My Definition of Inquiry Wordle:
Rough Draft Ideas for my Mini-Lessons….Advice and Ideas Appreciated :)
SUSH25 The student will describe changes in national politics since 1968.
g. Analyze the response of President George W. Bush to the attacks of September 11, 2001, on the United States, the war against terrorism, and the subsequent American interventions in Afghanistan and Iraq.
- Authenticity: I figured a great lesson to implement inquiry learning would be SSUSH25g since it deals with terrorism. I remember my last classes of the year were super curious about ISIS and 9/11. Everytime I teach 9/11 I have to remember this years’ kids were like 2 and 3 years old when it happened so they really don’t remember it. It’s really easy to get kids interested in terrorism because it is an ongoing topic.
2) Deep Understanding: We will discuss the topic and discuss together what they will need to learn in order to master the topic. I will have the students create their own learning targets. If some of them create learning targets that don’t exactly hit the mark, we (as a class) will try to perfect them. I can try to lead them in the right direction also.
3) Performance of Understanding: Students will be set into a real world situation. I haven’t quite figured out what I want to do here. I want them to maybe pretend they are an advisor to the president, or something along those lines. I want to force them to have to see why the terrorists/ISIS believe the are right in their actions and how our nation should respond. I want them to be forced to see the repercussions of every action that the US would take. (Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated :) )
4) Assessment for Learning: Once again, not 100% sure what I’m doing in this part either, but I definitely want them to self-reflect. How are their ideas changing? How do we deal with terrorism? I would like them to create a plan to deal with ISIS/terrorists today. Something that would have short term goals and long term goals, how would they attain those goals?
5) Appropriate Use of Technology: To start out (after they have established their learning targets) I would like to use a curation resource like Pearltrees to have articles, readings, video links, news stories, etc. linked for them to dig through before they start their own research. They need a base of information on terrorism. After they have achieved a level of understanding on what terrorism is I would like for them to create a Twitter account or some sort of social networking account so that they can discuss terrorism outside of school. The reason I picked this standard is because terrorism and ISIS are always in the news today. So, I would expect them to research on their own and hopefully watch the news and tweet/discuss what is going on with terrorism today. How is our nation responding, what are we doing, what are our plans, etc.
6) Connecting with Experts: I have a cousin who is currently stationed in Afganistan and his role is to advise the Defense Ministry. I would LOVE it if we could Skype with him and allow the kids to ask him questions if that would be possible(not sure). If that didn’t work, we could always invite a college professor in our town who knows more about the subject than I do or someone who has served and is willing to discuss it. I’m not sure if this would work, some veterans don’t want to talk about it and others do. Even if we got a veteran from another war, they could at least give the students the aspect of what it’s like to be in a war zone, something that none of them have ever experienced or maybe even thought about.
7) Student Success: I will try to make sure that resources are readily available for students who learn in different ways. I could set up a website and link articles and news reports/videos every night or ever so often and have them respond to one of them through their social networking account they set up. I would encourage them to respond to one another. Instead of making them all read, they could watch a news clip. If they don’t have wifi at home, they could do it in the library. Our school has wifi that they can connect to also. I could give them time to do it during class on their phone if we had to. (BYOD policy)
8) Ethical Citizenship: I feel like I lucked up on this part of the mini-lesson. I feel that if we (me and the students) can do this right, then they should feel more knowledgable on an important current event/topic. I also feel that if done correctly they should be forced to reflect on their ideas on terrorism and what the US should do about it. Did their opinions change?
Note: I have a lot of kids who say, “We should just go blow them up!- obviously it’s not that easy nor is that how modern day war is fought. Sometimes they’ll say we did it to Japan during WWII, why not? and we have a discussion. But I feel as though if we do this right and everything goes smoothly (fingers crossed) they could not say these things. They would be forced to really think about the actions the US should take and the consequences of those actions.
Also, any suggestions or ideas are greatly appreciated!!!
I agree with you about our students being very dependent on technology. We are competing with technology to keep them engaged in a world that easily gets lost in technology. I like how you included the party about the teacher snapping herself doing what she called inquiry based learning. I think the focus should always be on the student. We want the students to collaborate and learn. The things we do should aid them in accomplishing this, but it should not be our focus.
ReplyDeleteWhen I have a lesson that ends up not going the way I like, I always try to reflect as soon as I have a moment. I feel like reflecting can help me learn and grow. I try to examine what went wrong and why it didn't go the way that I had planned for it to go in my head. This is something you might consider to help you in this aspect of planning.