March 2013
Transcription
March 2013
MARCH 2013 T H E A M E R I C A N S C H O O L From our LEARNING GOALS Our ASFG community strives to be... Critical and Creative Thinkers Inquisitive, open-minded, and flexible Adept at applying learning to new situations in appropriate ways Creative problem solvers and responsible risk-takers Critical researchers La comunidad del ASFG se esfuerza por formar... Pensadores críticos y creativos Inquisitivos, abiertos y reflexivos Capaces de aplicar sus conocimientos a nuevas situaciones Creativos al solucionar problemas y responsables al tomar riesgos Investigadores críticos T H E A M E R I C A N S C H O O L F O U N D A T I O N O F G U A D A L A J A R A , A . C . CREATIVE AND CRITICAL THINKING Painting a Picture of Our Creative School Challenge Week From Ordinary to Extraordinary Gone Fishing F O U N D A T I O N O F G U A D A L A J A R A , A . C . Elementary CONTENTS Creatively Exploring Biomes and Ecosystems by 4-28, 4-29, and Ms. Jessie Johnson We have been studying and researching biomes and ecosystems along with the plants and animals that inhabit them. Our unit of study incorporated many types of learning: reading analysis and discussion, technology, online simulations, research, and art. First, we learned what a biome is. Then we learned about biotic (living) and abiotic (non-living) factors in ecosystems, and how they interact. We used our science textbook and watched the Planet Earth videos in order to increase our knowledge of the subject. We had numerous class discussions about the topic. The films were super; exciting and interesting! While watching, we felt as if we were actually in a variety of ecosystems – like the jungle! We were in awe when we saw the footage of the Amazon River, the grasslands of Kenya, and the coastal ecosystems of South Africa. We then used our Netbooks to further explore ecosystems and food chains with a computer simulation program called Gizmos. We saw how an ecosystem can evolve over the years. The things we learned amazed us. Then we researched ecosystems from our Folklorama countries. For example,we learned about the colorful fynbos of South Africa, the wild Kenyan savannah, the lush Amazon rainforest of Brazil, and the extraordinary cloud forest of Costa Rica. Our research helped us create dioramas that represented our learning for this unit. We gathered materials and began constructing our dioramas. It was exciting! We highlighted animal and plant populations interacting within their food chains. We had lots of fun and enjoyed being innovative. Our next step is to write a five-paragraph research essay about the ecosystem we studied, focusing on a specific animal from that environment. Our unit on biomes and ecosystems was really fun, and we were able to be both creative and critical. We LOVE Science! 36 march 2013 CON NEX ION Editor’s note 2 Director’s note 3 Painting a Picture of Our Creative School 4 Learn Neuroscience - or Gardening! 6 Challenge Week 8 ASOMEX ASFG Guadalajara y ASOMEX Puebla 10 Assesing Oral Proficiency in Foreign Languages 11 Ciclo de Conferencias: Migración e Indígenas 12 From Ordinary to Extraordinary 13 Taking Time to Read 14 Gone Fishing, A Language Learning Tale 16 La clase de SSL: Aprendizaje creativo 17 Drawing to Learn! 18 9th Grade Honors Geometry Students Secure 3D Printer Donation for ASFG 19 An Afternoon with Noam Chomsky 20 Creative Message in Our Project 21 El pensamiento crítico y creativo a través de la creación de historias en grupo en Preescolar 22 History Through the Lens of the Imagination 24 The Enhancement of Critical and Creative Thinking Skills Through Internships and Job Shadowing Opportunities at ASFG 26 Mr. Nacho Makes Science Come Alive 28 Una respuesta creativa para la implementación de la RIEB 29 La música y la creatividad en preescolar 30 Proyectos en beneficio de los futuros Ex Alumnos 31 Adapted Insect Designs 32 Critical And Creative Thinkers 33 The Fish Pharaoh: A 6th grade Cross-Curricular Experience 34 Un pequeño gran proyecto 35 Creatively Exploring Biomes and Ecosystems 36 The Scientific Method: A natural phenomenon in Early Childhood 37 1 march 2013 CON NEX ION Editor’s note Joaquin, 5th grade: ”Creativity is do imaginative things.” Director´s Note E the thing in your mind that makes you arly on I realized that the majority of our students, faculty, staff, parents, and board members were skilled critical and creative thinkers and as such brought a wealth of knowledge, a willingness to listen, and great research skills to the collaborative table. Discussing an issue at any level was thought of as a serious undertaking. Over the years we have honed our creative interaction skills even more by practicing, often on a daily basis, the art of being inquisitive, open minded, and flexible. We often ask ourselves, “What if?” It is imperative that mature and vibrant schools, such as ASFG, create and foster programs and attitudes that constantly improve student learning, school climate, and community interaction. The process and practice of working together to create and achieve our goals has included great successes as well as more than a few failed attempts. However, never to be discouraged, we take a deep breath and begin again as we have experienced that there is nothing more satisfying than participating in a collaborative group where new ideas, thoughts, knowledge, or past experiences are combined to create a new way of moving forward. There is a wonderful sense of satisfaction and solidarity when the sum is more than the parts! Creative and collaborative group discussions and decisions allow us to experiment with new activities and attitudes. The fear of failure is greatly reduced. Welcome to our Creative and Critical Thinking edition Since I sent out my call-for-writers email, I have been grappling with these questions – what is the creative and critical process, and what does it look like on our campus? I have learned that being creative is systematized and intentional. It is not a random scribble on a page – but having written this, I have to say that a scribble does have the potential to be the beginning of something wonderfully creative. The creative and critical process will only thrive in a school where people talk about creativity openly. It will only thrive if teachers are trusted to carry on, invent, recreate, learn, study, and experiment. It definitely thrives in a school where 6th grade students mummify fish and design their sarcophagus during an interdisciplinary unit on Egypt. Paulina, 5th grade: “Creativity is having fresh and vivid ideas.” We do things differently at our school. We look at problems and issues from a number of angles and create solutions by systematically critically thinking about things. We debate, Skype, research, and discuss issues. This happens all over the school! Creativity takes work, time, energy, and focus. Reflection is also a crucial part of the process. It takes more than just someone like me saying, please write about your creative project. It requires you to dissect the method, have time to ponder it, and then express it. Creativity is part of our quest for beauty and goodness, whether that is beauty in a science experiment, an art project, or in realizing the interconnectedness of life. Fermin (5th grade): “Creativity is when someone lets their mind flow and think of things nobody else has thought before and put it on a piece of work.” Juan Diego in P1-6: “I love the desert for the sicri (secrets) in the cavs (caves).” “I like the yellow-orange ski (sky) at sonset (sunset).” In this issue we will visit an ES class which is taking on big issues with its teacher, Ms. O’Connor. We will see how Dr. Hogan is asking his world history students to imagine historical life, and not merely memorize the events. John McKinley (MS) challenges us to decide to learn something brand new. EC shows us the creative process of art, science, music, and reading! In ES art class, students take everyday objects and turn them into works of art with phenomenal results. Fifth grade art students redesign insects to cope with environmental changes, and the new bugs are stunning. We will read from Claudia Padilla (11th grade) about the creative process of interviewing Noam Chomsky over Skype for a science project. Norma Guinto, from the Mexican Program, reflects on the creative and critical way our teachers are taking on the Reforma. Enjoy the journey around the school as we examine what it is to be a creative and critical thinker. Thank you to all teachers, students, and administrators who have edited, written, drawn, dissected, and created for this edition. A special thanks goes to Ms. Janet for her trust in the creative and critical process over the years at ASFG. Thank you. Kristen Fry editor Kristen Fry art director María José González copy editors Karen Corona, Norma Guinto & Julie Villand creative contributors Amy Bokser, Caleb Cook, Diego Soberanes, Alejandra Rodriguez, Tina Carstensen, David Markman, David Mc Grath, Nathanael Parson, Karen Mercer, Julie Villand, John McKinley, Ms. Jessie Johnson, the Language Institute Team, Cassandra Torres, Jodi Peterson, Juliet Evans, Virginia Morgan, Karen Corona, Bárbara Reyes, Karla Rosas, Renata Rodríguez, Claudia Padilla, Joana de Freitas, Miki Kuribayashi, Patty Gutiérrez, Michael Hogan, Leonardo José Díaz, Dawn Lussier, Norma Guinto, Cristina González Ladrón de Guevara, Mónica Caballero, Chris Peterson, Mary Anne O’Connor, Sam Morrison, Chris Swiggum, Alicia Aizuri Minakata Viramontes, Alejandro Garza, Brian Zink, Claudia Padilla, Abby Thompson, Rhett Butler, Michael Balog. director general Janet Heinze The American School Foundation of Guadalajara, A.C. Colomos 2100 Colonia Italia Providencia Guadalajara, Jalisco C.P. 44630 México t. 3648-0299 www.asfg.mx “The organizations of the future will increasingly depend on the creativity of their members to survive. Great Groups offer a new model in which the leader is an equal among Titans. In a truly creative collaboration, work is pleasure, and the only rules and procedures are those that advance the common cause.” - Warren Bennis (Warren Gamaliel Bennis, born March 8, 1925, is an American scholar, organizational consultant and author, widely regarded as a pioneer of the contemporary field of Leadership studies.) Every Thursday afternoon the section principals, the director of the Mexican program, the director of instruction and I meet to discuss school issues, policies, and procedures. We share a small lunch and begin our work. At times the agenda is short, other times very long, but what amazes me is no matter what the length of the agenda, the conversations always extend beyond what is planned. Some might judge that we are wasting time or that we are off task, but usually what takes place is that we are enjoying the intellectual sparing and brainstorming sessions that lead us to very creative solutions to our issues. Yes, it takes us longer to reach consensus but we have learned to enjoy and nurture the journey as well as the end result. Our work and collaboration have become quite pleasurable and you could even say playful at times. A person with a developed sense of humor is a joy to work with and now the latest research confirms the fact that play fosters creativity which results in innovative solutions and better decisions for all stakeholders. So, if you are planning or attending a meeting, plan to have some fun! High School High School Painting a Picture of Our Creative School In his popular TedTalk soon to top 15 million views, Sir Ken Robinson shares the endearing anecdote of a little girl in a classroom drawing a picture of God. The teacher leans in to break the news gently, “Honey, no one knows what God looks like.” The child replies with unscathed focus on her drawing, “Don’t worry. They will in a minute.” Such confidence and poise. So much to gain and so little to lose... she has not yet learned inhibition and taking chances is second nature to this five year old. The call for 21 century schools to highly value and effectively teach creativity is loud and clear. We know the world is changing at a mindboggling rate. We know industrial economies are giving way to service economies. And we know that most jobs our children will occupy don’t even exist today. st With instant communication and collaboration through video conferencing, social media and collaborative 2.0 spaces, we know our global interconnectedness is greater than ever and infinitely more complex. Last month we were at a hiring fair in San Francisco, Skyping with a candidate in Missoula who later that evening conferenced with our next high school principal and his family in Mexico City. Before the end of the fair, we had met candidates in person from all over the US and Skyped with teachers in the Philippines, Mexico and China. The very nature of knowledge is changing too. Like the radio and printing press before it, the Internet brings the next seismic shift of information away from the privileged and educated few towards the knowledge-hungry masses. With a few clicks of a mouse, people all over the world are enrolling in university classes through free online providers linked with top universities. Currently at ASFG, we have a growing number of teachers enrolled in free college courses through a web-based system called Coursera. However, with access to information expanding, the challenge becomes less how to acquire knowledge but rather what to do with it. The convenience of knowing stuff dissipates as the power of imagining stuff grows. IBM’s 2010 global CEO study, Capitalizing on Complexity, found that in our increasingly complex and interconnected world, “creativity trumps all other leadership characteristics.” 4 march 2013 CON NEX ION by David Mc Grath, HS Principal The degree to which we are highly creative determines more than ever our success or failure. In the tech industry alone examples are everywhere. Google conducts 5 billion searches a day while AltaVista is unknown to this generation of digital natives. Facebook soars and MySpace is a distant memory. We browse through Chrome and Firefox and have long forgotten our Netscape bookmark. Live Profile is prolific and most teens have never heard of ICQ. Innovators know that what works today not only may not work, but will not work tomorrow. Is this a new idea that imagination, ingenuity and creativity are essential skills of our modern era? Certainly not. To quote the over-quoted Albert Einstein, “The true sign of intelligence is not knowledge but imagination.” Almost 50 years ago Ted Kennedy eulogized his fallen brother Robert, “some men see things as they are and ask why, my brother imagined things that never were and asked why not.” If we really want our students to “get ahead” in their own projected professional and personal paths towards success, they have to be able to imagine, create and innovate. To land that ideal job, or better said, to create that ideal job, our students need to be highly creative. But more important than preparing them for their own individual career and life paths, we teach creativity so that our students will be (cliché alert) global citizens and leaders of tomorrow. Can we invent our way out of the many self-created and self-perpetuated problems such as global warming, poverty and human aggression? I am optimistic, but without creative people, the answer is a resounding no. I believe our fourth ASFG learning goal, community contributor, more than individual pursuits is at the heart of our efforts to teach creativity. So if the call for creativity is loud and clear, how are we doing in education? Are we ahead, with or behind the curve? I’ll let the educational pundits argue on the theoretical stage. For us here in schools working with students, teachers and parents every day, our beliefs, decisions and strategies matter. Where should we focus our efforts? Let’s start by debunking some myths about creativity itself. What our learning community believes about creativity is as important as our determined strategies to teach it. Myth 1. Creativity is born and lives most vibrantly in the arts. I disagree. It is within the arts where creativity is most appreciated and recognized as an essential component to the learning outcomes. However, creativity needs to be highly appreciated and taught in the sciences and mathematics. A beautiful poem which envelopes us in the human spirit undoubtedly requires creativity. But so does a new scientific model or an unconventional strategy to solve a math problem. The quantitative reasoning developed in the sciences goes hand