Pre-K
Jen Beazley and Beth Boyd
In the pre-k classroom, Jen addresses fine motor issues and works to strength hand muscles, so at a month into school, students write their names when they sign in every morning. The focus is to encourage the academic confidence and imaginative play of these young pre-writers. Therefore as a class with Jen as the scribe, they create thought/idea webs which require several skills. They use Venn diagrams to compare and contrast. Apples and pumpkins is a fall favorite. Jen and her students examine all aspects of the apple and pumpkin. They even open them up to see similarities and differences. This is brainstorming and critical thinking, and if you sit in on the class, you will hear their imaginations frequently taking flight.
They are also working on making Munchie Mission less abstract for the pre-k students. To make hunger a little more real for pre-k, for two days they will not have snacks so at the minimum they will experience what it is like to want to eat and not have food available. Jen and Greg, the other pre-k teacher, plan to turn this experience into a skit. This will involve critical thinking and reflection on the experience. It will also begin to develop some understanding that other kids are in different circumstances than they are. Here are the buds of empathy forming as they seek to understand “other.”
Second Grade
Yun Tansil
The second grade year-long theme is Community. They begin with the classroom community, move to the GH community, out to Addison, and then the world. They will launch a new writing project in January. The class will brainstorm who in the Addison and greater Dallas area are community workers —fire, police, park and recreation employees, and etc. The class will generate job specific questions and also ask what GH students can do as citizens to make the community stronger, healthier, and more vibrant. This will require critical thinking, research skills, and the potential for commitment to improve the community=empathy.
Also in Yun’s class, the students wrote get-well cards to a classmate who had been sick for several days. This emphasizes the importance of valuing the relationships between members in the community.
Third Grade
Judy Campos
One writing assignment Judy shared was the immigrant journal. After much research, shared exploration, brainstorming, and discussion, the third graders write journals about arriving in America from a child’s point of view. They imagine what the trip across the ocean was like and what the first emotions might be about arriving in a new land and leaving home far behind. This requires evaluative thinking and imaginative engagement. Putting themselves in the experiences of an immigrant continues to nurture the seeds of empathy.
The third graders also write letters to living heroes. They have to define “hero” and then seek to find someone they think is a hero. More evaluative thinking. They then send their letters to their heroes.
Upper School
Marilyn Stewart and Linda Woolley
In Marilyn’s first paper for her ninth graders, she asks them to express their response to a poem; she gives them several to choose from. They work with key images and through a close reading of the text arrive at a conclusion as to why a reader should care about what they think. Here, they not only have to think critically about a text but also about the validity of their reading of it. Later in the year after reading The Reivers, they students write a reminiscence. This requires a close reading of their lives, beliefs, traditions, and values. They become the text, and they have to think critically about themselves.
This type of self-examination is picked up again senior year in the personal narrative. Students have to evaluate themselves and their experiences to create some sort of synthesis concerning the meaning of their experiences. As Marilyn said, “How can they be expected to understand other people or other perspectives if they can’t think critically about themselves?”
Linda will bring in a service learning component to a senior elective this year that will require students to journal about various aspects of their experience. These written reflections are meant to move the students from the point of view of “self” or “I” to seek to understand/empathize with the “other,” perhaps to prepare them for the world beyond GH and a more global environment.
Marilyn also discussed writing for Evergreen. This requires the student to “get rid of their opinions” and seek the opinion of others. They have to be able to report the story from someone else’s point of view without editorializing and without bias. To sort out what are their ideas and what are the thoughts of the people they interview requires sophisticated critical thinking. They then have to pull all the information to some sort of conclusion.
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