The beginning of the year is fast approaching! I thought we could share effective ways we start the year. How do you frame the first weeks... to set up a PBL classroom? What rules and procedures and expectations and rituals do you start constructing? What activities do you assign? What community building activities do you do?
Here's my brainstorm (not finalized by any means!) of potential rules. I want to narrow my rules down to 3-4, tops!:
- seek multiple perspectives/points of view
- communicate from a place of respect
- find solutions that work for everyone
- create a positive learning environment
- act appropriately and maturely
Here's my brainstorm for the purpose of rules:
- to build... communication, collaboration, student independence, growth, reflection, responsibility, creativity
- to set up an environment of learning
What rules set the foundation for the environment outlined in the purpose?
I use a mix community building activities from several books, primarily Tribes by Jeanne Gibbs (Reaching All by Creating Tribes Learning Communities) and Comprehension & Collaboration: Inquiry Circles in Action by Harvey and Daniels.
I don't follow the Tribes format exactly, but the book is full of fantastic community building activities that easily tie into any curriculum.
Rachel,
What a great topic!
Here's a team-building idea I've borrowed from the world of design. The Marshmallow Challenge is deceptively simple--but can have profound benefits. Check out the TED Talk about it on the landing page. And here are some additional thoughts.
The marshmallow activity could connect with teaching/experiencing classroom rules like 'communicate constructively' and 'think from different perspectives' and 'speak your mind and listen to others' and 'take risks.' I'm now wondering how we as a class can explicitly think about these connections.
Here's a second draft of rules. I'd love your feedback...
- Think from different perspectives
- Speak your mind and listen to others
- Do the right thing even when no one is looking
- Communicate constructively
- Take risks
Hi Rachel,
I like the positive tone in this list of "rules." Instead of cautions ("don't do this"), you have a framework for how to work well together.
How about something that encourages asking questions, entertaining wild ideas, letting your imagination off-leash?