Title: A Sense of Place
1A Sense of Place
- Bryn Mawr Science Institute Project
- Deb Hazen
- July 2006
2 3 It is in fact nothing short of a miracle that the
modern methods of instruction have not yet
entirely strangled the holy curious of inquiry.
It is a very grave mistake to think that the
enjoyment of seeing and searching can be promoted
by means of coercion and a sense of
duty. Albert Einstein (1879-1955)
4 What good questions did youask in
schooltoday?
5Our Questions for the Year
- Who am I?
- Where am I?
- How does where I am (time and location) influence
who I am and how I see the world?
6Prior Learning
- Who am I?
- What is Culture?
- Our Watershed
- Thoreau/Finding Walden
7Getting Started
- You and your partner need one answer sheet.
- Decide who will operate the mouse and who will
record answers. - Look at the 18 slides. Identify the location and
be as specific as you can. -
- The first one is done for you!
- There are some challenge photos in the
collectionthese are photos of Lansdowne
locations in the past. Can you guess where these
photos were taken?
8Example
9Example Answers(They all work! Use one or all to
identify the location. Be as specific as you
can.)
- Name it---Lansdowne Friends Meeting
- Give me an address110 N. Lansdowne Avenue,
Lansdowne, PA - Get me there---From the intersection of Baltimore
Pike and Lansdowne Avenue travel north on
Lansdowne Avenue until you get to Stewart Avenue - Give me a hint---Its sort of across the street
from the Wawa on Lansdowne Avenue
10Photo 1
11Photo 2
12Photo 3
13Photo 4
14Photo 5
15Photo 6
16Photo 7
17Photo 8
18Photo 9
19Photo 10
20Photo 11Okay, it isnt really a photo, but can
you tell me what it is?
21Photo 12
22Photo 13
23Photo 14
24Photo 15
25Photo 16
26Photo 17
27- Turn in your answer sheet.
- High five your partnerfor the next part of this
assignment you are flying solo. - Click to move to the next slide and receive your
instructions.
28Next Step
- Pick up a large sheet of paper and a set of
colored pencils. - Working alone, draw a map of Lansdowne from YOUR
memory. - Place the school at the center of your map
- Include as much detail as you can
- Dont forget all of those things Ogg likes to see
on maps ?
29Walking to the Ends of Lansdowne
30Walking to the Ends of Lansdowne Activities
- Find the locations from the photos
- Notice what you notice
- Field journals
- Soundscape recordings
- Sketching
- Photography
- Modify personal maps
31Create a Class Map
- Using the observations from Walking to the Ends
of Lansdowne students will create a large, class
map of the borough
32Comparing Maps
- Post class generated map, topographical maps, and
political and historical maps of various scales - Discuss the nature of maps
- How are they different?
- What do they tell us?
- Which are better?
- Who would use which map?
- Leave the maps up throughout the next activity.
33Where in the cosmos is Lansdowne, PA?
- Use the following web resources to place
Lansdowne in the cosmos - Where is M13?
- A logarithmic map of the universe
- Power of 10
- Continue a discussion of scale and how we
identify our place. Introduce the concept of time
as well as physical location when identifying
place.
34Small Group Projects
- Earlier in the year we studied our watershed and
it will be important for students to recall what
they learned about the environment and geography
of the region as they investigate the human
stories associated with Lansdowne. - Group One A story about Lansdowne before
incorporation - Group Two A story about Lansdowne after
incorporation - Group Three A story about Lansdowne Friends
Meeting - Group Four A story about the founding of
Lansdowne Friends School - Students will not complete exhaustive histories
group interest and time will limit scope and
ensure that there are many more questions
remaining to answer at the end of this project. - Students will use local historical society, web
resources, National Archives, Swarthmore Quaker
Archive, Meeting members, Simpson Garden
residents - Culmination Potluck dinner to share discoveries
with the school community
35Individual Projects
- Students will be encouraged to add a personal
page to the story of our town and/or school. - My story in Lansdowne
- My relationship to the school
- Oral history (students will take each others)
- Photos
- Stories
- Impact of having been here and now
- Culmination Sharing our stories
36Next Steps
- We complete this unit of study at the end of
April. - During the month of May, students focus on
independent projects. - Past projects Finding my Walden, jewelry design
for charity, What do plants need to thrive?,
biographies, planning a trip to _____, kayak
design and use, inventions, sports histories,
How does ______work?, skateboarding, video
production... - Projects grow out of individual student interest
and are often sparked by something that we
touched on in class but did not get a chance to
explore in depth. There will be much in this unit
on place that could spark independent project
ideas (ex. microwaves).
37Long Term Goals
- A web based record of the stories of our school
and town. New stories to be added each year - A web based observation diary that places the
school in relation to our watershed and reports
both student observations and interactions with
this ecological region. This might include data
collection about weather, student decision to
make manual weeding a service project rather than
using herbicides on the property, progress in
achieving Project Green certification, water
testing, Marlyn Park surveys, bird migration
records
38Outcomes
- Students will gain insight into
- The interaction between human agents and the
environment - Their place both physically and historically.
- Students will have opportunities to strengthen
the following skills - Critical thinking
- Observation both qualitative and quantitative
- Story telling
- Sustained, self generated inquiry.
- The learning community will model student/teacher
co-learning.