in hand with creativity. Myth 2. Creativity happens spontaneously often without out much practice or background knowledge. I disagree. I believe in “learning the basics” for true innovation seldom stems from a peripheral or shallow understanding of the conceptual building blocks within a particular subject. Myth 3. Creativity is an inborn trait and is largely unlearned. I disagree. Under the right conditions, with the right community values and with deliberate teaching and assessing, creativity can certainly be learned. Myth 4. Creativity is by nature immeasurable in any reliable way. I disagree... wholeheartedly. Assessment of creativity, while elusive, is an extremely important part of providing an education that promotes and specifically teaches it. On the last point, I, the enthusiastic quantitative thinker, Mr. McMeasurment, believe the most important next-step is to imagine and build agreement around, not only the conditions that will promote creativity but also the observable product of creativity. And I finally arrive at my thesis statement. For whatever endeavor we purport to be “effective” or “helpful” on our never-ending but infinitely rewarding journey to teach and learn creativity, we must first agree upon and then describe what a highly creative person does. Our efforts to teach creativity will only be a means to the end of being creative. As faithful backwards-designers, we must first imagine what would be the observable outcome of a highly effective program of creativity and then use those outcomes to determine if our strategies are working or not. To focus only on the conditions that allow for students to be creative and ignoring the assessment of creativity itself, is like building a beautiful playground but then never observing the students playing on it. Perhaps the easiest method of measuring our students’ creativity is applying a test like the Torrence Test of Creativity which measures five mental characteristics: fluency, elaboration, originality, resistance to premature closure and abstractness. A typical item on such test might ask students to come up with as many uses for a brick as they can. Or, students are asked to draw a picture incorporating a given figure such as the one below. Such measures are appealing because they provide norm-referenced scores of creativity that allow us to step back and see beyond our local school context. But the short-comings of such a standardized approach are widespread. Our efforts to assess the teaching and learning of creativity must be more robust and more centered in authentic projects. In-house examples at ASFG such as our emergent curriculum in early childhood, Invention Convention in elementary, Project 20/20 in middle school and our senior projects in high school result in demonstrations of creativity that might not reliably show up on a standardized test. Our daunting task to robustly assess creativity endures but so does our resolve. We continue on this journey of imagination... So let’s together paint a picture of a creative school. Or, write a poem or a play. Storyboard a short film, AutoCad a blueprint, and for those mathamagicians out there, create and test a formula that predicts the interplay of essential variables of a creative school. Whatever our creative lens, let’s picture it…. What do we see? What color are the walls and where do they stand? How is the furniture arranged and in what unique architectural spaces? What do we hear? What sounds emanate from the classrooms, halls and playgrounds? Hammers pounding, drills boring, keyboards clicking? Who is speaking, who is listening and who is the audience? What do we smell? The musty scent of crisp pages in a classic novel? The distinctive air around a freshly printed 3D model? The richness of tilled earth from our school garden? What do we feel? The human touch, the sorrow of a theatrical tragedy, the exhilaration of improv, the calming reassurance of a scientific experiment well-designed and evidence well-collected and interpreted? And, most importantly, at the end of the day, after we establish the conditions in our school that encourage creativity and continue to explicitly teach it, how do we know if our students are successful in learning to be creative? What observable outcomes, projects, products and performances will provide the evidence that our students are ready to participate in our ever changing, increasingly complex and interconnected world? 5 march 2013 CON NEX ION ASFG´s Instructional Programs Learn Neuroscience – or Gardening! by Julie Villand, Instructional Programs Director We all search for lifelong learning opportunities – ways to grow personally and professionally. In the past, returning to university implied a career change, a lifestyle change, and a financial burden. But these days, the technologically equipped and connected home means a major shift in opportunities to continue learning. With the Internet, the only hurdle that prevents most of us from taking courses in computer programming, human physiology, songwriting, or business strategy is the struggle to choose from so many interesting fields of study and the juggle of time management. Massive collections of online material such as iTunesU, TedTalks, Khan Academy, and YouTube supply today’s learners not only with entertainment, but rich sources of knowledge. These websites give us insight into an increasingly dynamic world where knowledge was previously limited to the information attainable in our geographic area. At times, browsing the Internet can be a let-down because the quantity of superficial and weak information sources exceeds the reliable information. We combat this frustration by attempting to follow only trustworthy sources. Universities and world-renown professors qualify in most situations. Elite universities that offer Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) are a new source of quality information that allow learners to experience a university course from wherever they are. MOOCs are free, non-credit, online university courses. Not all educational experiences are created equally, and neither are MOOCs. MOOCs can be a collection of raw video, high quality indexed video, document collections, quizzes, chats, and collaborative networks. Although limited, MOOCs allow for some interaction among professors and students. Some MOOCs even make use of learning platforms that adapt to the information you have mastered and allow students to move forward at different paces. Some traditional reward systems still exist within MOOCs, such as point systems and final certificates of completion. 6 march 2013 CON NEX ION Charles Darwin once said, “It is not the strongest or the most intelligent who will survive, but those who can best manage change.” MOOCs bring a whole new opportunity for those who have inquisitive minds and enjoy new learning situations. MOOCs allow us to learn collaboratively with others around the world. It is a fact that collaboration is an important trend today. It allows us to investigate the world from a variety of perspectives. Can our education be of quality if we ignore the global collaboration possible today? Can we grow professionally and personally without participating in experiences that expose us to these opportunities? By answering these questions, MOOC experiments have proven to be the ones to follow. Elite universities are giving us the opportunity to experiment with learning in a collaborative setting. Free education from these major organizations is appreciated, but is this just pure philanthropy? Will there be a future return on the investment for these organizations? Universities can extend their reputation internationally through branding, and successful professors can gain a global following previously only accomplished through writing books. In addition to these self-fulfilling reasons, universities can receive massive amounts of data on learner behavior. But more importantly, universities understand that they cannot isolate themselves from the global collaboration trend; MOOCs are allowing them to be leaders in this movement. The choice to study Introduction to Music Production at Berklee College of Music (www.coursera.org), The Ancient Greek Hero at Harvard (www.edx.org), or Frontiers and Controversies in Astrophysics at Yale (oyc.yale.edu) is now possible with a web search among the top MOOCs. Our new personal challenges are to self-organize, choose, plan, allocate time, and complete a course. Regardless of your chosen or current career, the desire to keep studying is a reality for many. A MOOC is an experiment that we all should test. Doctors can learn how to program, computer scientists can learn to appreciate Roman architecture, artists can learn English composition, and teachers can learn neuroscience. Learning within a global community provides the opportunity to participate in the critical and creative thinking that will help us discover new connections, parallels, problems, and sustainable solutions that are so necessary in all of our lives. Enroll in a course today – try browsing www.coursera.org or www.edx.org to get started. 7 march 2013 CON NEX ION Middle School Middle School Challenge Week Stop trying to please us. You will not be graded on your ability to tell us what we already know. Don’t ask if this is good enough. What does that mean anyway? Better than the minimum? Good enough for whom? Don’t ask us what you should do. That’s what you’ll be telling us soon enough. You spent 7.5 hours at school yesterday. What did you learn? And even more important, why did you learn it? Today is the day you take those 7.5 hours back. For the equivalent of one measly school day, you’re going to decide what matters. You’re going to put the self back in self-direction; the purpose back in purposeful learning. And you’re going to be creative. You’re going to decide what to learn. You’re going to decide how to learn it. And you’re going to decide when you’ve learned enough. All we ask is a glimpse behind the curtain - show us how you did it. For five days, 8th grade students were given free reign to explore their bliss for two class periods per day. This is Challenge Week. Time to waste: the roots of Challenge Week Giving a student a full school day to use as he or she pleases might seem like a recipe for wasting time, but what would you do if you were given time away from your typical routine? What if you were encouraged to surrender to something that had you intellectually preoccupied – and then encouraged to commit to fully exploring it? Atlassian, a software development firm in Australia, takes 24 hours, four times a year, to stop doing what it does best. During what they call FedEx Day (“for when it absolutely, positively has to be there overnight”), employees stop their normal routine to re-ignite their creative passions by doing something that is intentionally not what they do every day. The idea is to allow employees to explore their interests and passions, to focus on problems that have nagged them, and to 8 march 2013 CON NEX ION by John McKinley, 8th grade Social Studies Teacher basically satisfy intellectual cravings. The day is focused on Atlassian’s widely varied products, but the experience allows creativity a space to exist. At the end of 24 hours employees have three minutes to amaze their co-workers with the tasks they’ve chosen to tackle. Sometimes their work is wildly successful, and sometimes it isn’t. Regardless, the process remains an engine for generating creativity. Atlassian isn’t alone in encouraging this “off task” behavior. At Google, it’s called “20-Percent Time” (one day every week) and is attributed with creating half of Google’s products, while 3M’s version is “15% Culture.” These three companies are among a growing cadre recognizing that free time leads to creativity, and creativity leads to innovation. Is it any surprise that innovation thrives outside of a traditionally structured environment? Titans of innovative industries have repeatedly found their niche while being focused outside the status quo. Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, and Mark Zuckerberg never managed to earn university degrees, but all had driving intellectual passions, and developed expertise doing what wasn’t on the official agenda. When the student is ready, the teacher will appear According to Benjamin Goering, a software engineer at the startup, Livefyre, “Education isn’t a four-year program, it’s a mind-set.” Goering put on hold his pursuit of a computer science degree from the University of Kansas because he felt it wasn’t quite getting him where he wanted to be - making Web experiences for others. The point isn’t that seeking a degree isn’t a worthy endeavor, rather it’s that becoming educated needn’t necessarily be confined to a traditional classroom or institution. And if education can take place outside of these confines, what should schools be doing to remain relevant and necessary? According to Seth Godin, new media ideas-man and author of the manifesto, “Stop Stealing Dreams (what is school for?),” if you were in school yesterday, you likely spent much of it being prepared for a 19th century economy in order to meet the needs of the industrial age. Obedience, standardization, and learning things that can be explicitly tested have become hallmarks of the educational structure. What we need to be doing instead, he argues, is creating adaptive and intellectually passionate kids who are intrigued by the challenge of solving interesting problems. Godin writes, “Here’s the question every parent and taxpayer needs to wrestle with: Are we going to applaud, push, or even permit our schools (including most of the private ones) to continue the safe but ultimately doomed strategy of churning out predictable, testable, and mediocre factory workers?” We still have traditional physical centers of learning in place, but our libraries and our schools are no longer isolated hubs of knowledge. When the Internet flung open the doors to knowledge, we began seeing a constant barrage of people so excited by their knowledge that they’re giving it away by the millions on YouTube, blogs, and any number of other new iterations of the web. Ubiquitous access to these resources is making our classroom walls ever more porous as teachers and students savvily use technology to bring new information from the outside world into the classroom in the quest to make learning relevant. An entrepreneurial shift in education is already well underway, and it’s moving away from the fringes of the educational establishment, as opportunities for learning become less exclusive. CS 221, the Stanford University course on artificial Intelligence, became one of the first official MOOCs (massive open online courses) when it offered the entire course, for free, via the Internet. 160,000 users registered for the course. 