A quest for 'recess-like' classroom environments
"Awakening people to the marvels and mysteries of daily life they are missing-increasing
their marvelous ability to totally immerse themselves in the moment, to lose track of time and space and just merge with the flow of life; their insatiable curiosity and sense of wonder about everything around them".
Steve Van Matre
How do we truly deepen students’s relationship with their community and their local natural world?
We are in week 5 walking the community twice a week as
a class (many curricular 'field studies' outcomes achieved; however, the
focal outcome is always positive experiences outside of the classroom). Next
week we pose specific questions, in hopes dynamic relations are
formed using mindful questioning with a sustainable lens:
How is everything interconnected?
Should you care about others and/or your place?
Are the current ‘relationships’ (between humans, between
humans and the ‘environment’, etc.) ‘continue-able’? ie. able to persist?
Are the ‘relationships’ fair?
Can you change the ‘relationships’?
In the past I have been guilty of avoiding 'recess-like' classroom environments by a concern that students could be missing key fundamental skills outlined in the curriculum, that is a myth.
Discipline issues are down and engagement is up during these walks, this 'fluffy' approach to instruction seems the ticket for the current grade 8 & 9 students at the moment. Posing questions prior to leaving the classroom, granting students a freestyle experience to 'merge with the flow of life' as S.V.M. states above, and vigilant sharing/documenting the learning via visual journals or mobile device is the lesson plan.
The walks bolster the upcoming program
of studies and students are keen, proud to say that start-up is above
average, I wake up every morning with new sequential activities on the mind to
continue this.
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