Coming Alive With Dead and Gone
Hi. My name is Alison and I am excited Dr. Pace asked me to be a guest blogger! When it comes to blogs I am a long time reader, first time blogger. I am currently in Dr. Pace’s class at UNI in the Ed Leadership program. I keep plenty busy with two jobs and school; keeps me on my toes!
I lived on
the east side of Des Moines when I was younger, but my family moved to a quiet
suburb when I was in 2nd grade.
My parents ran out of things to say when my brother and I asked why our
bikes kept getting stolen. The final
straw was a man who broke in and was found sleeping in our house. We landed in suburbia. Everyone I went to school with looked like me
and we all had similar religious beliefs. I was there from third through twelfth
grades and was quite happy and comfortable.
If you would have asked me then what I would be doing as an adult, there
is NO way I would have every guessed I would be working with alternative high
school students and loving it!
Currently, I
am finishing up my 6th year at Future Pathways. I was a Family and Consumer Science teacher
for four and a half years, and am now an Academic Advisor at Future
Pathways. Future Pathways at Central
Campus is an individual and project-based program with Des Moines Public
Schools. We serve at-risk 17-21 year-old
students who have 10+ credits towards graduation. Many of our students have dropped out or been
kicked out of traditional schools for a variety of reasons and are returning to
school to earn their diplomas. We also
have students who are administratively placed and others who are court ordered
to attend. Many of our students are
pregnant and parenting. Several live on
their own and are supporting themselves financially. To accommodate their complicated individual timetables,
we offer a flexible schedule. We
recommend students attend 4-6 hours a day, four days a week. Many of these students have had trouble in
the past, and we strive to see them as a whole person and give them a fresh
start.
All too
often we hear students complaining that school is soooo boring! Well, the two students who produced this
project as a part of Environmental Science thought their project was far from
boring! The purpose of this project was
for them to learn more about an ecosystem.
These students chose to learn more about The Congo Rainforest. The project covered three of the six required
skills to earn credit for the semester class.
The skills they mastered with this project are:
- Select an ecosystem and develop a plan to understand the relationships in the ecosystem.
- Design a correction to a perceived imbalance within an ecosystem.
- Compare a variety of disturbances to an ecosystem.
As with each
project, the teacher and student sit down together and
create the project plan. The science
teacher, Jason Fantz, planned this project with Sharane and DJ. The students picked an ecosystem, researched
it and chose to make a music video as their product. They wrote the lyrics, preformed the song,
and picked fitting photos to go along.
To me, the best part is how proud these students were of themselves
and how this project lit their fire for school once again! Sharane said she was so excited about this
project and she felt she would not have had the opportunity to do something
this fun if she were in a traditional school.
They were smiling ear to ear as staff let them know what a great job
they had done! It’s amazing what
students can do when they have a say in their education and are eager to
learn! Please watch and feel free to
comment! J
I can be contacted if you have any questions or comments!
Alison Arnold Alison.
arnold@dmschools.org
The lyrics appear below.
dead and gone
verse 1
you can see the pain their eyes you can see it behind the disguise
but we must rise no more crying the congo rainforest is one of the threatened
ecosystems and that’s because no one will really listen to what they have to
say things shouldn’t be that way the day to day life of the forest people
loosing their homes it should be illegal no food to eat nothing to drink kids
getting hungry and they getting angry no place to live no place to sleep they
feel inside like they got defeated but we must rise no more cries
hook
there's a problem over there there's a problem over here there's
problems everywhere like deforestaTion and that’s the big complication but i’m
here to lay down some inspiration and give you the right information to make
this pLace a better world for every boy and girl because it’s dead and gone
verse
2
African rainforest is a beautiful place but to destroy it is such a
disgrace over 8,000 species have been discovered if we DON’T DO ANYTHING about
it it will be undercover no more animals like elephants they gone just like
their elements and to do something about it is a definite so take a stand and
forget about the rest of it because this right here is left and if they take it
away it will just be dead and gone so come on we need the trees to breath i hope
you can see this rainforest is everything we need so don’t back down we can
turn this around
hook
theres a problem over there theres a problem overe here theres
problems everywhere like deforestaion and that’s the big complication but I'm
here to lay down some inspiration and give you the right information to make
this pLAce a better world for every boy and girl because it's dead and gone
Alison- For a 1st time blogger, you did an awesome job! Great job sharing the FP program and sharing an exemplary project from a couple fantastic students. This project shows how students who don't typically like the traditional school delivery system can thrive in a project based method of delivery. Continue to share what we are all about and maybe more schools and teachers will bring project based methods into the classroom.
ReplyDeleteMichelle- Thanks for the read and the comments. Hearing Alison talk about her unexpected enthusiasm for alternative ed made me wonder about how many of us are in unexpected places and roles...
DeleteNP - Thanks for sharing this! It is super exciting when alternative placement gets positive press. Far too often, those of us who work in alternative settings get a bad rap because we are different and that, sometimes, scares people.
ReplyDeleteAlison – Kudos to you and your kiddos! FP is doing great things for kids and I am honored to have been a part of it!
E- Disclaimer: As a recovering social studies teacher, I can ask this. I wonder how many of DJ and Sharane's former classmates in regular high schools were doing worksheets and answering the section review questions while they were working on this.
DeleteThanks for the read.