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  • It's crazy that in a system that is meant to teach and help the youth,

  • there's no voice from the youth at all.

  • If students designed their own schools, what would school look like?

  • SANDY: Crime and Punishment is first and foremost a test.

  • Probably something like this: no quizzes, no grades, not even classes.

  • And most of the time, no teachers or any adults in the classroom.

  • Sandy: It's a completely alternative academic program. We have 9 kids in it.

  • We look at the 4 main bodies of learning: English, Math, Social Sciences and Natural Sciences.

  • This is a school within a public high school, designed by the students themselves.

  • The program, known as the Independent Project, runs for one semester

  • and is divided into three parts.

  • All follow the same basic rule: design your own learning.

  • Every monday, each students comes up with a question he or she is curious about.

  • It should be related to one of their core subjects.

  • Peter: The most important thing about your question is that you actually want to know the answer.

  • They spend the week doing research or experimentation.

  • And on Friday, they give a formal presentation to share what they've learned.

  • Peter: If the question is yours, the answer is going to feel great when you obtain it.

  • Peter: My goal every presentation is to be as engaging as possible

  • and make my care for my subject as infectious as possible - try to make everyone catch it.

  • The week I visited, the questions touched on diverse topics that included...

  • unexplained mysteries, the novel Crime and Punishment,

  • the naturalist John Muir, a local music establishment called Music Inn,

  • and HIV/AIDS in South Africa.

  • Jake: For a week, I went out and took a flight lesson

  • and built myself a model airplane.

  • Each day, I wanted to know why a wing generates lift.

  • And it was that question that kept guiding me through all this research and it was fun research.

  • These weekly questions usually take up half of their time.

  • The other half is spent on their individual endeavor,

  • which is a much more ambitious project that they work on for the entire term.

  • Some learn to play an instrument for the very first time and put on a recital.

  • Sergio: In two short years, I've learned

  • to play the piano fairly well. I can play with other people.

  • I'm in a band now. I can hold a beat. I can play.

  • Others work on writing a book and a collection of poems.

  • Matt: I try to write 2 to 4 hours a day. A 1 hour day is really bad

  • and a 5 or 6 hour day is excellent.

  • Some choose to devote their time to researching topics such as education or the environment.

  • Again, it's whatever they decide, as long as it demonstrates effort, learning

  • and a mastery of skills.

  • Joe: The thing you center your semester around doesn't have to be academic.

  • It can be something that you can really develop a strong passion for.

  • Peter: This year my Individual Endeavor has been a complete blast.

  • I've been making a mockumentary of the kids in my school.

  • It's been an organic process, a lot of improv. There's no script. I've been making it up as I go.

  • I think I've gotten better work from having it open ended.

  • Your friends can suddenly think of something and you build onto that and they build back onto that

  • and you have something that's 20 times funnier than you originally thought.

  • Aside from the weekly questions and the Individual Endeavor, students also spend the last three weeks

  • working on a group project, called the Collective Endeavor.

  • Here, they are starting to debate what they should do.

  • The goal of the Collective Endeavor is to produce social impact and to make a difference.

  • Peter: Just tell me why you're clearly not digging it and I want to know why.

  • But as you can see, it's also a chance for this group to practice collaboration skills

  • and to unite around a common cause.

  • Self-directed learning in small doses can be found at many schools

  • but few public schools have taken it to this extreme.

  • Giving students full control of their school day was a big gamble on the part of the principal,

  • Marianne Young: "My personal and professional investment

  • in these opportunities is to create a school and a way of educating young people

  • that allows them to be completely invested

  • and to stop trying to move every kind of human being through the same gate."

  • When the Independent Project was first proposed,

  • it was met with a lot of resistance from some of the teachers,

  • who felt there were too many unanswered questions. "What's the role of the teacher?

  • Who decides what's good work? Who decides what earns credit

  • and merits a diploma from this high school?

  • The project did find strong support from the guidance counselor

  • and a few teachers who became advisors.

  • So Principal Young agreed to pilot it not once but twice.

  • This is the second pilot.

  • Lisa Baldwin: It's a pretty good risk to take on a student to allow them an opportunity

  • for this sort of independent freedom and thinking because it can't really fail.

  • I can't tell you how many times the question get me thinking

  • and then I go and try to learn or refresh.

  • Everyone has gained or will gain something positive.

  • After two trials, what tangible benefits do they see?

  • First the Independent Project seems to accommodate different types of learners:

  • both the straight A students and those who have been struggling academically.

