Scott,
That is incredibly impressive work that you are doing and that your
students are doing!
- Your ideas for having students publicly recognize peers who
contribute in special ways is very creative and insightful.
- The projects you have students working on are almost unbelievable (I
believe you, but it is amazing).
Two questions:
- 1. Are you in special school of high achieving students?
Or are you accomplishing this with "everyday" 7th grade
students? (Either way, it is impressive.)
- 2. In your description of the "basic format", you did
not mention having students follow the "individual pretest" of
15 questions with a "team" version of the same test, which
normally happens in TBL.
-
Do you in fact not use that part of TBL?
- (This is not a criticism because you are obviously accomplishing
great things with whatever you are doing. But I am curious about
the sequence of activities that you do use.)
Thanks for sharing with us your use of TBL in the k-12 arena.
Occasionally I/we get asked whether it will work there. You have
answered that with a definitive "Yes!"
Dee Fink
At 11:23 AM 10/16/2007, Scott Hovis wrote:
It works great. I know lots
of k-12 teachers that use problem based learning, but no one else
using my real world team project approach.
For example, our cell unit centers around finding a cure for
cancer.
The basic format is:
1) Preview packet do in groups
2) Individual Pretest (aprox 15 question scantron)
3) Multiple mini projects: A) create a treatment for a human disease
based on modifying organelle shape &/or function. B) Create a
specialized stem cell that can repair specific heart attack damage.
Describe how various organelles help the cell to do it's work in
conjunction to surrounding cells, tissue, organs, & organ System. C)
Final project is to propose a new cancer treatment using organelles that
inhibits cancer by targeting mitosis.
4) Final review packet in groups
5) Final individual test
Kids love it and are fully engaged in learning. It beats having to push
information onto them.
Scott Kubista-Hovis
7th grade Life Science Teacher
Hayfield Secondary School
Alexandria, VA
"Sweet, Michael S"
<[log in to unmask]> wrote:
- Scott,
-
- I see by your
sig line that you teach 7th grade. There may be others, but you are
the first K-12 teacher I have heard of using all the main pieces of
TBL.
-
- What have you
learned from adapting it to younger folks?
-
- The social
pressures and social skills of younger students are no doubt different
than adults. I am curious: has this made much of a
difference?
-
- -M
-
- -----Original Message-----
- From: Team Learning Discussion List
[
mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Scott Hovis
- Sent: Monday, October 15, 2007 8:23 PM
- To: [log in to unmask]
- Subject: Re: Top Score Prize
- Individuals rate their team members during the peer evaluation. But I
take the average for every member and place it on a scale. with a 10
translating into a B-, and Higher scores sometimes translating into a
100% + extra credit.
- I also have leaders vocally recognize their top achievers for every
major project (composed of 4-5 mini projects) at their culminating poster
session , this translates into 1 homework pass.
- Another thing I do is I have a jar set out for every class. Students
are encouraged to recognize peers who have gone above and beyond the call
of duty in some way by writing their name & what they did on a slip
of paper and putting it in the jar. All names are read out loud at the
end of the week.
- Scott Kubista-Hovis
- 7th grade Life Science Teacher
- Hayfield Secondary School
- Alexandria, VA
-
Check out the hottest 2008 models today at Yahoo! Autos.
Check out the hottest 2008 models today at Yahoo! Autos.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
*
L. Dee
Fink
Phone:
405-364-6464
234 Foreman
Ave
Email:
[log in to unmask]
Norman, OK
73069
FAX:
405-364-6464
Website:
www.finkconsulting.info
**National Project Director, Teaching & Curriculum Assessment
Project
**Senior Associate, Dee Fink & Associates Consulting Services
**Author of: Creating Significant Learning Experiences
(Jossey-Bass, 2003)
**Former President of the POD Network [Professional and Organizational
Development] in Higher Education (2004-2005)