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Curriculum [ Humanities | Math | Assessment | Greenhouse(.ppt) ]

Humanities curriculum goals: highly educated in a global community

To be competitive in a global society, graduates need to have a firm background in world cultures and be competent in the productive skills necessary for the 21st century.  To accomplish this purpose, 17 years ago, Bright Ideas designed a framework for curriculum using world history as the focus around which other subjects are integrated to deliver an in depth global perspective, SCANS workplace competencies, and Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS).  SCANS is the report from the U.S. Labor Secretary's Commission on Achieving Necessary Skills, which was issued in 1992 to define workplace competencies for the 21st century (see Code of Accountability).

The global village will require global knowledge.  At present, America's children know little, if any, world history.  By the time they encounter world history in secondary school, they are resistant to learning it because they often feel world history is irrelevant to their lives.  They neither know nor do they care about other societies' backgrounds or problems.  The lack of knowledge and understanding of other cultures' historical backgrounds leads directly to racial conflict.  Our children will be global citizens and leaders.  In order to be effective as such, they must understand the historical underpinnings of other cultures.  "History to be relevant today cannot be so parochial (only Western Civilization) but must encompass as much as possible of the total experience of mankind" (Reischauer 1976).

Our world has serious global problems.  "As heretical as it may seem to institution based historians, the study of history has essentially been a self-help project.  That it no longer holds such value for the current generation of students, who shun history for more practical disciplines, is evidence of a failure among historians.  They have abandoned the old fashioned notion that history has lessons, and thus emptied their classrooms.  The most compelling of all reasons to study the past has been to foretell the future" (Davidson & Reeves-Mogg 1991). 

 

Culturally inclusive

Our humanities framework for curriculum, Connections Between Cultures®, uses the history of the world as its focus because children must learn from history's mistakes if they are to create a better future.  This curriculum teaches children what they need to know for the 21st century:  how to understand and work with a multitude of cultures, how to creatively solve problems and produce knowledge, and how to work hard and achieve.  Our children are fascinated by other cultures, as well as their own, because from the time they are three until the 12th grade they study the history of the world's cultures. 

We study periods of history in chronological order by examining and comparing the main cultures of each period, beginning in 3000 BC and continuing to the present time.  Based on Time Life's TimeFrame series, this study produces a strongly integrated global continuum.  This framework supplies a rich source of material for projects and research creating a curriculum that is open-ended enough to plug in the skills and content the children need to acquire, yet is rich enough to demand creativity, problem solving, critical thinking, and the investigation of leadership and moral values. 

All students spend three weeks immersed in each culture in each period of time.  Because students are allowed to choose challenging topics that they find interesting, a strong network of effective, engaging connections is created for the integration of language arts, geography, and social studies.  Our multi-graded classes are PrePrimary, Primary, Intermediate, and Secondary.  Each age group has a developmentally appropriate focus in its culture studies.  At each level, the children compare not only the different cultures within a time period by outlining the similarities and interconnections, they also compare each culture with their own.

Our curriculum requires approximately six years to progress from 3000 BC through history to the present, at which point the sequence is repeated.  If a child is at Bright Ideas for 12 years, he will experience the entirety of written history twice, at increasingly complex academic levels. 

By studying each culture within the TimeFrame for three weeks, the children are experiencing a different culture every three weeks, giving them a broad knowledge of cultures.  In successive TimeFrames, they revisit most of the same cultures.  For example, Europe is visited 16 times, India 8 times, and America 13 times in each four-year cycle. The children develop a deep sense of how each culture developed, how it fits into the span of history, and how much each culture shares with the others.  They experience the growth of all the world's cultures through time.  The experience causes kids to discover for themselves that within all of us is a tapestry of cultures, made up of bits of the world's history, that there is more to each of us that is similar than different, and that we are all human.  The differences become fascinating, not threatening.  Diversity becomes a non-issue as we discover our own diverse roots.

Connections Between Cultures® is a dynamic vehicle for developing high achieving problem solvers. Brain researchers indicate that the complex human brain operates best when all of its functions are integrated (Clark 1988).  To be effective creative problem solvers, children at Bright Ideas are taught how to integrate the brain's functions: thinking, feeling, sensing, and intuiting.  When brain function is integrated, learning occurs with great power and speed.

Bright Ideas supports this process by requiring students to research topics within the culture being studied and design project presentations complete with visuals, music, skits, and models.  The curriculum is alive and ever changing because the children and the teachers have choices of which aspects of a culture to study and of how to complete their projects.  In order to complete their projects, the students gather research on their chosen topics from a variety of resources.  After completing their written papers, they design media-rich project presentations.  Art, music, and drama skills are used to develop effective project presentations to share their thinking with others.  Designing and developing quality project presentations demands the vigorous use of basic skills, creative problem solving and critical thinking, as well as workplace competencies.  This process results in deep thinking and powerful learning.

Connections Between Cultures® produces knowledge workers because it demands higher level thought and production.  At the end of each three week culture study, the children are required to present their individual or group project at a school wide Culture Fair.  The Culture Fair gives the children a reason to read, write, create projects, and share information using a variety of media.  Each student is responsible for teaching his material to the audience in a manner that is engaging and informative.  In this way, all the students benefit from each other's research.  At Culture Fair, parents, staff, and students celebrate deep and creative thinking, productivity, and courage.  Culture Fair creates a community of global learners, forging ahead to create a better future.

Connections Between Cultures® is what the educational futurists are calling for: “a curriculum that is activity‑ and idea‑based, a transdisciplinary one” (Benjamin 1989).  Connections Between Cultures® shows students the beauty, as well as the commonalities, of other cultures while at the same time teaches them to produce and achieve at very high levels, skills which they will need to earn a good living. 

Next Page: Math and Science curriculum goals: globally competitive skills.


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Bright Ideas Charter School admits students of any sex, race, color, national or ethnic origin, or disability to all the rights, privileges, programs, services, vocational and technology education programs and activities generally accorded to students at the school. It does not discriminate on the basis of sex, race, color, national or ethnic origin, artistic ability, or disability in administration of its educational, vocational or employment policies, admission policies, scholarship and loan programs, and athletic or other school sponsored programs.