20,000 completed it. Student enrollment at Stanford is 15,870. The desire to spread knowledge is making gains against the desire to merely possess it. Excuses of lacking access and lacking experience “I hear and I forget. I see and I remember. I do and I understand.” - Confucius have evaporated. The only thing effectively standing in anyone’s way is a lack of will. No one can force you to learn anything When people talk about the value of lifelong learning, they’re often talking about valuing knowledge for its own sake, continuously craving knowledge and discovery, and somehow developing the mindset that becoming educated is an opportunity and not a burden. Challenge Week is where the rubber meets the road. It’s a student’s chance to demonstrate that he or she values the opportunity to learn. If this value isn’t present it serves as a chance to develop it. Challenge I: Learn whatever you want An inconceivable amount of information is now literally seconds away. It’s no longer enough to simply absorb the content you’re presented – decision-making about what to know is itself a part of the learning process. Somehow, this part of the process was the most difficult for students. When you’re so used to being instructed, having to decide for yourself what you want to know is fraught with complication. Suddenly they weren’t so sure what interested them. When it hit them that the time they were wasting really was their own time to learn, students became more selective in how they spent their time. They began seeking value in lieu of entertainment. Some discovered that they really were just wasting time, and set out to actually find something worth learning. It was a paradigm shift. Again and again students would ask if a topic was a good one to study. They were really asking for us to tell them what to know. They were like salesmen who wouldn’t take no for an answer, rephrasing the question in order to gain anything other than, “Is it something you’re interested in?” and “Will it challenge you to learn it?” They were forced to answer the question for themselves: What do I want to know? Doing that is the real key to becoming a lifelong learner. Most kids are taken to school where they perform for a teacher while being told they should value learning for its own sake. They’re required to value what we’re telling them rather than develop their own sense of autonomy in deciding for themselves. I won’t claim that the week produced a sea of students focused on learning in a way I’d never seen before; but it was different and good. For one thing, students were engaged. Most started class without being told and many stayed after class to finish what they were doing, scarcely noticing the bell they normally so eagerly await. Students began to rely on teachers for clarity, not instruction. Many used YouTube tutorials (found in baffling abundance and specificity) while others found experts in their families or community. fourth languages – not because their families had moved or enrolled them in an institute, but because for seven and a half hours they could choose to do so. Kids sought clarifying materials and used critical thinking skills. Who knew solving a Rubik’s cube was a simple matter of knowing and then applying a few algorithms? One of the most frustrating questions a teacher hears is, “Why are we doing this?” For one week we were able to respond: You’re doing it because you want to learn it. They recognized connections between their individual challenges to create communities of interest, collaborating with each other and demonstrating their progress. They monitored their progress knowing they would need to show classmates what they had done. Most implausibly of all, some even gave themselves homework – because doing what interests you doesn’t really seem like work at all, and you can’t always do it in a day. As educators we are always trying to make connections between the real world and our content. But when we stripped away the content requirements, there was only the real world left – that, and Edgar studying science, math, and English – while developing visual/spatial awareness – as he investigated something he’s always wondered about: the internal combustion engine. In the past this has often been a vocational subject, but for Edgar, might it be the first step towards mechanical engineering? We saw Anna, Mariana and Joaquin learning sign language, at first independently, until they realized how much more efficient group work could make it. Are they fluent? Of course not. But the seed of curiosity has been sown. Andrea and Paola spent hours at home identifying the underlying structure of dress patterns, consulting experts in the field and practicing rudimentary sewing techniques. Kids were learning second, third, and 9 march 2013 CON NEX ION PE & Sports Language Institute ASOMEX Puebla En la ciudad de Puebla, del 7 al 12 de febrero nuestro equipo de futbol Juvenil “C” y los representativos de basquetbol de las categorías Juvenil “A” e Infantil participaron en el ASOMEX organizado por The American School Foundation of Puebla. Cabe resaltar que los tres equipos obtuvieron en su competencia el trofeo Sportmanship, el cual se otorga a los equipos con mejor comportamiento tanto dentro como fuera de la cancha. Los resultados obtenidos por nuestros equipos fueron los siguientes: ASOMEX ASFG Guadalajara 2013 por Alejandro Garza, Director Deportivo del ASFG En la última reunión de Directores Atléticos ASOMEX se optó por un sistema de convivencias masivas con competencias deportivas en una misma sede, con el fin de garantizar a nuestros alumnos e invitados un evento con las medidas necesarias de seguridad y optimizar el uso de las instalaciones deportivas de cada institución anfitriona. Es por ello que del 25 al 30 de enero fuimos anfitriones de la convivencia deportiva ASOMEX en donde por primera vez se llevó a cabo la organización de dos eventos deportivos de manera simultánea: futbol en la categoría juvenil “A” en ambas ramas y voleibol en la rama femenil en todas sus categorías. Los resultados obtenidos por nuestros equipos fueron los siguientes: Deporte Voleibol Voleibol Voleibol Voleibol Futbol Equipo Infantil Juvenil “A” Juvenil “B” Juvenil “C” Juvenil “A” varonil Lugar Primer Lugar Primer Lugar Primer Lugar Primer Lugar Sexto Lugar Deporte Basquetbol Basquetbol Basquetbol Basquetbol Futbol Futbol Equipo Infantil Infantil Juvenil “A” Juvenil “A” Juvenil “C” Juvenil “C” Lugar Primer Lugar SPORTSMANSHIP SPORTSMANSHIP Sexto Lugar SPORTSMANSHIP Sexto Lugar Enhorabuena a todos nuestros estudiantes deportistas que representaron a nuestro colegio en estos dos magnos eventos, nos sentimos orgullosos de su esfuerzo y dedicación. ¡MUCHAS FELICIDADES! Assessing Oral Proficiency in Foreign Languages Novice; Advanced, Intermediate, and Novice being divided into High, Medium and Low sublevels. The interview is interactive and adapts to the speaking abilities of the individual being tested. The topics that are discussed during the interview are based on the interests and experiences of the test candidate. Through a series of personalized questions, the interviewer elicits examples of the candidate’s ability to handle the communication tasks specified for each level of proficiency in order to establish a clear 'floor' and 'ceiling' of consistent functional ability. Often candidates are asked to take part in a role-play. This task provides the opportunity for linguistic functions not easily elicited through the conversational format. The interview is double rated, and an Official ACTFL Oral Proficiency Certificate stating the candidate’s proficiency level is issued to the candidate. The assessment of oral skills in a foreign language has always been a brain-teaser for foreign language educators around the world. Whereas most research on assessment agrees that listening, reading, and writing skills are assessed effectively to some extent through standardized tests such as the TOEFL iBT or IELTS, these tests have not proven to be valid or reliable regarding oral language. Two years ago, Michael Dunand of the American School Language Institute conducted an extensive literature review entitled “ESL/ EFL instructor´s classroom assessment practices and the ACTFL (American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages) Oral Proficiency Interview: a pragmatic approach.” The ACTFL OPI is currently used worldwide by academic institutions, government agencies, and private corporations for purposes such as academic placement, student assessment, program evaluation, professional certification, hiring, and promotional qualification. The ACTFL OPI is recognized by the American Council on Education (ACE) for the awarding of college credit. More than 10,000 OPIs in 37 different languages are conducted through the ACTFL Testing Program every year. We are thrilled to be working on this very important project which we believe will help the institute in reaching excellency in our language programs. by the Language Institute Team The research concluded that The ACTFL Oral Proficiency Interview (OPI) was a superior assessment tool, stating, “It seems widely accepted that the OPI is substantially reliable, with inter-rater reliability ranging from .94 to .99.” The institute decided to apply for a full membership at ACTFL as well as promoting the OPI tester certification among its staff; first in English and French, and after two years in other less-taught languages. Furthermore, as a language institute, we were very interested in being able to assess our students/teachers proficiency across all languages in a standardized fashion. The OPI is a valid and reliable standardized procedure for the global assessment of functional speaking ability. It is a 20-30 minute face-to-face or telephonic interview between a certified ACTFL tester and an examinee. It determines how well a person speaks a language by comparing his or her performance of specific communication tasks with the criteria for each of ten proficiency levels described in the ACTFL Proficiency Guidelines 2012 – Speaking. The ten proficiency levels are: Superior, Advanced, Intermediate, and 10 march 2013 CON NEX ION 11 march 2013 CON NEX ION Mexican Program Elementary From Ordinary to Extraordinary Ciclo de conferencias: Migración e indígenas por Cassandra Torres, alumna de noveno grado Los días 5 y 6 de febrero se llevó a cabo el II Ciclo de conferencias Migración e indígenas 2013. En estos días la escuela recibió a grandes invitados como: Berónica Palacios, Ana Paula Uruñuela, Sabrina y Scott Brennan, Eugenia Vignon Castrejón y el fotógrafo José Hernández-Claire. Ellos informaron a los estudiantes y maestros del ASFG sobre la migración. Muchos se podrán preguntar ¿qué es la migración? Y la respuesta es: cuando un grupo social, sea humano o animal, realiza un traslado de su lugar de origen, a otro donde considere que mejorará su calidad de vida. La Lic. Eugenia Vignon Castrejón, del Programa Paisano, habló sobre el tema de riesgos y peligros del migrante. Durante su presentación, la Lic. Eugenia nos relató historias de las cuales ella había sido parte en Programa Paisano. No solo nos dio una idea acerca de su profesión sino que también nos comentó, a fondo, sobre la migración. Se puede decir que la gente emigra en busca de mejores oportunidades de vida, en busca de trabajo, a causa de desastres naturales, la violencia, la globalización, la unificación familiar, por persecución o por aventura. La migración se desglosa en cuatro tipos; interna, estacional, externa y la repatriación. Se considera migración interna cuando se migra dentro del país o de estados, estacional cuando es solo por un periodo de tiempo determinado, externa cuando es fuera del país, y repatriación cuando el 12 march 2013 CON NEX ION migrante es deportado por un país, o este decide regresar a lugar de origen. Durante su viaje el migrante se enfrenta con grandes dificultades y desafíos. Unos son víctimas del tráfico ilícito de personas. Otros son discriminados, defraudados, o pierden sus papeles. Ellos tienen derecho a la vida, a la libertad y seguridad, a la salud, a la justicia, a la libertad de religión, a trabajar, a una unidad familiar y por supuesto, al libre tránsito. Y, sin embargo, sus derechos frecuentemente no son respetados. Organizaciones como Programa Paisano, OPIS y Grupos Beta se encarga de ayudar al migrante en cualquier desafío y peligro que este se encuentre. Es importante estar informado acerca de este tema ya que nos afecta como mexicanos. Si las personas se encuentran informadas se puede ayudar y prevenir varios de los peligros que un migrante puede enfrentar. Como parte de la comunidad del American School nosotros debemos de ponernos en acción y buscar formas para ayudar. Esto solo se puede lograr si estamos informados. Por esta razón me gustaría agradecer a todas aquellas personas que estuvieron con nosotros los días 5 y 6 de febrero platicándonos sobre migración e indígenas. Los invito a todos a ponernos en acción para darles a algunos una mejor oportunidad de vida. Image above: Cristobal Martinez 4-31 Images on the left from top to bottom: Ana Karina Carrillo 4-28, Emma Arnold 4-31, Hiraku Oda 4-32, Luca Boschetti 4-33, Isabella Roulbet 4-31, Diego Salcedo 4-31, Diego Padilla 4-32. by Jodi Peterson, Elementary Art ASFG’s fourth grade artists have been flexing their creative muscles this month. Their challenge: to transform an ordinary object into an extraordinary work of art. First, students honed their observational drawing skills. Paying close attention to details and proportions, they rendered an object as realistically as they could. Their choices were a bottle, a hole-punch, or a pair of scissors. Then students put their imaginations to work brainstorming all the ways they could transform their object. Finally, with the goal of surprising the viewer and making them look twice, students focused in on their most unique idea. The results are fun, silly and unexpected. We hope you enjoy! 13 march 2013 CON NEX ION Library Library Taking Time to Read by Juliet Evans and Virginia Morgan The ASFG Upper Library has been working with the high school English department to update reading practices among the students. The goal is to direct students back to reading traditional literature. Traditional literature in this article refers to reading that prompts thought and reflection, and goes beyond the classics. Traditional literature includes modern writers, but in general excludes “genre fiction,” a category found on the Amazon book webpage and often features authors such as John Grisham and Danielle Steel. Recent studies have shown that the Internet has changed reading practices in the past two decades. In the 2007 National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) study titled To Read or Not To Read: A Question of National Consequence, it was reported that literary reading is declining among all education levels and all age levels, but particularly among teens and young adults. For the NEA, this “decline in literary reading foreshadows an erosion in cultural and civic participation.” *Did you know that literary readers are more than twice as likely as non-readers to volunteer or do charity work? One of ASFG’s learning goals is to educate students to be community contributors. We need to create literary readers in order to meet this goal. The change in reading practices also impacts ASFG’s learning goal to educate students to be critical and creative thinkers. Superficial reading (like scanning) has increased, and most reading requires less concentration. Reading online lacks depth. (Although it is too early for studies to identify exactly what is going on in the brain while Internet surfing versus reading a novel, it is known that the two processes are very differently neurologically.) Educators worry that students are not reading deeply and are not taking time to develop understanding. Virginia Morgan, ASFG Upper School librarian, believes that time is the biggest concern here: “Students need time to digest what they are reading, to read between the lines, and to reflect on the ideas they have read. When a student reads deeply, he or she is able to reflect and respond independently- and this helps create a critical and creative thinker. I think students are reading widely - on the Internet - but they are not reading well.” The end goal, therefore, is to direct students to literature that promotes deep reading. 