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>>Suzanne Reeves: If I was to imagine creating a school from scratch,
I would look at "What am I preparing my students for?
What is this world that they're gonna be going into?"
and "how can I make their experience
in school feel more close to that outside world?
How do I sort of turn the school inside out?"
>>Adrienne Curtis Dickinson: We are in the process
of re-designing thirty courses, which affects nearly seventy-five teachers.
This is not easy, we're engaged in work that asks teachers
to really examine classroom practices that have been things they've done
for a really long time, and so helping teachers
to re-define curriculum is a really challenging mental shift.
>>Suzanne Reeves: So we're really focused
on giving students a problem-based experience across the whole school
and we've had to think about "How does that really look?"
and "how does it apply?"
There are places where it's less intuitive
and where it's a little bit more challenging.
English and math are ones where people don't think
about problem-based learning.
>>Danielle Lynch: I was very unsure, I didn't know, "What does this look
like in a math classroom?"
I think overall that there's a little bit of apprehension,
just when you're talking about doing something completely new.
It's really exciting to see all students engaged in your class,
and I think that the difference of having PBL
in classrooms really is helping overall engage our students.
>>Alicia Kallay: I think there have been varying levels
of acceptance of PBL.
What I think has worked for teachers to buy
in to PBL is having teachers create their own courses
by giving them the voice and also giving them this time to try
to figure out what it looks like within their own subject area.
>>I think we really struggled to find a way to inject PBL into English.
We didn't want the study of literature to be lost.
I don't want to lose what inspires people.
For literature it is harder
because the authentic problems are these really big
philosophical questions.
Being able to see what else students could do
and moving beyond the traditional essay
that follows reading, it was a challenge.
>>Suzanne Reeves: One starting point for all the courses is thinking
about what professionals in this discipline really do and then say,
"How do we give students more of that experience?"
>>Alicia Kallay: Before, it was all about the text,
but I feel like now it's about them engaging with the text
in a different way, and it's engaging them
with a text as a writer themselves.
A book that students read is Eli Wiesel's Holocaust memoir "Night,"
as they're reading they're seeing what are the consequences
of remaining silent.
We ask them to start to look for groups or individuals
who are silenced in some way and, like Eli Wiesel is doing,
is give voice to a voiceless population.
So what you're actually asking them to do is apply the themes
that they've seen in the text themselves.
>>Emma: I think using PBL in English classes, or in any other class,
really kind of changes your perspective on what that subject is
and what that subject entails.
You really see how the subjects you're learning at fifteen years old,
how you can use them for your future and for the rest of your life.
>>Teacher: Making a tool would be to have a--
>>Danielle Lynch: Our leadership team said,
"We don't know what this looks like for math.
You guys need to, by trial and error, figure out what does it look like?
What's gonna work best?"
I think each group of teachers that works together
to design functions a little bit differently.
We wanted to be able to not lose any content in our course
and still really enrich it with problems or projects.
We don't have a PBL-based unit for every concept
that we teach in Algebra 2.
We really just looked at where it fits and I think
that is our best approach in math.
>>Suzanne Reeves: This problem-based learning isn't gonna look the same
in every class and so if we're just trying to kind of shoehorn the way
that we teach into this kind of mold that we think is trendy
or that we think we're supposed to do because the administration told us,
then, yeah, it won't work.
>>Danielle Lynch: Well, I think that the idea of problem-based learning is
to engage those students who normally
in a traditional math classroom wouldn't be engaged.
So one example is in our probability unit: We have students create games.
For students who may not be pro-math,
math may not be their favorite subject, I think when they think
about "Okay, I have free rein to create a game," that's something
that can kind of hook them into the unit.
Then you can connect that saying, "Okay,
how can we find the probability of what you created?"
>>Angelo: The project helps me, like, to be focused more.
Making the game project it's fun and then there's,
like, a connection to it.
It makes me more engaged through math.
>>Teacher: Do your best to work around that.
>>Adrienne Curtis Dickinson: I am so excited
about the progress at Sammamish.
We have really seen some enormous outcomes for our students already.
>>All of that is coming through the hard work our teachers are doing.
>>Suzanne Reeves: It's exciting professionally to be pushed,
to have the opportunity to collaborate
with colleagues in a new way.
>>Danielle Lynch: It's like anything.
You have days where you can get a lot accomplished.
There're days where you feel stuck, but we're working together,
we're a team we're all working towards the same goal of learning.