  • Sergio: I have dyslexia so it's very hard reading and writing and doing those sorts of things.

  • School has always been a big problem for me. If not for this program,

  • I don't know if I'd be graduating. I don't know where I would be right now.

  • So I think this has been my savior and got me through the last two years of high school.

  • Free from assigned work and tests, they are able to focus on the one thing

  • that motivates everyone to learn: their own passions.

  • Joe: I think I've stayed up at night doing work more times this semester

  • than in previous 3 years of high school.

  • Sandy: I think every single person wants to learn about something.

  • Even kids who are barely going to classes - they want to learn something

  • and whether that's auto mechanics or the physics of skateboarding

  • or how ice cream is made. Everybody's interested in something.

  • And this gives you the room and space to really learn whatever you want.

  • Another key benefit: learning becomes a group activity.

  • There's mutual support every step of the way, starting with the morning check in.

  • Mike: It's called the Independent Project but I don't think it can be any more

  • dependent on a number of things.

  • This program is really dependent on people working together.

  • It's dependent on people pushing each other, giving constructive criticism, giving support,

  • giving praise. It's dependent on people using resources and finding resources.

  • It's dependent on being creative. It's dependent on learning how to ask a question.

  • Peter: Group dynamic is everything. That's like one of the most important concepts of

  • this program: You are not only doing it for yourself

  • but you're doing it for your group-mates. It's like a team.

  • Sophie: I enjoy being with people as interested in what they're doing

  • as I am in what I'm doing even though we're not doing the same thing.

  • Peer support also means peer pressure to stay on track

  • and follow through on your commitments.

  • Annalena: If you blow off the independent project, you're letting 8

  • of your friends down and that feels a lot different than getting a D on a test.

  • It feels a lot worse so in that way, there's a lot more pressure to do well than in normal school

  • because in normal school you're letting down one person,

  • whereas here you're impacting a huge group of people really negatively.

  • Do you guys criticize each other? Yes, period. Yes. That's definitely the hardest part.

  • The most visible benefit however is the ownership that students feel over their learning.

  • Sandy's presentation on Crime and Punishment sparked a lively discussion but didn't go as planned.

  • Although no one else noticed it, he felt he lost control of what he wanted to say.

  • SANDY: I just faltered and I couldn't get the grasp on the book I wanted to grasp.

  • And what really frustrated me was that I wanted to give them a taste of what I have learned and

  • it felt like the taste I gave them was probably rancid.

  • I slipped up on that and that kind of made me upset.

  • For the following week, he assigned himself a five page essay

  • so he can present his thoughts more coherently.

  • During another presentation, Joe started to describe a logic problem he learned to solve.

  • Before he could present the answer and without any prompting from him,

  • the other students formed two small groups

  • and solved the problem themselves, using two different approaches.

  • Sandy: I like the way you guys did it. That's a much more innovative way to do it.

  • This is like, I don't have anything else, I'm just going to go for it.

  • Peter: The world we're coming into right now - we're going to really be on our own.

  • We're not going to be able to rely on our elders telling us what to do.

  • It's going to be us telling us what to do and responsible for the next generation trying to help them.

  • The only way we can learn lessons and be individuals and autonomous is if we do it by ourselves.

  • Are students capable of teaching themselves?

  • And is it enough for teachers to be mentors and coaches?

  • These are the tough questions being asked and tested

  • at the most innovative schools around the world.

  • Marianne Young: I think the more options we have in our schools

  • the more students we will help develop into the citizens we need.

  • And it's ok for you to need a little bit of a different approach from mine.

  • Mike Powell: The power of a young mind is pretty impressive. One, they're so resilient.

  • Two, they're extremely creative. Three, they're fearless. They'll try anything.

  • So the qualities that many many teenagers have go very well with a program like this,

  • which makes senseit was developed by a teenager.

  • The Independent Project itself continues to evolve...

  • but students are taking pride in the fact that dozens of schools around the world

  • have already expressed interest in their model

  • and may soon replicate their program elsewhere.

  • Sandy: It would mean the world to me if just one other school saw this video and said,

  • "Let's start an Independent Project." That's all I want.

  • If that happens then more students will finally get to have

  • their say in how to reform education for the 21st century.

  • Subtitles by the Amara.org community

It's crazy that in a system that is meant to teach and help the youth,

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A2 初級

生徒が自分たちで学校を設計したら (If students designed their own schools...)

  • 62 6
    黃駿祐 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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