14 march 2013 CON NEX ION This fall, an electronic resource list was created for high school English students. It is a recommended reading list compiled from several others, including a College Board list of recommendations for students preparing for the Advance Placement exam in English Literature and English Language, as well as a famous “Great Books” list. The list cross-references all those books available in the library, in both print and electronic form. The books that were missing from the list are being purchased. Newer editions have also been ordered to replace the shabbier ones. The library is also building up resources for access to digital editions. The English department, in turn, has been using the recommended list with its students. How to Encourage Reading with Young Children The foundation of becoming a lifelong reader starts at home. Parents have a critical role to play in the development of reading habits of their child. The example we set at home is highly influential in shaping the extent to which our children value reading and develop the reading skills to become critical and creative thinkers. There are many things you can do to encourage your child to grow as a reader: • Lead by example: make sure your child sees you reading at home regularly. • Create a quiet, cozy place at home that allows a child to focus completely on his/her book without distractions or interruptions. • Read a bedtime story to your preschooler every night & ask questions about the story. • Once your child starts to read by him/herself, be a good listener and ask questions to check for understanding. • If your child is struggling to read a book, take turns reading pages. This way you can explain new words and discuss what’s happening. • Provide a wide variety of reading materials at home. • Look for books to match your child’s passions - sports, movies, animals, heroes, monsters, etc. • Be aware of what your older children are reading - have conversations about the theme and how it relates to real life, or discuss the characters and the choices they make. By setting the example of being a reader and showing interest in what our child is reading, we model that we value reading and the benefits it brings – such as training the mind to comprehend, analyze, criticize, and eventually synthesize information and ideas: in short, to be critical and creative thinkers. * National Endowment for the Arts, USA (2007). To Read or Not To Read: A Question of National Consequence. Retrieved February 17, 2013 from http://www.nea.gov/research/toread.pdf 15 march 2013 CON NEX ION ASAP Program Gone Fishing a language learning tale by Karen Corona, Academic Support Director Seven boys Three languages English learners Gone fishing You never know what the outcome will be. The teacher’s goal for the activity was to review vocabulary and practice categorizing nouns. The boys’ plan was to have fun going fishing in the classroom. And all were successful. Just how could this be? In order to help students review key vocabulary, Tabetha Valencia, teacher in the ASAP classroom, planned an activity in which they would individually brainstorm, listing all the nouns they could think of. The next step was to categorize them as people, places, animals and things. And then to keep the interest of this multi-aged and multi-lingual group of boys, she had them write the groups of nouns on small cards which she casually mentioned was fishing for nouns. Before you knew what was happening the boys were turning their vocabulary cards into “fish” which were ready for the fish pond. And instead of displaying the cards on the bulletin board, one of them thought of hanging the “fish.” What would they hang from? Why fishing poles of course! And what to make the fishing poles from in the classroom? The boys experimented with various materials until they discovered one that worked. They tightly rolled a piece of paper lengthwise, then threaded string through it tying it to one end of the “fishing pole” while the other end hung to “catch” the word-card “fish.” And then someone suggested that once they caught the fish, they should barbecue and eat them. This entailed creating a paper fire, utensils and plates. All the while the brainstorming, sharing of materials, evaluating options, problem-solving, and negotiating about what to do next HAD to go on in ENGLISH – their shared language. While the boys’ conversations revolved around the fishing activity, their teacher’s interventions focused on tying this vocabulary review to their prior knowledge from varying semantic settings such as the classroom, their homes and families, the environment and animal habitats they’d been studying together. Much of her instruction, while clearly guided by her thorough planning, allows for an element of creativity and this was no exception. Students have access to a wide range of learning materials including books, technology, paper, scissors, markers, glue – you name it and you’ll find it in the ASAP classroom. This facilitates the spontaneity and creativity exemplified by these boys as they reviewed and applied their English language skills while “going fishing” together. 16 march 2013 CON NEX ION Elementary La clase de SSL: Aprendizaje creativo por Bárbara Reyes, Maestra de SSL - Elementary School Hace 2 años me ofrecieron nuevamente la posición de maestra de primaria del grupo de español como segunda lengua. En ese momento me quedé paralizada. Pensamientos, sensaciones y emociones llegaron a mí como en torrente. Me hice una pregunta sin respuesta ¿Por qué a mí? Pude percibir como un escalofrío recorría mi cuerpo a mil revoluciones por minuto y entonces sentí miedo. Mientras trataba de aquietar mi mente, respirar profundo para tener todo bajo control, las palabras se agolpaban en mi boca como queriendo salir y entonces solamente pude decir una… SI!! En SSL no hemos encontrado un programa de lengua extranjera que se adapte al 100% al tipo de grupo como los que tenemos en el colegio. Es por eso que cuando se tiene un grupo tan variado como el de español como segunda lengua, donde hay una confluencia de nacionalidades, edades, creencias, costumbres y diferentes niveles académicos no hay otra manera de salir adelante que echando mano de la creatividad, que yo en forma personal defino como: esa comezón que te hace moverte en una dirección y te invita a buscar algo para aplacarla, “algo” que finalmente te produce una sensación de placer. Lo primero que yo hago como maestra de este grupo, es no tomarme tan en serio. Con ellos soy una más, aprendiendo a convivir con niños de diferentes culturas. Otra más, aprendiendo un idioma, su idioma. Claro que sigo siendo la líder, la responsable pero compartiendo esa parte infantil que nos permite reírnos cuando las cosas no salen como queremos y sorprendernos cuando los resultados rebasan las expectativas. Comparto con ustedes algunos puntos que tomo en cuenta para que en la clase de SSL se lleve a cabo el aprendizaje creativo: en la siguiente metáfora. Si tuviéramos que 1 Pensemos preparar nuestro pastel favorito ¿utilizaríamos ingredientes de baja calidad o los mejores que podamos conseguir? Yo creo que todos contestarán que los mejores. Ese es uno de los puntos más importantes, lo que metamos en el horno es lo que obtendremos. Por eso lo primero que hago cuando estoy planeando, es buscar lo mejor que pueda darle a mis alumnos, desde libros, materiales, acomodo del salón, experiencias, etc., para que ellos cuenten con una materia prima de excelente calidad que les asegure poder obtener “el mejor pastel que puedan hornear” algo en otra cosa es lo que hacemos en la clase 3 Transformar de SSL y es algo que la hace muy especial. Esto es, la mayoría del material que empleamos es elaborado por los alumnos, combinamos mi necesidad de enseñarles algo con sus ganas de hacer. Es trabajo de equipo, expongo la idea de lo que necesitamos, les explicó para que lo utilizaremos y entonces me dicen: “mira Ms. Bárbara hay que hacerlo así” ponen manos a la obra y aprenden mientras hacen. riqueza de culturas es el siguiente factor que permite que 4 Laveamos las cosas de una forma poco habitual. El intercambio de roles por ejemplo, es algo que hacemos con regularidad. A veces jugamos a que ellos son los maestros y deben enseñarle a sus compañeros algo en lo que son expertos, o simplemente aparentamos que ya son expertos en algo aunque sea un concepto que recién conocen. La diferencia no se nota, pues el ir más allá de sus propias limitaciones les permite encontrar recursos para terminar dominando el tema. quinto punto que tiene que ver con creatividad es la 5 Elinteligencia personal de cada uno. Veámoslo desde otra perspectiva. Imaginemos que cada uno de nosotros es un cochecito que debe circular por la carretera del programa académico. Los instrumentos con que viene equipado cada modelo y marca de cochecito para empezar ya son diferentes y dependerá de las habilidades del conductor para hacer que el auto llegue a la meta, de la mejor manera posible. Aquí el alumno echa mano de sus recursos para resolver las situaciones que se le presentan de la mejor manera posible. último y no menos importante es la motivación. Ese 6 Elelemento que combinado con los hábitos permite que el alumno sea más o menos creativo. Los alumnos asisten con gusto a la clase porque saben que aprenden de una manera “diferente” y no es precisamente porque se la pasen haciendo trabajos que implican menos reto, no. Sino que son considerados sus talentos naturales para enriquecer la clase y al no forzar menos el carrito en el que les tocó vivir la clase se vuelve más placentera. En conclusión, ¿qué es lo que hace que una clase sea creativa y otra no? “La combinación innovadora de elementos existentes”(1) (1) Arau, C. (2008) Ontocreatividad. Guadalajara, México: Quanta Editores, S.A. de C.V. cosa que hago para que en mi clase sea creativa 2 Laes: segunda tener la oreja como radar para escuchar lo que los alumnos dicen, comentan, platican. Escuchar sus comentarios ha permitido que la mayoría de los proyectos hayan salido directamente de sus inquietudes. La creatividad proviene de escuchar atentamente más que de imaginar cosas. 17 march 2013 CON NEX ION Early Childhood High School Observational drawing has become a regular activity in our classroom. It challenges the children to produce detailed and quality drawings that allow them to reflect on what they are observing, but also on their drawing capabilities. As a group we have discussed drawing and how it helps us learn. Iñigo said, “Writing is drawing letters, but drawing lets you draw anything you want!” Camila stated, “When you draw something you learn about it.” Valeria said, “You can draw what you see or what is in your head.” This statement from Valeria led us to the topic of using drawing as tool for different learning styles. The children understand how this form of communication helps them learn, but to further investigate drawing, we did an experiment in the classroom. Drawing to Learn! by Karla Rosas, K9 Teacher Two years ago early childhood invited Sylvia Chard, a founder of The Project Approach, to come to Guadalajara and talk to us about the importance of drawing with our students. Sylvia believes that if children from a very young age learn how to draw something they will better understand their immediate environment. She views drawing as a form of communication that allows the child to study his or her surroundings and how things are made or how they work. In Kinder 9, students have used drawing and sketching to study our environment. We studied the life cycle of plants and the parts of a plant. Students observed potted plants, pineapple, corn, carrots, and the growth of lima bean seeds over several weeks and then were asked to produce the details they found in their drawings. They noticed the patterns and shapes found in these fruits and vegetables. While doing this, the children began to make detailed observations of what they saw. Josh said, “Look the corn must have over 100 seeds on it.” and Maria pointed out that the pattern in the pineapple is “diamond-shaped.” We also used the observational drawing technique to study Betta fish. The children observed two types of Siamese fighting fish. We looked at the two fish and the children began to notice the shape of the fins were different. Andrés stated, “The big fish has fins that are oval and the little fish has pointy fins.” We then sketched both fish and focused on these details that were observed by Andrés. The children learned that by closely observing fish fins you can define what type of fish it might be. 18 march 2013 CON NEX ION Kinder students are encouraged to learn many words for each letter of the alphabet. We introduce and expose them to vocabulary using different techniques and strategies such as reading books, creating lists, playing games and drawing pictures. To help the children understand the benefits of drawing we did an activity in the classroom. We first used a standardized worksheet that required the children to look at a group of pictures and color the ones that started with the letter H or cross out the ones that did not. The children worked for approximately twenty minutes on the activity. The next day when I asked the students during circle time to please help me name vocabulary starting with the letter H, the only word they could think of was “house,” which is found on the alphabet strip. I reminded the children of the activity we had done the day before and asked them again why they could not remember any of the pictures from the worksheet. They themselves were surprised they were not able to come up with more vocabulary. I proposed that instead of using a worksheet to learn the vocabulary we try a different activity. This time we tried it with the letter C. I asked the children, “What do you think would happen if you drew pictures of things that started with the letter C?” Alex answered, “We will remember them because we drew them.” So we tried it. First, I asked the children to look around the classroom and name things that started with the letter C. The students listed items like cat, cookie, cake, Camila, car, etc. Then we gave them a piece of paper and they drew three things starting with that letter. The next day the children were able to remember several vocabulary words to represent the letter C. They were amazed and proud of themselves! Through drawing the children have discovered they can learn about their environment, or express their ideas. Drawing is not just an art form, but a way to communicate what the child sees and the thought process of learning. Or as Iñigo said, “So we can have fun learning!” 9TH GRADE HONORS GEOMETRY STUDENTS SECURE 3D PRINTER DONATION FOR ASFG by Renata Rodríguez, HS Student When our Honors Geometry teacher, Rhett Butler, talked to my class about 3D printing, I had never heard of it before. In fact, except for a couple of my classmates, no one had heard about it. So Rhett gave us a brief overview, basically getting across the fact that 3D printing is a developing technology that gives designers the ability to turn a virtual digital 3D model (e.g. SketchUp or AutoCad) into a solid, physical 3D model. Our homework for the evening was to learn more about the technology as it would be the topic of our quarter project. We learned that 3D printing is based on the concept of additive manufacturing (AM) where the digital model is interpreted as a series of cross-sections by the printing software. The printer takes the software’s instructions and constructs the physical model layer-by-layer. Though several techniques can be utilized, one popular 3D printer design employs a nozzle similar to an ink-jet printer. The major difference is that this nozzle contains a heating element to melt a plastic filament that is fed to the printer from a coil. The nozzle is under precise numerical control and lays down successive layers of beads of the plastic, which quickly solidify after being extruded from the nozzle. Though 3D printing has been around since the mid-1990s, it hasn’t been until the last couple of years that it has reached the do-it-yourself hobbyist level with relatively inexpensive, desktop-sized machines. Nike uses 3D printers to create multi-colored prototypes of shoes. The automotive and aviation industries use 3D printers to make parts. Physicians are using it to make prosthetics, hearing aids, artificial teeth, and bone grafts, as well as replicate models of organs, tumors, and other anatomical structures. The technology has even made it into pop culture when Britney Spears featured 3D printers in her music video of Scream and Shout. Many manufacturing experts believe that we are in the midst of an industrial revolution and it won’t be long before consumers are downloading plans for printing 3D products in their own homes. Manufacturers will produce products on-demand rather than in large runs, improving inventory management and reducing warehouse space. People in remote locations (e.g. on the moon) could fabricate objects that would otherwise be inaccessible to them. Lastly, 3D printing can save money and material over subtractive manufacturing techniques in which expensive material (e.g. titanium) is cut, drilled, or milled, as very little raw material is wasted. We assumed our project would be a “research paper”, but then Dr. Butler asked us: “When was the last time you gave a high-stakes presentation aimed at persuading a stranger to your way of thinking?” A few of us mentioned our Model United Nations (MUN) experience, but our teacher was unimpressed and reminded us that during an MUN simulation we were not “really” a group of delegates representing different nations; we were only pretending to be. He promised that this project would be authentic and that ASFG students’ access to a 3D printer depended on us. A meeting would be arranged with a local entrepreneur interested in supporting the acquisition of a 3D printer and the strength of our presentation would determine whether or not he would grant the request or not. The pressure was on. students should learn? • How difficult is it to learn the software and hardware basics of 3D printing? Are ASFG 9th grade students up to the task? • What make and model 3D printer do we want and why? Deep down we had doubts that our teacher would find a suitable patron for the project, but unbeknownst to us, Dr. Butler had already made contact with Mr. Timothy Willing, an