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| The Place-Based Learning
Portfolio Entry 1: Student Learning and Contributions |
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| "Coming up with these new opportunities is definitely broadening everyone's knowledge. In school you do your bookwork, but weve gotten a chance to do a lot more in school relating to our lives. Ive done research on the farming and what affects it-'cause you know, that affects my family and me-and Ive learned a lot about what is actually happening. I did a paper on corporate farming a year ago, and I did my term paper this year on ountry-of-origin meat labeling. It opened my eyes to why some of the things are happening, the falling prices and that kind of thing." Chris, Student We of course needed the communitys input for everything, because thats just the way it worked. We all, the 12 of us, met many times throughout the summer, and we also met with the community, and in the end we presented this final plan, and it was approved. It was quite different to be one of the only students on a complete adult committee, and to be working with them, side-by-side, meeting-by-meeting. It really makes a person feel like theyre important, and that theyre doing something worthy." Whitney, Student "You talk about academics as all kinds of things that you can excel in, and be known the world over because of an academic standard. But to think what these kids did for our area deserves the same praise. Under very good supervision, they went out and started a project from grounds up, and the uniqueness of the whole thing is how it was done. It was our kids, in our community, visiting with our community members on what they do with their income and their life, what they think of things, what they think of the community, and [they] brought that perspective back in a package form to be presented to the community." Jim Mutzinger, Farm Grain Coop and School Committee Member Howard High School, Howard, South Dakota
Place-based education prizes rigorous student learning that taps student voice and leadership and is connected to the community. This entry offers a vehicle for demonstrating when such learning is occurring and reflecting on what stands in the way when it is notplus it offers an important opportunity to make a case for "learning in place." Key Components Entry 1 has two specific purposes:
The themes and underlying aspects are: Theme 1: Student Intellectual Growth
Selecting a project on which to focus Choose a single placed-based learning initiative that your group is currently engaged in or has completed within the past six monthsone whose substance and duration make it suitable for examining in depth. Since the entry you create must speak to the themes and aspects just listed, the project you choose should be one that has set its sights on most, if not all, of these goals. Examples of projects for Entry 1 portfolios: |
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VOICES OF THE VALLEY EYE ON GUFFEY NEWS MAGAZINE |
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Gathering evidence Your task, now, is to gather evidence linked to the project you have selectedevidence that speaks persuasively to the placed-based learning and student contributions this project has stimulated around the themes and aspects that concern Entry 1. The cornerstones of this evidence, which will in turn support your narrative, include the following. Instructional and assessment materials Teaching and learning go hand-in-hand. Looking closely at students' learning
and contributions requires an understanding of the instructional context
guiding their efforts. In the case of place-based learning, the process
is often iterative: instructional goals and frameworks may change or evolve
in response to changing circumstances, including student input. Instruction and student assessment also go hand-in-hand. Collect a small group of assessment artifacts that best illustrate expectations for students' work, along with the feedback they received. Examples include scored rubrics, corrected student work with instructions to students, notes from a student conference where his or her work was reviewed. Choose assessments that ask students to demonstrate their understanding through application or analysis and not simply factual recall. Samples of student work One of the best ways to get a feel for student learning is to examine samples of work, over time, from a few students. As part of this entry, we ask that you first select a minimum of two students who represent a range of learners and that you then pull together a small set of work for each one over an extended period of time. What sort of student work? It may include more traditional items, such as research reports, or be less traditional-for example, a videotape of a student-led discussion with community members or "concept maps" that demonstrate student understanding of key terminology and ideas. The work need not be elaborate or "perfect." Rather, it should accurately reflect the students' capacities and progress. It should also reveal their sense of ownership and investment in the project. When selecting students, think about the diversity of student participants and pick students with different needs, abilities, and interests. Do not choose only your strongest students or best writers; ironically, they may not provide the best opportunity to exhibit substantial development over time. For the selected students, choose work samples from at least two different points in time that, taken together, show intellectual growth. The first point in time will supply baseline data for later comparisons. There are several ways to approach this, but two good strategies are:
If student roles and tasks in the project varied substantially, it might help to show more students-the 3 X 2 approach. If student learning was notably incremental, you will need to show the growth in learning across more points of time. In this case, choose the 2 X 3 approach. If possible, select student work samples from different students from approximately the same points in time. Your task is thus twofold: to choose the students and the work they did that, taken together build your case richly and economically. General project data in relation to student learning and contribution In addition to analyzing the growth of a few students over time, you
will also need to provide some evidence that speaks more broadly to the
project's impact on students overall. For example, when addressing issues
like "Student Ownership," and "Authenticity,"
you will need to collect evidence that support generalizations about the
students' experiences and learning as a whole. Such data sources could
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| In addition to rounding up existing evidence, you may find it worthwhile, even necessary, to generate new sources of data. This may mean, for example, conducting a focus group (with students, or perhaps with parents) or gathering additional student reflections. Quickly reviewing the questions that follow in "Telling Your Story" will help you determine if you have the evidence you need. Telling your story through a written narrative 1. Who put this portfolio entry together?
2. Who is participating in the project and what has occurred?
3. What is the instructional context of the project?
4. What can be learned from the student work?
5. Reflection and next steps
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