June 2016 - Sri Atmananda Memorial School
Transcription
June 2016 - Sri Atmananda Memorial School
ATMA VIDYA EDUCATIONAL FOUNDATION Students from the Big History class visit the Lower Primary with their dinosaur exhibit A NEW SCHOOL YEAR May 18th marked the opening of a new school year, and the children and teachers have returned with an anticipation of new learning opportunities and new horizons. An initiative is underway this year to document the school’s curriculum, which is rooted in the individual learner and his or her interests. As the curriculum here is flexible and caters to each child, documenting it poses a major challenge. A committee of teachers will try to capture the actual learning experience in the school in the form of a curricular map or programme which will be of use to our teachers and, perhaps, to other schools as well. Focusing on the Upper Primary section, teachers are trying out various approaches to curriculum, including module-based learning, described below. In the High School, the innovative Big History program enters its second year, while a series of clubs has also been established to cater to the extracurricular interests of the children. In the Lower Primary section, teachers are finding innovative ways to develop the children’s reading and writing skills through their interest in cars, cooking, sand play, dinosaurs and other passions. With a 2016 Colloquium being planned for August, as well as the traditional December graduation, it promises to be a lively academic year, the twenty-ninth in the history of the school. www.avef.org Malakkara, P.O. Edayaranmulla, Kerala 689532. email: [email protected] Pages of a cosmos calendar made by the Big History students BIG HISTORY Eighteen eighth-standard students who are newcomers to the High School are entering the Big History class, which is being offered for the second year in the school. They are embarking upon an adventure that will lead them to studying the stars, building hunter-gatherer huts, operating a classroom factory and even making virtual visits to outer space. Big History is an interdisciplinary study of the history of the Universe from the Big Bang to the present based primarily on project work. Each of the ten units in the course is based on a different discipline, including physics, chemistry, biology, geology, anthropology, economics and environmental science, which gives the children a broad framework and introduction to their future high school courses. Big History as a discipline was pioneered by David Christian, an American historian whose course in an Australian university caught the attention of Bill Gates, who funded a website that makes the course available for free to schools worldwide. Sri Atmananda Memorial School was the second school in India to adopt the course, and in 2015 was honoured by a visit from Dr. Craig Benjamin, one of the course directors who co-authored the Big History textbook. The popularity of the course is attested by a visit from last year’s students on the first day of school, wanting to know if they “were missing anything.” www.avef.org Malakkara, P.O. Edayaranmulla, Kerala 689532. email: [email protected] Upper Primary children design and build an electronic voting machine for upcoming elections FOCUS ON SCIENTIFIC INQUIRY In an effort to promote self-directed learning and to improve the children’s retention of the rich curricular offerings, Module-based Learning has been introduced in the Upper Primary section. This method uses small modules to cover large topics in an interdisciplinary way. Children are given activity sheets and other resources and allowed to do the work at their own pace. They may research areas that particularly interest them and cover a wide range of aspects of a single topic. For example, they may learn about plants, animals, astronomy or other broad topics and study different aspects of each. The teachers provide resource books, videos and websites to facilitate the children's interests. This helps fulfill the child's need for individuality, takes into account individual learning differences and promotes initiative. SECOND-LANGUAGE LEARNERS: The school is an English-medium school, with teachers speaking in English and following an Englishmedium syllabus, though Malayalam, Hindi and French are also offered in the curriculum. But the children primarily have learned Malayalam as their first language, which poses a challenge to children and teachers alike. The school’s approach has been to provide a rich English environment where children can naturally absorb the language and be encouraged, without forcing, to use it. In a further effort to refine their skills, teachers in the Upper Primary section are offering targeted activities for English as a Second Language learners in the fifth, sixth and seventh standards. The syllabus is taught through interactive means such as skits, music, videos and games. Spoken English is also emphasized. WEDNESDAY CLUBS Each Wednesday afternoon in the High School there is a current of excitement in the air, as the club period approaches. Extra-curricular activities in the school are being offered through clubs where the students can focus on interests such as arts and crafts, cooking, literature, photography and cinema. Though these clubs are labeled “extra-curricular,” they offer children the opportunity to explore interests, and even career paths, outside the ICSE and ISC curricula. It is not surprising that the cooking club is popular with some of the boys, as two of the school’s recent graduates have pursued the career of chef. Likewise, the arts and crafts club provides an outlet for children who may follow their seniors who have gone on in the fields of graphic and textile design. Teachers are assigned to each of the clubs to provide support and guidance. CLONLARA PROGRAM In addition to the syllabus provided by the Council on the Indian School Certificate Examinations, the school also offers an alternative syllabus in conjunction with Clonlara School (USA), a pioneer in alternative education. Children who follow the Clonlara syllabus have more flexibility in course content and also in assessment, as the Clonlara system emphasizes project work, self-assessment and ongoing assessment (homework), rather than focusing on the results of a single examination. This year’s six Clonlara students, ranging from the ninth through twelfth standards, are taking the regular ICSE and ISC classes but also are pursuing independent study in areas including world literature, computer software and visual communication. WISH LIST The teachers in all the sections of the school are increasingly using visual aids in the classroom but find it difficult, with only a few laptop computers available. The school would welcome donations of laptops and UPS battery back-up from well-wishers, as this would directly benefit the children. www.avef.org Malakkara, P.O. Edayaranmulla, Kerala 689532. email: [email protected]