ASFG parent and General Director & President, Miller Packaging, and an expert in plastics. It turned out that Mr. Willing is enthusiastic about 3D printing and is highly interested in seeing our student community have access to the technology. All we had to do was convince him that we were adequately prepared to make use of the gift and the printer would be ours. We started off the presentation process by breaking up into groups of three or four students and presenting in class. Ms. Jennie Kies, ASFG Middle School Technology teacher, had experience with 3D printing at her previous school in Iowa and attended the sessions to give us valuable feedback. As if planned beforehand, each group seemed to focus on a different aspect of 3D printing and broadened our fund of knowledge. While one group became adept in the details of the printing process, another group downloaded proprietary software and began experimenting with virtual models and “preparing” them for printing. Numerous connections were made to ASFG’s Learning Goals and each group made a strong case for the feasibility of a 3D printer at our school. After each group had presented, we voted to select a seven student all-star team who would make the decisive presentation to Mr. Willing in the Board Room. The students chosen to deliver this presentation were: Paloma Calderon, Sabrina Cuevas, Rodrigo Díaz, Francis McCann, Luciana Méndez, Daniel Soberanes, and me, Renata Rodríguez. The presentation took place on Wednesday, November 7, 2012 in the Pink Palace. Mr. McGrath, Deputy Director General, presided. The whole meeting was nerve-racking, but our presentations went smoothly and honestly seemed to impress Mr. Willing. A rather lengthy question-and-answer session followed the formal presentation where numerous and detailed specifications of the various 3D printer models were discussed. At the end of the evening, Mr. Willing was gracious enough to agree to support the acquisition of ASFG’s first 3D printer and thanked us for our enthusiasm and preparation. Significantly, through his donation and our hard work, ASFG will be the first high school in Guadalajara to own this technology. Presently, Mr. Willing and ASFG faculty and administrators are evaluating the current 3D printer options to select the best printer for our school. Thank you Mr. Willing! The essential questions to be answered in our presentation were: • What is 3D printing and why is it something that ASFG 9th grade Mr. Timothy Willing and students Photo: Juan Alarcon 19 march 2013 CON NEX ION High School An Afternoon with When Mr. Balog, my 10th grade biology teacher, asked my group (Francisco García-Bedoy, Constanza Aceves, Pamela Quirarte, and myself) to choose which unanswered question in science we wanted to learn about, we decided on: What is the biological basis of language and universal grammar? I didn’t know anything about the subject, but I was eager to learn about it. When I began to research language and grammar, I found out that there are many theories regarding language acquisition which go beyond just Spanish or English. After I looked at several Web pages and articles, I realized that there was one name that I saw over and over. This name was Noam Chomsky. I had no idea who he was or what he had done. The only thing I knew was that he was a famous linguist and that he had several theories of language acquisition. For this project, we needed to interview scientists that are important in the field. I found out that Noam Chomsky is a professor at MIT, and I emailed him. I was very happy because we needed to send as many emails as possible to scientists in order to get a response by the end of the week. I told Mr. Balog that I had just sent an email to a guy named Noam Chomsky, and that from my research I knew that he was well known in linguistics. Mr. Balog told me that it would be amazing just to get a response from him. 20 march 2013 CON NEX ION High School Noam Chomsky Creative�Message�in�Our�Project by Joana de Freitas and Miki Kuribayashi, HS Students by Claudia Padilla, HS Student Two days later, I got a response saying, “Interested to learn of your plans and concerns. But I am utterly deluged with interview requests, and it’s a physical impossibility to keep up. The most I can say is that I’ll try, but can’t promise.” When I saw this email, the first thing I did was grab my Webster’s World Dictionary and Thesaurus to understand all the words he was using. Then, after several more emails to him and his secretary, I scheduled a phone interview for January 25th, 2013. At that time, it was only the end of November, but I had an interview with Noam Chomsky! I knew I could wait. During Christmas break, I went to Barnes & Noble and asked if they had anything written by Noam Chomsky. The employee thought I was majoring in linguistics. When I told him that I was only a 10th grader who happened to be lucky enough to have an interview with Noam Chomsky, he couldn’t believe me. He sat down with me for about an hour and explained everything I needed to know about Chomsky’s books. I ended up buying four books. One of the books was Linguistics for Dummies, because before this assignment, I barely knew what that subject was. I also got a comic book explaining Chomsky’s work, and two books written by him: Language and Thought and Language and the Problems of Knowledge. I had to look up most of the things in the books on the Internet, as well as several words in the dictionary. In the three weeks left before the interview I became an “expert” in Noam Chomsky’s work regarding linguistics. With the help of Mr. Balog, I came up with several questions to ask him in the interview. I researched his theories, languages that have been lost over time, isolated children, and even bonobos (great apes studied by some linguists). After creating a set of questions, I sorted them out from most important to least important. I thought I was set for the interview. It was Friday, January 25th, and I was very nervous. I had his phone number, and I would call him when the time came. I called him right on time, but after a while his secretary answered and told me to call back in 15 minutes. Again, he is Noam Chomsky, so I could wait as long as he wanted. I called back about 20 minutes later and he answered. I wasn’t quite sure what to call him – Professor? Doctor? Noam? Mr.? I just went with my instinct. I began to introduce my group and my class, but he cut me off and told me to start asking the questions. I first asked him what he thought about the bonobos and the research that scientists had done regarding them being able to speak. He told me that was a stupid question, and I just wanted to die. But he gave us a very interesting answer to why he thought the research done on bonobos had nothing to do with linguistics, and told us that it was the same as studying bees’ communication and comparing it with humans. After talking to him for a while, he realized that I was well-prepared and that my questions were very well-researched. That gave me a lot of confidence to continue with the interview. I think the best feeling was half-way through the interview when I began to hear him lighten up and laugh a bit. After the interview my group and I had to make a podcast explaining the biological basis of language and grammar. This project made me realize that the American School gives us the tools to be greater and to achieve success, but we need to do it ourselves. We have to trust ourselves to be able to grow and improve and to step out of our comfort zones every once in a while. We can’t give up the first time we don’t succeed at something; if we really want something we have to fight for it. I learned that the more you read about a topic and the more you research it, the more you will know – and the more confident you will feel about what you know. In our video production class, we were assigned to make a stop motion video. In a stop-motion video, many pictures are put together and fast-forwarded to create a video, kind of like a flip-book. When we discussed our project, we came up with two ideas; a video about a potato, or a video using paper. Our first idea was to create a story based on the life of a potato, from the supermarket to our dining table, but then we came up with a better idea. We did not want our project to be something ordinary; we wanted it to be something special, something that had a meaning. Our idea was to use our project to deliver a message. We changed our main focus to paper recycling. We thought that if our idea included an eco-friendly theme, it would be a positive message, and the video would apply to everyone. Our video starts with a crumpled paper, thrown away by children because he was ripped. No one wanted to draw on him. He starts crying because he wants someone to draw on him. Then a pencil asks him the reason for his tears. After hearing from the paper, the pencil has the great idea of drawing on the paper to make him happy. The paper, first crumpled, morphs into a paper without any wrinkles. This shows the paper’s joy at the words from the pencil. After the pencil finishes his drawing, markers appear to add color. At the end of the video, the drawing gets hung because it is beautiful, even if the paper is ripped. This idea shows, like the Ugly Duckling, how something with humble beginnings can turn out to be something of beauty. In making this video, we wanted to be creative in our delivery of the message to our audience. We decided the video should be simple, but valuable as a tool of societal change. The film’s simplicity makes it understandable to all ages and hopefully elicits sympathy. We tried to make the video with few words and simple movement of characters. The sense of wonder that a child has when creating a drawing is a universal theme to which anyone in our audience can relate. We hope that our message inspires not only a more eco-friendly audience, but a more creative one. You can watch our video at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z4JI9811jDI 21 march 2013 CON NEX ION Early Childhood Early Childhood El pensamiento crítico y creativo a través de la creación de historias en grupo en Preescolar por Patty Gutiérrez, maestra de K6 “Una vez estaba un niño jugando futbol en el patio de atrás de su casa, aventó la pelota y cayó en una casa. Se escuchó un rugido muy fuerte y venía de la casa. Era un monstruo que empezó a perseguir al niño, pero corría tan rápido que se tropezó. Cuando se paró, estaba muy enojado y lo empezó a perseguir otra vez. Entonces, el niño se despertó y se dió cuenta que había sido una pesadilla. " La creación de historias promueve la creatividad, la confianza y el desarrollo del lenguaje oral y escrito. Uno de los retos al trabajar en la creación de historias con niños de preescolar, es introducir la estructura de una historia sin inhibir la imaginación. Cuestionando a los niños de K6 acerca de lo que se necesita para crear una historia, éstas fueron algunas de sus respuestas: "Un final feliz" "Decir lo que pasó, lo dices con la mente y luego lo dices" "Un personaje principal" "O un animal" "Un lugar para que ahí sea el cuento" "Y un principio para que después sea un final" Una vez enlistados los elementos que los niños consideraban importantes, comenzamos a practicar el desarrollo de cada uno de los siguientes: 1) Las personas o animales que estuvieran en la historia (Personajes) 2) El lugar, o lugares en los que se llevaría a cabo la historia (Escenario) 3) Lo que pasaría en la historia (Historia o problema) 4) Un final (Conclusión o solución del problema) 1) Personajes Para el desarrollo de los personajes, hablamos de personajes reales e irreales. Los niños crearon personajes con distintas técnicas: "Packy es como un marciano pero se convierte en muñeco de nieve para robar comida. Le encanta jugar con sus amigos y es un buen amigo. Ve personas muertas, niños de 7 años. Le gustan las cosas que brillan." 22 march 2013 CON NEX ION "Es un humano-serpiente con orejas de conejo. Vive en el agua pero puede brincar y salir, come pescado, no le gustan las verduras y se sabe defender de sus enemigos, brincando y haciendo olas." 2) Escenario Con distintos tipos de música de fondo, pedimos a los niños que cerraran sus ojos e imaginaran el lugar ideal para su historia. Después les pedimos que dibujaran y pintaran su escenario. 3) Historia o problema Los niños tuvieron la oportunidad de expresar sus ideas y soluciones a diversos planteamientos como: ¿Qué pasaría si algún día llegaras al colegio y éste fuera un bosque? "Haría un carrito con hojas, una casita de palitos y haría una computadora con hojas y madera" "Lo pintaría como escuela" "Correría y escalaría árboles. Aprendería cosas de las ardillas y escavaría." "Esquivaría a los osos y nadaría para llegar a mi salón" "Buscaría a mis amigos, si hay algún animal peligroso, me cambiaría de salón" "Avisaría a los constructores para que hicieran otra escuela y me iría a esperar a mi casa" ¿Qué harías si tu maestra fuera un perro? "Hacerle caso para que no me muerda" "Le hablaría en idioma perro" "Acariciarla y llevarla a pasear" "Le enseñaría las letras" "No entendería lo que dice y tendría que aprender a hablar de perro" "Le pediría a la otra miss que me dijera que dice la miss, y tendríamos una mascota-miss" "Haría una poción para que otra vez fuera teacher" "Le daría croquetas y me iría a otra escuela a aprender" ¿Y si te creciera pan en lugar de pelo? "Me lo cortaría y me lo comería, así todos los días" "Lo cortaría y lo vendería con mantequilla" "Dejaría que lo mordieran, si estaba rico" "Lo cortaría, le pondría queso y me lo comería, después me dejaría el pan largo" "Arrancármelo y bañarme" En otro ejercicio, contamos a los niños una historia conocida para ellos y les pedimos jugar a cambiar alguno de los elementos principales de la misma, ya fueran los personajes, el escenario o el final de la historia. 4) Conclusión o solución del problema Para practicar este elemento de la historia, pedimos a algunos niños que hicieran un dibujo de alguna situación problemática y a otros niños, nos hicieran propuestas para resolverlos. Es una casa y hay fuego. ¿Cómo ayudarías al gatito? "Me treparía a un banquito hasta lo de arriba de la puerta, de ahí me brincaría a la primera línea pero con un pie sin pisar el fuego, estiraría los brazos, le diría, gatito, gatito, no tengas miedo y lo agarraría y me bajaría hasta abajo de la puerta con él abrazado y ya llegamos, fácil." "Un día estaba gorilita roja y le llevaba pastelitos a su abuelita, cuando llegó, vio que un lobo se comió a su abuelita, entonces lo levantó, lo sacudió así, así y luego se salió la abuelita. Después, él se comió al lobo y le dijo ándele." Otras prácticas pueden ser, el pedirle a cada niño que dibuje un personaje y juntarlos para crear una historia en grupos pequeños; mostrar un cuento sin texto y pedir a los niños que imaginen a través de las imágenes de lo que trata la historia; mostrar una imagen y un personaje y en pares, invitar a la creación de una mini historia; utilizar el iPad o la computadora para crear y narrar una historia, o crear un libro con fotos pensadas y tomadas por los niños. El permitir a los niños sentirse cómodos con los cambios y las ambigüedades, estimula habilidades de pensamiento complejo y les permite tener flexibilidad de pensamiento, así como facilidad para acoplarse a los cambios. Desarrollando el pensamiento crítico y creativo, se generan nuevas ideas y permite crear nuevas relaciones entre las cosas. Las juntas de salón son otra herramienta para ayudar a los niños a encontrar soluciones a sus problemas, así como los de sus compañeros o maestros. Al invitar a los niños a compartir ideas creativas para la solución de problemas, más allá de encontrar alternativas para resolverlos, los invitamos a ser analíticos, reflexivos, a razonar y proponer. Al escuchar a los niños y demostrar un genuino interés por sus propuestas, creamos niños más seguros e independientes. Al invitarlos a desarrollar el pensamiento crítico y creativo, los ayudamos a procesar información, les permitimos aprender, comprender, practicar y aplicar. Tratamos de promover que nuestros niños sean críticos, autónomos, pensantes y productivos. Una de las maneras para lograrlo, es generar en ellos la alegría y motivación por aprender y la necesidad y pasión por proponer. 