Introduction
Travel
Through Time and Culture is the result of a generous grant
from the National Endowment for the Humanities. It is a Kindergarten
through sixth grade social studies curriculum that was written by
the staff of Valley View Alternative Elementary with the help of
many partnerships. The history and education departments at Seattle
Pacific University, the World Affairs Council, the Museum of History
and Industry, the King County Libraries and many others helped the
teachers of Valley View receive training in technology, curriculum
design, research skills, use of primary sources, and historical
content through field experience. One year ago, in the spring of
1999, the staff of Valley View revised and clarified the school’s
philosophy. Major components of the philosophy include an emphasis
on studying the humanities, learning through a field-based structure,
and incorporating technology into the learning environment. Travel
Through Time and Culture is a curriculum designed to teach
these components though social studies.
Valley View is a small
K-6 school in Highline School District. It is located in SeaTac,
Washington, a community on the outskirts of Seattle. The school
has been an alternative school since it began in 1969. It has a
unique educational structure that allows students of different classes
and grade levels to mix with each other and interact with more than
one teacher throughout the day. Students have two separate classes
daily, a morning language arts block and an afternoon math and science
block. The 1999-2000 school year was the first in which a twice-weekly
elective block was used for teaching the humanities. Some of the
classes offered at this time are art, music, history, social studies,
foreign language, theater and dance. Students found themselves in
a third grouping of students, placed among other students of different
grades who share a common interest. The philosophical reason for
this structure is to have all teachers serve as teachers to all
kids. The result is a school in which the students know all the
teachers and the students, regardless of their age. It is a school
community where the students are interested and involved in what
each other is learning.
Field-Based Learning
Field-based learning
plays an integral role in these units. The Valley View staff embraced
this learning strategy for many reasons. The most important is the
high quality of learning. Students love to go on field trips. When
structured well, students can be so engaged that they forget they
are learning. This high level of interest also makes it ideal for
diverse learners. Field-based learning expands the walls of the
classroom by demonstrating to students how to learn from the environment.
It models to students that "learning" does not only take
place at school during school hours. Students of field-based learning
are trained to see the daily chore of getting around the community,
or visiting sites near or far from home, as learning opportunities.
Field-based learning
encourages students to be critical thinkers. They become “detectives”
of history as they examine and interpret the landscape, using it
as primary source material. Students taught to interpret history
through this type of experiential learning have the skills to become
independent learners who can analyze, synthesize and evaluate history.
They need not be spoon-fed history but can actively seek it out
in their daily encounters with the world around them.
This strategy also helps
to foster an appreciation of the community in which students live.
Students can look to their own communities to learn about major
events in history, such as changes in technology or the impact of
ideas. All too often students of history see history as involving
“other” people in a setting too far removed from what
they know. What they know, however, is a result of events and changes
in history.
Des Moines Memorial Drive
in the Highline Community illustrates how students can interpret
history from a field site. American Elm trees were planted along
11 miles of Des Moines Memorial Drive to commemorate Highline community
members who fought and died in World War I. The changing needs of
the community required that many of these trees be removed. As the
community grew and relied more heavily on getting around by car
and using telephones and other electrical appliances, the road needed
widening. We can use this site to help us understand what life was
like after World War I by making inferences about the pace of the
community, the communication technology and size of the population.
History is all around
us. We must teach students the skills of becoming “detectives
of history.” By reading the landscape we learn more about
who we are, how we came to be and where we fit in with the rest
of the world.
How We Make Field Trips
Possible
Valley View has been
very fortunate to take classes on field trips. The PTSA pays for
two field trips per year, or $15 per student. We cut costs by asking
parents to drive, filling a bus with more than one class for a cross-age
field trip and fundraising.
Valley View traditionally
involves students in raising funds. They write letters to local
businesses, sell pop and baked goods at school functions and organize
fundraisers held at recess. Students bring in candy, trading cards
and old toys. They offer face paintings and telegrams to be delivered
to anyone in the school. The money raised from these fundraisers
makes a difference in offsetting the cost of the field trip. Students
learn economics, marketing and business skills and are highly invested
in the field trip.
Technology Through the
Times
Our role as educators,
in teaching students to become independent, careful thinkers, prepared
with skills to succeed in our society, requires that we also make
them computer literate. A technology skills guide developed by the
Shoreline School District is included in this unit. It recommends
skills for students of k-3 and 4-6 to master. We used this guide
to determine the types of technology projects students of different
grade levels should be asked to do.
In addition to the computer
skills we feel our students should have, we also used technology
as a theme for learning history. Ideas and events throughout history
can be traced back to changes in technology. The movement of people
throughout time is the result of changes in transportation technology.
