real-time data to tailor instruction across all content, letting go of teacher control, cultivating creativity and passions--watch and listen to one of our fifth grade teachers reflect on implementing personalization.






Monday, October 13, 2014

Twitter = Personalized PD Everyday

twitter
Twitter is personalized PD everyday.  Years ago, maybe we could go to one conference a year to hear one person present on one topic and then we would read a few recommended books and hope to implement our learning in our classroom. Now we can learn every second on topics of our choice. When used for professional development, Twitter provides relevant and timely information and dialogue about education. It offers a plethora of resources to implement into the classroom and is a fantastic tool for communication.
Twitter is communication. It opens doors to the world for us and for our students every day. It creates learning opportunities and connections that surprise and delight us. All of our EPiC staff are on Twitter. We use it to communicate with one another, with families, with our PLN, and we participate in twitter chats such as #pblchat and #moedchat to grow our learning and thinking. And our students benefit from twitter, as our teachers have set up class twitter accounts so students can tweet out the happenings of the day with pictures and videos.  
Follow Us on Twitter as we learn and grow together!
Studio K: @EPiCKdg
Blended Learning Coach: Susan Maynor ‏@shmaynor
Special Education: Mary Oyler ‏@MrsOylerEPiC

Thursday, October 2, 2014

Students as Researchers




This past month, Studio 1 and Studio 2 have been busy researching as they both are in process of designing and producing something beautiful for the community. 

 Real Work:

Field research on plants and butterflies

Real Product:

Studio 1: A Plant Field Guide of plants in our Liberty community 

**** 

Studio 2: A designed Butterfly Garden for the Memorial Student Garden 

Real Audience:

The Liberty Community












Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Butterfly Research: Project-Based Learning

Challenge:

How can we engage today's 

modern learner in learning?

One of the ways we approached this challenge was to move away from teaching isolated subjects that could easily be "Googled" and engaged project-based learning for our students.
PROJECT OVERVIEW:
    • Students will study the life cycle and needs of butterflies in order to create butterfly garden on the EPiC campus.
DRIVING QUESTION:
    • How can we as butterfly experts and landscapers create an environment for butterflies to thrive at EPiC?
Learning Outcomes/Targets (Missouri Learning Standards):
    • Identify and sequence life cycles (birth, growth, and development, reproduction and death) of animals (i.e., butterfly, frog, chicken, snake, dog).
    • Identify and relate the similarities and differences among animal parents and their offspring or multiple offspring.
    • Ask and answer questions such as who, what, where, when, why and how to demonstrate understanding of key details and in a text.
    • Recall information from experiences or gather information from provided sources to answer questions.
    • Construct maps with title and key
    • Explain how specific images (e.g. a diagram showing how a machine works) contribute to and clarify a text.
AUTHENTIC PRODUCT:
    • Redesigning a garden on campus into Butterfly Garden
PUBLIC AUDIENCE:
    • All of Liberty and any visitors to our school
After writing a persuasive letter asking for permission to redesign the garden, students meet with the principal to discuss possibilities:
persuasive letters
Research on the butterfly lifecycle:
researching pbl
Working with Liberty High School students surveying the space:
working with LHS students
Deepening learning about butterflies through movement:
butteflies through movement
Exploring the butterfly habitat:
Butterfly life cycle