23 march 2013 CON NEX ION High School High School of The Clan of the Cave Bear, or Augustus, or The Fall of Troy, I hoped they would be able to see the characters of history become real in a vivid fashion -- to imagine themselves living at such a time. While the time of the Roman emperors was very different from the 21st century, the people who lived in those years had the same desires for comfort, for love, for accomplishment that the people of today have. Students in this class, through visualization and use of the imagination, become a part of history, and history becomes a part of who they are. It is a unique experience. It is also one they can share with their fellow students around the world through reviews of the books they read which we then publish on Amazon. HISTORY THROUGH THE LENS OF THE IMAGINATION by Michael Hogan, HS teacher What must it have felt like to be branded with a burning cattle iron on the cheek? I asked myself this question while I was writing the book The Irish Soldiers of Mexico, a history of the Mexican-American War of 1846-48. This was exactly what happened to John Riley, the leader of the San Patricio Battalion, when captured by the Americans. I could not answer the question of what Riley was feeling from a formal history text, of course, because it was about pain and humiliation; about emotions. The answer depended on using my imagination to empathize with another human being, whereas what is required from a historian is cold objective analysis. But I could answer it in a novel which I later went on to write called Molly Malone and the San Patricios. Producers of the movie One Man’s Hero, based on my book, took it one step further and dramatized this terrible event on the screen. In our Honors World History class this year I have asked the students to read at least one work of historical fiction as well as the Advanced Placement textbook. In the pages 24 march 2013 CON NEX ION We often hear it said that “those who do not understand history are doomed to repeat it.” But how many people really understand history? Here at the American School we do much more than simply show the students the lives of great leaders, the perennial wars, the dates of the rise and fall of empires, and the evolution of man. We also try to demonstrate the interconnectedness of the events that have occurred over time, and how, even though things change, there are certain underlying currents that remain the same. But is that enough? I sometimes hear discussions among educators about teaching for the 21st century. As if that is something different from quality teaching at any time or any place. One of my great friends on campus, Leo Diaz, once said in annoyance, “Well, as for me, I am a 6th century teacher!” Leo, like Aristotle, like Marcus Aurelius, is interested in helping his students discover the interconnectedness of things, of making the students aware that technology existed long before the Internet. The quality of teaching which made Alexander the Great, Einstein, Madame Curie, Gandhi, and Octavo Paz such wonderful contributors to society, was not "21st Century Thinking;" some narrow, isolated-from-history method only thirteen years in existence. It was something bigger than that. It was critical and creative thinking, and that has been what good teachers have been doing for many centuries. Another of the projects my students are working on this year on is choosing a tool or technology that existed in prehistoric times and following that tool/technology through the Roman Empire, the Golden Age of Greece, the Persian epoch, the Byzantine Empire, the Middle Ages. The students are required to show how the tool or technology not only evolved and was changed, but how it in turn changed the world around it. Thus each student is able to discover that a variety of tools and technologies existed before mankind even had the word “technology” in its vocabulary. Before, in fact, man developed a language. The students learn through their own research that men and women were applying the principles of physics and chemistry and mathematics long before these subjects existed formally. There were aqueducts in Rome before Newton “discovered” the Law of Gravity; the Persians used complex compounds for makeup and the Chinese for gunpowder centuries before there were any books on chemistry. The Egyptians built pyramids ages before Euclid wrote his text on geometry. The world has always been an interesting and dynamic place, filled with technologies new and old. And one technology doesn’t necessarily replace another. The wheel exists today right alongside the computer. The screw exists inside the most complex machine. People read real books and magazines as well as Kindles and iPads. The old is simultaneous with the new. nationalistic automatons, singing anthems and reciting pledges while the world around them is destroyed. We hope they will be citizens of the world: young men and women who will have respect for all the creatures on the planet, for all cultures, and will honor the lives of those around them. That is not possible unless they are able to imagine who those people are and why those cultures are the way they are. It is also fun to do these things. It is enjoyable to step out of one’s narrow vision of the world and see it from another perspective. It is why I became a writer and why I became a historian. Why I am I also a teacher? Well, I just had so much fun doing these things that I felt it would be selfish not to share them with others. The history of the world (unlike what CNN and most politicians tell us) has not been a steady progression toward some wonderful future of the evolution of man. It has been filled with up-cycles and down-cycles. There have been times of great accomplishment and peace: the Golden Age of Greece, the great advances of the Persians – followed by the Dark Ages and the Hundred Years War. There have been great innovations in technologies and civilization, of art and music, followed by invading armies who destroyed much of what was built up and generations who wallowed in ignorance. There have been days of peace and security followed by days of terrible wars and murders of children. And the murders of children occurred not just in China during some long-forgotten incident in the 5th century but in 21st century Connecticut as well. What we learn from the past, or don’t learn, tends to come about as a result of active minds being challenged (and challenging themselves) to see the world from different perspectives. Not merely the perspective of a single influential country with formal programs of education that are often dominated by the textbook publishing business and testing companies, following the imperatives of corporate culture and the need for a gullible consumer and obedient citizenry. But also the view of the outsiders, the view of other cultures who measure success in other ways, who measure progress other than by perennial consumption of the resources of the planet. This is part of why we study WORLD history, not merely United States History or Mexican history. We hope our students will become good citizens, yes, but not Dr. Michael Hogan is a writer and historian and the author of twenty books, including The Irish Soldiers of Mexico, an Amazon best-seller about the Mexican War which formed the basis to an MGM movie and two award winning documentaries. He currently teaches Honors World History at ASFG. 25 march 2013 CON NEX ION High School THE ENHANCEMENT OF CRITICAL AND CREATIVE THINKING SKILLS THROUGH INTERNSHIPS AND JOB SHADOWING OPPORTUNITIES AT ASFG by Leonardo José Díaz, High School Counselor CAREER COUNSELING AT ASFG ASFG recognizes that each student possesses unique interests, abilities and goals that will lead to many future educational and career opportunities. Collaborating with students, families, educational staff and the community, ASFG works to ensure all students develop an academic and career plan reflecting these characteristics and including rigorous, relevant coursework and experiences appropriate for the student. As a leading educational institution ASFG seeks to provide all students the opportunity to: • Make course selections that allow students the opportunity to choose from a wide range of post-secondary options. • Explore the connection between coursework and life experiences. • Explore interests and abilities in relation to knowledge of self and the world of work. • Experiment the world of work through internships and job shadowing opportunities in the community. • Develop a career and college admissions portfolio to highlight strengths and interests. 26 march 2013 CON NEX ION High School Academic and college/career planning at ASFG provides all students with the opportunity to identify strengths, areas in need of improvement and areas of interest early on so students and their families can set post-secondary goals and make informed choices to support students in reaching the desired outcome. The focus of individual academic and career planning is thus threefold: a) to help students acquire the skills to achieve academic success; b) to make connections between school and life experiences and c) to acquire knowledge and skills to be college and career ready upon high school graduation. Being a college preparatory school, ASFG places a lot of emphasis on career and college admissions guidance both as part of the high school mentoring program and as a key function of the high school counselor. Career guidance can be broadly defined as a spectrum of activities and programs designed to help young people learn about careers, plan, choose, and succeed in their chosen careers. Thus, ASFG implements a comprehensive school counseling program that includes educational and career planning activities for all students designed to assist them in reaching academic, career and personal/social goals. These career guidance programs and experiences effectively prepare for college and career readiness. One example of these programs and activities is ASFG´s annual Career Fair for high school students to explore a wide variety of career fields. A keynote speaker kicks off the event plus numerous presenters from all types of professions offer sessions so that students can choose fields that are interesting to them. Students are encouraged to ask questions regarding their personal interests and preparation for that field. ASFG relies every year upon the generosity of our parents, graduates and community members to present their professions during these sessions. THE CAREER GUIDANCE ENHANCEMENT PROJECT Recognizing the importance of developing models of career education and guidance that involve not just the school but also the wider community, the Parents Association is leading an exciting new project where ASFG parents will provide our high school students the opportunity to join them at work either through internship opportunities like the Wonderful World of Work offered every year during Week Without Walls and through job shadowing opportunities. This initiative, led by Mrs. Laura Guerra de Escobedo, Parents Association President, Mrs. Marina Furia, PA Liaison for the Career Guidance Enhancement Project and several amazing and committed mothers from all the school divisions (early childhood, elementary, middle school and high school) has three projects. : Wonderful World of Work during Week Without Walls March 2013 During the entire week, students participating in the Wonderful World of Work will work with a professional, a business or organization where they can explore and experience a particular career. Some examples: working in an industrial engineering plant, with a doctor, a restaurateur or as a teacher assistant in kindergarten. The goal is to experience a career in the real world. The range of careers can be very broad. Fifteen students signed up to work for a full week with law firms, industries, businesses, a consulate, a school and a hospital. We are very grateful to those parents who have given these 15 warriors the chance to fully immerse in the wonderful world of work under their guidance and mentoring. Job Shadow - April and May 2013 The program "Job Shadow" enables our students from 10th, 11th and 12th grades (ages 16 and up) to experience a specific profession for a full workday being the "shadow" of a professional who will become the student’s mentor in the career of their choice for the day. Career Fair - October 2013 Every year during October, high school organizes a career fair in which students have the opportunity to spend time with professionals in fields they are interested in. All students attend three different career presentations of their choice. We offer approximately 30-35 career options. AN OPEN INVITATION TO JOIN US The Parents Association has invited the ASFG professional community to join us in one, two or all three projects and we have had a great response so far. If you are interested in participating in one or all more of these projects, we invite you to send an email to career.orientation@asfg.edu.mx expressing your interest and/or availability. We will give you more information and request additional information depending on the project or projects you want to participate in. The critical foundations for lifelong career development are being laid out at ASFG in partnership with the school community and we hope that as a community we can activate and utilize all resources that can help our young people to learn how to explore, learn about and choose their careers making informed decisions through opportunities that allow them to test their “vocational hypothesis” in live work settings with mentors from our community. These experiential learning opportunities enhance critical and creative thinking skills by allowing students to question their assumptions about the careers they are interested in, ask clarifying questions about the key features of a given career or profession and assess their experience with adult mentors in a system that provides clarification and feedback on the chosen careers of interest. 27 march 2013 CON NEX ION Elementary Mr. Nacho Makes Science Come Alive by Dawn Lussier, Elementary Principal ASFG is not the only place that has benefitted from Nacho Salazar’s passion for science. It has taken him to faraway states where he has had the opportunity to inspire hundreds of teachers, in different parts of Mexico, through workshops with hands-on activities. The following comments were made by teachers who attended Mr. Nacho’s one day workshop in the state of Oaxaca. “I never thought science could be taught this way.” “I never thought science could be so much fun.” “I can’t wait to share these experiments with my students.” Over the past few years, Mr. Nacho has given a number of hands-on science workshops to teachers from many schools here in Guadalajara as well as to educators from other cities and towns in Mexico; his goal being to transmit his passion by making science come alive so that it motivates teachers who are then able to get their students excited about science. Many of the teachers that Mr. Nacho has worked with admitted that it Programa Mexicano was really hard to spark a student’s interest in science when the majority of their science lessons simply involved the teacher reading and lecturing from a science textbook. The process of metamorphosis, however colorful it might be on a textbook page, just somehow did not come alive and make the children want to learn about the life cycle of a butterfly. A teacher, from the southeast sierra of Nayarit, said that she often skipped teaching science; she preferred to leave the textbook reading for homework. But, after attending Mr. Nacho’s workshop, her view of science completely changed. She realized that her school sits in the middle of a forest that provides a wealth of learning opportunities. So, she took her students on a nature walk to observe butterflies, insects, and the backside of leaves to look for pupas. What an amazing learning experience it was for her students and suddenly they became very interested in the process of metamorphosis. Nacho Salazar spent three days at the University of Chapingo, in the state of Mexico, modeling hands-on science to 28 preschool and elementary teachers. When Mr. Nacho discovered that the majority of the participants did not know how to turn lessons about animals into something that involved the children, he chose to share a fun lesson on birds. In the lesson, when teachers squirted drops of water down real feathers they were able to observe how water simply rolls off the feathers of the birds. The teachers were given materials such as clothes pins, tweezers, and spatulas and were instructed to create imitation bird beaks. They were then asked to use their bird beaks to try and pick up seeds; he