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Innovative Teacher Project Roundtable (5/19)

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Design Thinking Institute, 6/18-21
Social-Emotional Learning, 8/13

Grade 1 Curriculum

Language Arts
The language arts curriculum is integrated into all subject areas. While students work under a yearlong theme, their interests are incorporated within specifically designed units of study whenever possible. For the past several years, the "Building" theme has served as the platform for engaging oral and written critical thinking and reflection. The topic jump-starts the year and weaves through each month as students build with their hands, heart, and minds.

Thumbnail imageTeachers read literature aloud to class every day. They also model comprehension and critical-thinking strategies before students practice these skills. Activating schema, predicting, questioning, making connections, and learning to recognize inference are explicitly taught in the reading program. Picture books, poetry, chapter books, nonfiction, and informational articles are learning vehicles.

Independent reading in Reader's Workshop happens every day so students can use their new skills to build proficiency, and teachers conference with students each week to provide individualized instruction and new goals for reading time. First graders work in small groups, in which they continue to receive direct instruction in phonemic awareness, handwriting, and comprehension strategies. They also begin to receive direct instruction in spelling. Groups are dynamic as students progress and master skills.

First graders write independently using invented spelling, and begin to master sight words through the use of word walls, phonics, and reading. As the year progresses and children learn spelling skills, they should begin to move toward conventional spelling.

Teachers use Writer's Workshop to provide direct instruction in personal narrative, fiction writing, poetry, and nonfiction/informational texts. Through mini-lessons, children learn about all stages of the writing process from brainstorming to drafting, editing, and revising. First graders also write in reflection and response journals and practice conventional skills with a weekly "Weekend News" narrative.

Several projects, such as the "Name Biography," enable children to share their interests through verbal presentation, writing, and creative displays. The "Community Project" allows first graders to build connections to the larger school community while using their reading, writing, and research skills. Children interview staff and choose an individual to study more in depth.

These projects consist of interviews, letter correspondence, observations, drawings, discussions, and photographs. The projects culminate in creative displays of learning, which reflect each student's research. Students have freedom to choose how to organize and present research and findings. Theme-based projects are vehicles for language development and research skills.

Math
First-grade math provides a student-centered, hands-on environment for students to explore and discuss the meaning of mathematics. Subject matter is an integrated whole rather than a collection of isolated concepts and procedures. Building a sequence of experiences in a gradually enlarging spiral, math uses problem-solving approaches to develop student thinking and understanding.

Through direct investigative experiences, communication, collaboration, questions, and discussions, students build content knowledge. The math program focuses on the following areas:

  • Providing a safe and engaging environment for inquiry and exploration.
  • Valuing multiple problem-solving approaches, solution methods, and thinking strategies.
  • Experiencing multiple math tools.
  • Engaging in hands-on building to solve problems.
  • Discovering math connections in the world.
  • Communicating ideas and results using numbers, pictures, and words.
  • Assessing student progress during performance tasks, teacher observation, direct questioning, and some problem situations.

Theme
First grade is a year children typically spend getting to know themselves and the community in which they learn. Children become very conscious of their surroundings and their place in them. They want to have ownership over their space and feel close to it. Because this time is marked by students starting to build connections to their community, "Building" is the year's central theme.

The theme enables teachers to integrate all subject areas smoothly into the curriculum. Each unit is designed to allow children to enter projects at their specific and individual developmental skill levels while allowing them to work at their zones of proximal development, or challenge levels. Math, science, social studies, and language arts are integrated within the theme throughout the year. Building leads the class into areas of balance, structural integrity, mapping, graphing, addition, subtraction, community, friendships, fort play, and projects.

Choices
The Choices area is always full of activity. With the help of parent volunteers, students have many options (e.g., cooking, science, building, painting, beading, cooperative games, newscasts, writing choice, story plays, art, hiking, sports, board games) to allow them to pursue their interests. Children learn how to make good choices for themselves and how to negotiate making choices together.


Innovation Spotlight

Thumbnail imageThe April evening featuring Eighth Grade Recital Projects was a night of intriguing, thoughtful, and creative presentations. Also stunning was the array of topics -- from designing a soccer cleat for injury prevention, to writing novels, to making a film using stop-motion technology, to designing and constructing a computer-aided quadcopter.

This year marks twenty-two years of Recital Projects at Nueva, a student rite of passage and an opportunity to investigate and learn about a passion of one’s choosing. Each pupil selects a topic to research extensively, writes a paper, and aims to somehow better the world through the project. Each student also has a mentor to help guide him/her through the long-term project. Some students pursue the interest areas in high school and beyond (see this story about Natalia Duong).

Recital projects culminate more than a year of work. Initially, seventh graders meet four times in the spring to begin scoping projects. In eighth grade, students attend weekly I-Lab classes to learn design-thinking tenets. They employ the practices to brainstorm and evaluate options during each project stage.

News

arianna-an-exemplary-menuhin-violin-scholar-for-eight-yearsWe periodically share a student’s accomplishments in the arts, music, or drama program, highlighting a unique performance or accomplishment.

This...
alumnus-uses-technology-to-do-global-goodAlumnus Zach Berke (class of ’94) -- an entrepreneur who has spent the last decade building and working with technology startups around the globe -- told...
third-graders-share-beliefs-through-podcastsAs part of third grade's examination of how beliefs are formed, each student relayed a specific belief that is important to him/her through essays they...