The transition from hunting and gathering to farming is the result
of agricultural technology. The wars groups fought were made possible
with technology in warfare. And the removal of American Elms along
Des Moines Memorial Drive came about because of changes in technology
in automobiles, telephones and household appliances.
When we speak of technology
in this curriculum, we are not limiting ourselves to just computers
and the internet. We are looking at Technology through the Times.
Any way that humans control and manipulate the natural environment
to satisfy their needs and goals is technology. This definition
includes any tool used to accomplish a task such as a pencil, journal,
siren, map, railroad spike, highway, etc.
We want our students
to think critically about the technology they use, considering both
advantages and disadvantages. As our students learn how to navigate
the internet, chat with students in Japan and produce multimedia
projects, it is important we give them opportunities to reflect
on where technology has been and how it has impacted societies in
the past. Students can then predict where it might take us in the
future.
Curriculum Design
The design of the curriculum
follows a template from Grant Wiggins and Jay McTighe’s text,
Understanding by Design. It is called ”Backward Design”
because as units are created, the last step is considering the individual
lessons and activities. We begin by identifying the big ideas we
want students to learn. These, along with the Essential Academic
Learning Requirements, are listed under Desired Academic Results
in the curriculum. Next, we think of the evidence a student could
produce that would demonstrate his/her understanding. This makes
up the assessment piece. The final step is planning the learning
experiences and instruction that will give students the knowledge
and skills to demonstrate their understanding of the learning goals.
The essential and unit
questions help to focus the unit. They are intended to be used throughout
the unit to evoke discussion, critical thinking and raise additional
questions. Great emphasis is placed on the use of questions in this
design because, “Important ideas must be questioned and verified
if they are to be understood. One might say that content that hasn’t
been questioned is like courtroom claims that are never examined,
leading to a hodgepodge of opinions and beliefs instead of to knowledge.”
(1)We chose units of study that fit the four
criteria addressed in Understanding by Design. That is,
they are enduring; they represent big ideas that have enduring value
beyond the classroom. They are at the heart of the discipline and
involve doing the subject. The topics are in need uncoverage: “A
Curriculum designed to develop understanding would uncover complex,
abstract, and counterintuitive ideas by involving students in active
questioning, practice trying out ideas, and rethinking what they
thought they knew.”(2) And lastly,
they offer potential for engaging students.
(3)
Curriculum Overview
The Travel Through
Time and Culture curriculum is intended to take students who
enter Valley View at the kindergarten level on a trip, “traveling
through time and culture” until they graduate from Valley
View in the 6th grade. While the curriculum allows students to make
several “stops” along the way, it is not a complete
tour of the world nor is it a complete social studies curriculum
for a K-6 school. The units themselves have not been tested in the
classroom and will more than likely need some adjusting. Teachers
from other schools can use as much or as little as they see fit
in their particular educational setting. The focus at the primary
grades is to learn about the community. As students move up the
grades the geographic area for “traveling” expands.
In the 3rd and 4th grades students learn about their state and in
the 5th and 6th grades students explore western United States with
Lewis and Clarke and learn about their role in the Pacific Rim.
All international travelers
need a passport for passing through the borders of countries, and
students on Valley View’s excursions will be no exception.
They will be issued a “passport” when they begin school,
complete with photograph. This will serve as a fun way to track
where students have been. Our travel theme is a loose one that is
all inclusive of the various forms of travel. Not only does it include
the travel you might do in a bus or car, but it also includes “virtual
travel.” A student could take a virtual field trip on the
internet when viewing such things like museum collections or be
on an adventure when reading the kind of book you simply can’t
put down.
As students travel through
time and culture, stamping their passports along the way, they will
also keep a journal or scrap book. Students will write about their
"travels" and include ephemera, photographs, news clippings,
etc. to personalize their journey and remember their experiences
years later. This journal will help them reflect on their travels
as they prepare a final 6th grade project before graduating. The
students will choose projects with guidance from his/her teacher.
Projects will be presented to the school community in a fair modeled
after the Alaska Yukon Pacific Exposition held in 1907. This historical
event was legislated by the state government to promote Washington
as the porthole to Pacific Rim trade and to Alaskan gold. Inventors
and people who played a major role in changing the geographic landscape
with canals and railroads were invited to attend to give Washington
the image of a futuristic community. Our study of social studies
through technology makes this an easy connection and a fun way to
relive history.
(1) Ibid. P.
27.
(2) Ibid. P.
21
(3) Wiggins,
Grant and McTighe, Hay. Understanding by Design. Alexandria,
VA. Association for Supervision and Curriculum Developement. 1998.
P.9.
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