wanted them to see how difficult or easy it might be for a bird to actually collect his food. He actively involved them in a number of hands-on activities that helped them learn more about such groups as insects, reptiles, and amphibians. And, by the end of the three day workshop, teachers at Chapingo were excited about getting back to their schools and trying out their new found skills with their students. They were sold on the idea of teaching with hands-on science activities and convinced that their students would be excited and motivated about learning science. Good work, Nacho. Una respuesta creativa para la implementación de la RIEB por Norma Guinto, Directora del Programa Mexicano El sistema educativo mexicano está transitando por una Reforma Integral de la Educación Básica (RIEB) desde el año 2004. Esta reforma ha traído consigo no solo cambios en los planes y programas de estudio, sino innovaciones en las estrategias de enseñanza, la evaluación y el rol del maestro, del alumno y de los padres de familia con el objetivo de elevar la calidad de la educación que reciben nuestros niños y jóvenes. Para los maestros, llevar a la práctica los aspectos sustantivos de esta reforma – articulación entre los diferentes niveles educativos, énfasis en temas relevantes para la sociedad actual y en la formación para la vida - , ha sido un arduo camino que han recorrido con entusiasmo. Nuestros maestros han estado en capacitación continua desde que inició la implementación de la RIEB, con el objetivo de contar con las herramientas que les permitan innovar en su práctica educativa para que sus alumnos alcancen los aprendizajes esperados para cada grado escolar. Pero, ¿cómo responder a una reforma de esta magnitud? ¿cómo prepararse para integrar los principios pedagógicos, las competencias para la vida, las competencias docentes, los estándares curriculares, el enfoque formativo de la evaluación, temas de relevancia social? Conociendo los talentos de cada uno de nuestros maestros del Programa Mexicano, decidimos unir esfuerzos y enfrentamos este reto trabajando colaborativamente despertando nuestra creatividad. Además de acudir a los talleres de capacitación ofrecidos por la SEP, creamos un plan de capacitación interna para asegurarnos de que todos nuestros maestros 28 march 2013 CON NEX ION reciban la formación profesional que necesitan según el grado y la materia que imparten. Una de las iniciativas que más han enriquecido nuestra práctica educativa fue la creación de un club de lectura que lleva por nombre Te platico un libro. Para ello, adquirimos una colección de libros con temas como: uso de la tecnología en las prácticas docentes, trabajo en equipo, hábitos de los docentes eficaces, evaluación auténtica del aprendizaje, nuevas alternativas de aprender y enseñar, desarrollo de competencias lectoras, entre otros. Cada uno de los maestros eligió el libro que leería para posteriormente compartirlo con sus colegas. En el caso de las maestras de Primaria, las reuniones son una vez al mes y en cada una de esas reuniones, una maestra platica a sus compañeras el libro que leyó. Al final de cada sesión se abre un espacio para dialogar, de esta manera las maestras relacionan el contenido del libro con lo que sucede en el día a día en los salones de clase. A través de este diálogo, las maestras comparten experiencias que les ayudan a mejorar su práctica docente y desarrollan relaciones que les permiten colaborar con sus colegas en la realización de proyectos interdisciplinarios que tienen un impacto positivo en el aprendizaje de sus alumnos. En las secciones de Secundaria y Bachillerato, la reunión se realiza de manera virtual ya que la multiplicidad de horarios hacía imposible contar con un tiempo dentro del horario escolar donde todos los maestros coincidieran. Actualmente, los maestros han seleccionado el libro que van a compartir y aprovechando las herramientas tecnológicas con las que contamos en el colegio, en el mes de marzo comenzarán a usar Google Groups para dialogar sobre el libro que eligieron. Con la convicción de que el trabajo colaborativo rinde grandes resultados, los maestros del Programa Mexicano se han propuesto contribuir con sus habilidades individuales para que aprendiendo los unos de los otros logren aprendizajes significativos que se reflejen en el éxito de cada uno de sus alumnos. 29 march 2013 CON NEX ION Early Childhood Alumni Association La música y la creatividad en preescolar por Cristina González Ladrón de Guevara - Miss Gigi “Con ésta canción puedo hacer títeres para jugar.” 30 march 2013 CON NEX ION Johnnie Ting La educación musical tiene un gran impacto en el desarrollo de capacidades intelectuales, auditivas, sensoriales, motrices y del habla. La música es una herramienta para el aprendizaje que además de ser divertida, desarrolla habilidades tanto motrices como sensoriales. Para los alumnos de preescolar, la aventura musical comienza al momento de entrar a nuestro salón, ya que tienen que pasar por el “túnel musical,” que fue diseñado por dibujos que ellos mismos hicieron de notas, instrumentos y frases musicales. Para iniciar nuestra clase, cantamos una canción para saludarnos e indicar que estamos en clase de música y al terminarla todos saben que es momento de bailar. Existen canciones que nos ayudan a aprender las partes del cuerpo al mismo tiempo que utilizamos la memoria y la coordinación. Otra canción que sin duda es de las favoritas de los niños, nos lleva a bailar como chango, elefante y tigre. Recuerdo la primer clase con los alumnos de maternal, cuando todo era nuevo para ellos y algunos incluso estaban asustados y llorando. Uno de los pequeños no dejaba de llorar, hasta que comenzó la canción “Do The Monkey” con la cual comenzó a bailar como changuito, a hacer la trompa del elefante y a asustarnos a todos como un tigre. Toda la clase estuvo feliz, bailando y cantando. Se le olvidó que quería volver a casa hasta que la clase terminó y comenzó a llorar de nuevo. Ése fue para mí un gran ejemplo de lo poderosa que puede ser la música para nuestras emociones y para romper toda barrera y miedo. Es increíble ver como la música ayuda a los niños a despertar diferentes emociones y ayuda también a desinhibirse al momento de que todos estamos bailando sin importar quién nos vea. La canción “The Bear Hunt” habla de ir en busca de un oso y todo lo que tenemos que atravesar para llegar hasta la cueva. Los alumnos pueden ir imaginando el subir un puente, trepar un árbol, remar un bote hasta encontrarnos con el oso. Al llegar a la cueva es curioso como cada uno demuestra su personalidad al reaccionar de diferente manera al “salir corriendo de la cueva”. Hay quienes deciden luchar con el oso para salvar a sus compañeros, o quienes abrazan a sus amigos para protegerse del oso y quienes de inmediato corren para salir de ahí. Al momento de cantar utilizamos canciones que ayudan a los niños a descubrir diferentes sonidos que se pueden realizar con la voz. Trato de seleccionar canciones con pocas palabras para que sean fáciles de memorizar, pero que podamos jugar con ellas. “Boom Chicka Boom” es una canción en donde los niños van cambiando su voz y van desde cantar como bebé, vaquero o perro, como si estuvieran debajo del agua, como sonido de motocicleta o ratón y trato de terminar con voz de susurro para poder tener un ambiente relajado y la atención de todos. Las canciones cuentan historias y permiten que cada quien las interprete y se las imagine de distinta manera. La música estimula la creatividad, la psicomotricidad, coordinacion, el lenguaje y ayuda a que los pequeños puedan expresar sus emociones, de una manera divertida. Es una manera para que los amigos y familiares, independientemente de su edad sean juguetones, divertidos y puedan convivir fácilmente. La música crea un ambiente rico que fomenta la autoestima y promueve el desarrollo social, emocional e intelectual. Me gustaría invitarlos a que incorporen música en su rutina diaria y vean el lenguaje tan poderoso que puede llegar a ser. Proyectos en beneficio de los futuros Ex Alumnos por Mónica Caballero, miembro de la Asociación de Ex Alumnos A lo largo de los años, el ASFG se ha distinguido por desarrollar en los alumnos el pensamiento crítico y la creatividad. Una vez que salimos del colegio, los ex alumnos comprobamos lo valioso de estas habilidades las cuales se convierten en herramientas útiles para la vida. Por ejemplo, al ingresar a la universidad un ex alumno del ASFG experimenta confianza en su desempeño, la cual proviene de su capacidad de estudiar, discernir y elegir adecuadamente. Más tarde, en la vida profesional, o en los años de formación de una familia, el pensamiento crítico y la creatividad son compañeros ideales para la toma de decisiones y la creación de soluciones “out of the box” indispensables en estos importantes años de la vida. En la Asociación de Ex Alumnos del ASFG hemos decidido apoyar actividades que el colegio ofrece para detonar estas habilidades en sus alumnos. Ejemplo de ello ha sido apoyar la iniciativa de otorgar laptops Mac para los alumnos de 7º grado. Es un hecho que esta herramienta tecnológica refuerza el desarrollo de habilidades que brindan a los alumnos ventajas competitivas decisivas. Asimismo, a partir del año pasado la Asociación de Ex Alumnos decidió ampliar sus patrocinios a otros proyectos que como el anterior, contribuyan en forma directa al desarrollo de la creatividad y el pensamiento crítico. Es el caso de los apoyos que se han brindado a alumnos que participan en diversos concursos nacionales de ciencias como la Expo Ciencia. El año pasado patrocinamos dos de estos proyectos. En el primero se destinaron recursos de la Asociación al pago de las inscripciones de la Expo Ciencia en Puebla, donde nuestros alumnos ganaron un primer y un tercer lugar nacional, y la posibilidad de representar a nuestra escuela en los Veranos de Ciencias en Rusia. En el segundo proyecto, apoyamos de forma parcial el hospedaje en Brasil de nuestros ahora ex alumnos Juan Carlos Sanabria y Santiago Peña quienes presentaron un proyecto de ciencia en Mostratec, Novo Hamburgo, Brasil. Los miembros de la Asociación de Ex Alumnos llevamos a cabo actividades de procuración de fondos tales como la venta de agua y refrescos en los eventos sociales y deportivos que se realizan a lo largo del año en la escuela. Pero, la fuente primordial de ingresos a la Asociación son los donativos que de manera libre y generosa realizan los padres de familia durante las re-inscripciones. A nombre de los miembros que constituimos la Asociación de Ex alumnos deseamos expresar nuestro más sincero agradecimiento a todos los padres de familia que con sus aportaciones contribuyen al fortalecimiento de nuestra Asociación y con ello nos permiten seguir apoyando proyectos creativos en beneficio de los futuros ex alumnos del ASFG. 31 march 2013 CON NEX ION Middle School Elementary adapted insect designs by Chris Peterson, MS Art Teacher Imagine that you are a cockroach. Or maybe you would prefer to think of yourself as a beautiful butterfly. Either way, your species is in trouble. Environmental changes have brought a flurry of super storms that are wreaking havoc on your way of life. Luckily, insects are highly adaptable creatures. Your little cockroach body starts to sprout fins that allow you to maneuver easily through flooded areas. Suction cups emerge from the ends of your legs to help you stay put in strong winds. Your exoskeleton doubles in thickness and develops diamond-like strength to protect you from falling objects. Fifth graders have been considering scenarios just like the one above as they creatively problem-solve for their latest art assignment. The creative challenge is to draw an insect and then invent adaptations that reflect a drastic change to that insect’s environment. Students utilize their knowledge of adaptations from science class to imagine how their insect would change when confronted with environmental disruptions such as rising sea levels, super storms, or faster prey. This is art class, so the more creative, unexpected, or strange the adaptions are, the better! A praying mantis with freeze-rays that can turn rising waters to ice? Sure! A jet-propelled grasshopper that can out-hop its prey? Why not? Sounds like fun, right? But arriving at ideas that are unexpected can be harder than you think. Creativity is not an entirely concrete idea, yet we seem to agree that it is a positive and very desirable skill in the 21st century. A survey of fifth grade students revealed the following ideas about what is at the heart of creativity: Paulina stated, “Creativity is having fresh and vivid ideas.” Joaquin believed, “Creativity is the thing in your mind that makes you do imaginative things. If you didn’t have creativity, you would be the most boring man on earth.” Fermin thought, “Creativity is when someone lets their mind flow and think of things nobody else has thought before and put it on a piece of work.” We combined our thoughts on what creativity was, and agreed that it had to do with using your imagination to think of novel ideas. To generate ideas for our adapted insect designs, we began by brainstorming. We went over three basic, but essential, ground rules for generating ideas: 1. Don’t judge your ideas; all ideas count. 2. Think of many ideas – strive for unusual or even strange ideas. 3. Build on your ideas – if one idea sparks another, write it down. 32 march 2013 CON NEX ION The goal was set high. Think of twenty-five ideas for adaptations. The ideas began to flow. It was a struggle for some, while others fluently produced more than the goal, and most were in the middle of the two extremes. It was important to maintain a quick pace using a timer, and to frequently remind students that quantity, novelty, and building on ideas was very important. Fifteen minutes later, it was time to converge and select the ideas that would be drawn for the final insect design. Ideas that were unusual, original and plausible to draw were chosen. There were many unexpected and fun insect adaptations: solar reflectors, floral subterfuge, color and form changing wings, acid spraying cannons, hypnotizing antennae, teleportation and super-vision capable of seeing predators light-years away. At this point, the students were excited and ready to draw from their imagination. Here we discovered yet another significant creative problem to solve: How does one draw light-year super-vision, or the ability to teleport? Just go for it! Guess, even! Another vital aspect of creativity is the willingness to experiment with a wide variety of ideas, take some risks and jump in headfirst. Making changes, corrections, or modifications along the way will eventually lead one to a resolution of the creative problem. The process of creating the adapted insect artwork and the final product itself share equal importance. Generating unexpected ideas, then critically selecting them, takes persistence, practice, and repetition. Putting those ideas into action and transforming a beautiful and delicate monarch into a mind controlling, solar-powered predator requires flexible, imaginative, and creative thinking. Encouraging these qualities in art, science, and beyond will develop a young mind that can embrace and adapt to our quickly evolving 21st century environment. Critical And Creative Thinkers by Mary Anne O'Connor, Elementary Support Services Coordinator It generally takes a great deal of effort and practice to develop into a fluent reader and writer. If, in the learning of these skills, we do not then use them in a critical and creative way to better our society and world, I wonder what purpose they really serve. The time and work it takes for our brains to master these literacy skills warrants that we put it to good use by honing in on developing those traits within us that make us artists, innovators, social advocates, and world citizens who value beauty, and who have an ability to critique and act to improve on what we see around us. Noticing beauty is, for me, one of the early steps in creative development. A person first notices beauty and then with a deepening appreciation of it, will often be inspired to create, and thus influence, others. In addition, the ability to critique and act for justice are necessary skills for our world. The sense of indignation inspired by injustice or a lack of harmony fuels the development of critical thought. This critiquing of perceived unfairness hopefully leads to taking action to right wrongs, a very important responsibility for ourselves as citizens. Please read on to hear from the mouths of our own developing critical and creative thinkers. They have some random but beautiful thoughts, which hold the seeds for profound reflection as to the true meaning of being human. Juan Diego in P1-6 says: “I love the desert for the sicri (secrets) in the cavs (caves).” “I like the yellow-orange ski (sky) at sonset (sunset).” Sayuri in 1-12 says: “It is beautiful when me and my cousins play hide and seek in the dark and scare each other in a funny way.” Also, she shares, “It was beautiful when a frog jumped on my arm and then on my head. It wanted to be my friend.” Patricio, also in 1-12, says: “The most beautiful sound for me is the ten songs my Mom wrote for me.” And again, Patricio explains, “I love to hear the sounds of the birds and the animals.” Jose Pablo, from 1-12, says: “We saw a dead bird on the ground and we buried it.” He then remembered, “When my own bird died, I cried.” Daniel, in 1-12, says: “I stand up for the animals. I tell people don’t hurt the animals; they didn’t do anything to you.” The ability to read and write can be most deeply moving when the words are grounded in the experiences of beauty around us and inspired by a desire for justice in our world. Let’s keep our hearts and minds alert to the beauty that surrounds us. From this perspective, let us be moved to make the world more just and even more beautiful, as the children above have shown us it can be. Let us in turn profit from any opportunity to encourage this type of reflection in our students. 33 march 2013 CON NEX ION Middle School The Fish Pharaoh: A 6th grade Cross-Curricular Experience by Sam Morrison and Chris Swiggum, MS teachers Too often in our schools, subjects are divided into containers: language arts only happens in this room, history only happens in that room, and art is only an activity one day a week. Schools can be a place where subjects are rigidly categorized and segregated, but this need not be the case. With careful planning, teachers can enrich students’ experiences by breaking down the divisions between the classrooms. The big skills of thinking creatively and critically happen across subject lines, and so it makes sense that projects and assignments do as well. For the second year in a row, we (Mr. Morrison and Mr. Swiggum) have collaborated on a three-month long project that combines science, history, art, and literacy. The Fish Pharaoh Project gets students thinking critically while working collaboratively towards a long term goal. The students must dissect and mummify a fish in a way that mirrors the process that was used in ancient Egypt. The first step starts in science class. In sixth grade science, students spend four weeks learning about the human body and how cells, tissues, and organs work together to give life to the human machine. One of the best ways to learn about what is inside something is to see, touch, and smell what is inside. For the dissection, we use a species of fish local to the Mexican coast, the Liseta Mullet (Mugil setosus) or ‘Lisa’ fish. Students began by making a T-cut along the belly of the fish and just behind the gills. As the medical scissors cut through the rigid scales, a blackish liquid seeped over students’ hands and into the dissection trays. Student pairs collaborated and communicated on who would fill what role in this process. The next step was to move the intestine to reveal the organs behind. Trimethylamine and dimethylamine (the chemicals responsible for the distinct ‘fishy’ smell) began to permeate around the lab. Behind the intestine, students identified the stomach, liver, swim bladder, and the acorn-shaped heart. In order to prepare the young fish pharaoh for his/her passage into the afterlife, it is necessary to remove these organs (except the heart which was left in by the Ancient Egyptians). Students had to figure Middle School out the best way to carefully remove the organs while leaving the arteries and veins connected to the heart. Ancient Egyptians used a long iron hook to extract the brain through the royal’s nose. Fish nostrils are not connected to the respiratory system, so it is necessary to remove the eyeballs and fleshy gills to access the brain. One student stabilized the fish while another used tweezers to extract the eyeballs and gill tissue. Groups could now get to the relatively small brain near the back of the pharaoh’s skull. With the brain removed and heart attached, the fish was ready to be cleaned and salted. The ancient Egyptians relied on natron, a mineral salt found in dried lake beds. We used sodium chloride (normal table salt) to fill the clean fish bodies, and then buried them in the salt to await the wrapping process. After the dissection, the body is stored in salt in order to dry and preserve the body. This process takes eight to ten weeks. In the meantime, students work on building a sarcophagus (coffin-like structure) for the fish pharaoh. Students have specific details that they must add in order to make the sarcophagi similar to those of Ancient Egypt. Every sarcophagus needs to have a colorful representation of the fish’s body, a door (for the soul to leave), and an eye (so the pharaoh can “see” out). This process allows students to be creative and apply what they have learned about ancient Egypt. Once the fish bodies are dry, they are wrapped. Students first lightly oil the bodies, then wrap the body in gauze. A type of glue (similar to the resin that was used in ancient Egypt) is used to hold the gauze. Each body is then placed in an individual sarcophagus. Late in the school year, the students excavate the mummified fish. This is their opportunity to see if the process worked. To remove the bodies from the wrapping is a painstaking and deliberate process. Students work carefully with one another in order to get their fish out intact. The fish pharaoh project has proven to be a popular project in the sixth grade. Students must apply what they learned via lecture and books to dissection, sarcophagi building, body wrapping, and eventual excavation. Effective communication throughout the process is required because so much of it is done in collaboration with other students. Students leave sixth grade with an enduring understanding of the dissection and mummification processes of ancient Egypt. Un pequeño por Alicia Aizuri Minakata Viramontes, gran proyecto maestra de Middle School Un sábado de octubre, escuchaba en la radio un programa en el que solicitaban alimentos no perecederos para los niños de las comunidades wixárika (huicholes), quienes viven en Nayarit y al norte de Jalisco; a cambio ofrecían ir a las instituciones educativas a presentar una función de títeres para difundir algunas de las leyendas que forman parte de la cultura de nuestras comunidades indígenas, que muchas veces desconocemos. Entonces, pensé que sería un pequeño-gran proyecto (así lo bautizó Miss Fry) de servicio a la comunidad, que cumplía con tres elementos clave: • Estaba relacionado con el currículum de español de quinto grado, pues en ese bimestre estábamos estudiando sobre las fábulas y leyendas. • Existía una necesidad real por parte de la comunidad, pues cada año en los meses de frío y sequía, es sabido que los alimentos escasean y que la más afectada es la niñez. • Podríamos reflexionar sobre la enseñanza que las leyendas y los testimonios del líder del grupo de la Cucaracha nos compartiría, acerca de las acciones que ha venido haciendo durante tantos años, solidarizándose con nuestros hermanos huicholes. “Ser humano es no poder entenderse a uno mismo si te desentiendes del resto de tus semejantes.” (Savater, Fernando. Ética para Amador. Editorial Ariel. España 2005 3ra. Edición. Pág. 184) Después de llamar al número de teléfono que escuché, quedamos de acuerdo en la fecha; propuse la actividad al equipo de quinto; llenamos lo formatos correspondientes y empezamos la campaña de recolección. Los alumnos hicieron carteles para pedir la cooperación de otros grados y, de esta manera, hicimos que se escuchara esta necesidad en la comunidad del colegio; decoraron varias cajas para ir almacenando la comida que íbamos trayendo y, mientras tanto, estudiábamos las características de las leyendas y las fábulas. ¡Ah! y claro, vivimos el significado de LA SOLIDARIDAD, que al principio era una palabra impronunciable porque era muy difícil, pero ahora la reconocemos y la relacionamos con una experiencia de aprendizaje. Y como “no hay fecha que no se llegue, ni plazo que no se cumpla” se llegó el día esperado. Llegamos al auditorio del ASFG y ya nos estaban esperando los títeres y el grupo, nos acomodamos y nos preparamos para aprender y disfrutar de la función. Vimos varias escenas en las que se buscaba que tomáramos conciencia de las necesidades que hay en México; nos contaron una leyenda sobre una tortuga que explicaba las creencias del pueblo wixárika sobre el efecto del hombre en la naturaleza. Finalmente, se invitó a la audiencia para que participara en el escenario; nos dieron las 2:30 y queríamos seguir con la función, pero ni modo era hora de terminar. Ese mismo día, nos pusimos de acuerdo para entregar lo que se había recolectado, pero era más de lo que se esperaba, así que no se lo pudieron llevar en ese momento; tuvieron que volver sin títeres para que cupiera en su camioneta. Como parte de la sensibilización de este proyecto, veremos en febrero una película que produjo Barbara Sack, cineasta austriaca que busca apoyar a los grupos vulnerables en la sociedad mexicana, dando a conocer sus culturas a través del arte que ella produce. Muy amablemente aceptó venir a compartir con quinto año sus conocimientos y experiencias como parte del tema de la diversidad cultural en la materia de geografía. En hora buena a todas las personas que luchan por preservar y difundir las tradiciones de los pueblos de México. Yo, lo que busco es fortalecer la identidad de los estudiantes, pues la mayoría son mexicanos y de que sepan más de esta cultura porque creo que no se puede aceptar, o al menos tolerar, lo que no se conoce; entonces ¿Cómo les pedimos que acepten la diversidad? 34 march 2013 CON NEX ION 35 march 2013 CON NEX ION The Scientific Method: A natural phenomenon in Early Childhood by Karen Mercer, K11 Teacher The scientific method has been simplified in a way that certainly rings true of the basic nature of the young child. Simply put the scientific method is: Look around, ask questions, get an idea, try it out, think again and then make sense of it all. Visit one of our student-centered kindergartens and watch for only a few moments and most of this process is visible. While observing my students in the block area it is obvious that they have already “looked around” and chosen the blocks. They begin to build a tall structure, the idea begins to formulate and suddenly the block structure tumbles loudly to the floor. They build an almost identical structure and tumble it again and again. Many teachers at this point might stop this activity after all it is annoyingly loud and at first may just seem destructive. On continued observation and annotated notes, one realizes that the “think again” takes root and the structure evolves. One of the zoo animals is placed atop and more ground work is done to reinforce the tower. Once adjustments are made to the plans, the experiment persists. I watched a group of four create and topple sixteen towers in about fifteen minutes. To some this may seem to be only play but the four students in the block area were engaged in the hands-on exploration of the natural phenomena of gravity and physics. The teacher’s role then is to give voice to the questions and help “make sense of it all”. The simple question of why often creates a whole new picture for the adult observer. When asked, “Why do you keep knocking over the towers that you build?” One student responded, “To see how far it goes.” “What do you mean?” “To see if it can get to the edge of the carpet. I keep pushing harder but it would not go, so we added more blocks and it finally did, see it is under the writing table now.” The student, age 5, had formulated an unspoken question something like “I wonder how hard I have to push this tower to make it go off the carpet?” Then the student, with the cooperation of a peer group, constructed a tower, tested the hypothesis, re-thought and reconstructed the experiment with additions, tested again and succeeded in the goal. Then, to pose the question, “What did you learn?” “Hmmm,” says the one girl in the group, “we really did not need to push it that hard; all we had to do was make it taller.” The others chimed in their approval for her answer and then one added, “I guess it just went down faster and harder the taller it got.” That is a pretty good conclusion to make and we use the word conclusion when talking about it with five year olds. We also use the word hypothesis when we make guesses about what is going to happen. Although, I do not believe it is the vocabulary or formality that is the great benefit to young children, it is the opportunity for experimentation. Activity provides a context and purpose for dialogue and it is the dialogue around the manipulation of materials that supports meaning making. At the end of the day I ask the small group to come up and explain what they did and what they learned from it. I always begin those discussions with “What question did you answer?” We keep a list of questions that children ask in our room. Those conversations can almost guarantee a repeat performance by another group of experimenters the following day. The talk is productive and fosters an interest in science and experimentation, creating a climate of risk taking and a scientific approach to other aspects of our classroom. Children’s natural curiosity with the world around them and the questions they ask are often related to science concepts. In Early Childhood our business is providing the environment and the climate which allows for interaction with intelligent materials and spaces that cry out for scientific inquiry. In our room this year, we set out to provide as much opportunity as possible. I rearranged my room to create a dark room underneath a loft. Miss Cristi and I hung a black curtain across the base of the loft. In this space, students could investigate photonics, the study of light. We placed an overhead projector, flash lights and mirrors in the space as well as a basket with assorted materials that included opaque, transparent and translucent shapes. We also included overhead transparencies and markers. We allowed a lot of time for exploration and we listened. Time and time again we watched the scientific process take shape. When the materials we provided were not enough, they “looked around” for other options that included leaves and flower petals. They were disappointed to find that those beautiful colors were not transferred on the walls like the transparent objects. One student said, “Oh! They are just like these shapes (as he put an opaque triangle on the overhead next to the leaf); the light just can’t get through!” Another student said, like it was the most obvious thing in the world, “No light, no color.” Photonics according to kindergarteners without any direct instruction from the teacher. I wanted them to come to this conclusion, I could have told them explicitly that indeed color does depend on light but that sophisticated reasoning came from the opportunity to interact, look around, develop questions, get ideas, try them out, think again and make sense of it all. All I had to do was keep asking questions and provide the time. Experimentation in the classroom can be loud and messy and often looks unstructured to parents and administrators. It does not look like “curriculum” and so it is often questioned. Providing opportunity serves to prepare learners to be scientists, technological experts, engineers, and mathematicians. It prepares a workforce for jobs and problems of the 21st century. The scientific method is a natural phenomenon of the young child interacting with his or her world. It is the responsibility of the adults in that world to enrich the environment, seek the content knowledge, and ask the questions that steer children to content and connection through the messy, loud, often annoying process of inquiry. The formulation of a problem is often more essential than its solution, which may be merely a matter of mathematical or experimental skill. To raise new questions, new possibilities, to regard old problems from a new angle, requires creative imagination and marks real advances in science. ~ Albert Einstein