Week 31: : My interdisciplinary connection map

My current and potential interdisciplinary connections.
As a secondary teacher of Geography and Social Sciences and passionate about both my subject areas. Teaching both these subjects have allowed for interdisciplinary collaborations with teachers and experts outside in the field. Social studies has allowed, I believe, for the greatest collaboration and innovation opportunities. As NCEA constraints in our senior subjects still force many teachers to stick to their silo subject areas for fear of disruption and failing to meet many expectations of communities. The junior discipline of social studies I feel I have more flexibility as it is topic or thematic based and often I can pose a problem, inquiry and hands on activities for students to achievement or excel, incorporate all key competencies and the 21st Century skills. Mathison,S.. & Freeman, M.(1997) describe this as a typical interdisciplinary model.
 http://popplet.com/app/#/4145228
Savage Earth Year 9 Social Studies Unit.

This Unit could certainly go school wide for incorporating the technologies investigating and preparing recipes and meals from the 1930’s. Modelled on the idea from the art deco weekend depression dinner. Dressing up as deco at school, so looking at 1930’s fashion. Technology could be also looking at the transport and telecommunications that were around at that time and in particular the use of Morse code that was used to by the HMS Veronica to signal for help from other vessels during the Earthquake. I’m sure physical education could look into the games and sports played in the 1930’s. All of this could be put into a 1930’s art deco day, where students participate hands on, perhaps it could also be a fundraising exercise where money goes towards a local Hawke’s Bay Charity.
How might the joint planning, decision-making, and goal-setting take place?
The start of the planning process could be done digitally, collaborative online spaces, like trello, Facebook groups, google docs etc., but eventually a face to face meeting needs to happen as people do express their ideas in different ways. But ultimately the decision for a major project would have to come from the top down.

The benefits of this revamped Unit will allow our Year 9 students to build on prior knowledge, but also create new knowledge and problem solving. They are used to having a home room teacher and working interdisciplinary at intermediate and primary school, I believe if we started the year with this approach we may see greater rapport built with our students, as conversations would extend from ‘today in science we learnt about subduction zones’ (I’ve already had this conversation with my Year 9 Students) or in English ‘we have been writing about how it would have been if we were at school during the 1931 Earthquake’ these are the types of conversations that could enter all our classrooms. This allows for greater understanding of concepts and skills and reinforcement of knowledge learnt in other curriculum areas.
I think this is the toughest challenge getting buy in from people from the silos. As mostly it is a time issue and for schools to allow this to happen then there must be time available to plan a time when all staff involved in a project are mostly available. The second challenge would be changing the mind-set of the community, teachers, parents and students, that in this particular unit we are trying to teach the key competencies and 21st Century skills, rather than strictly assessing to the Achievement Objectives outlined in all subject areas. I think that the way we assess our seniors will have to change to allow for the interdisciplinary teaching to become naturally occurring and support our 21st century learners.
References:
Mathison,S.. & Freeman, M.(1997). The logic of interdisciplinary studies. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Educational Research Association, Chicago, 1997. Retrieved from http://www.albany.edu/cela/reports/mathisonlogic12004.pdf:

Comments

  1. Hi Stephanie. You articulate your ideas very well and have covered the assessment requirements clearly. I agree that it is easier to conduct interdisciplinary studies within the junior secondary school than senior levels due to NCEA restrictions. On one hand, with creativity we could allow for it to work in some aspects, but the topics of choice may be harder as a result of individual preferences within faculties. One department was creative with their approach, but their moderator did not like it as it was not 'prescription'. Perhaps it is a matter of shifting mindsets right across the education spectrum. Our school follows the 60s theme. I quite like your Art Deco ideas as a subject theme ending in a celebratory day used as a fundraising activity. That has scope for a wide range of interdisciplinary action.

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  2. I agree assessment is one of the biggest hurdles in the senior school and sufficient planning time to co ordinate subjects and staff. However when NZQA change to "anytime anyplace" this might change a number of things about how we plan a curriculum and course. Imagine if they could move into a different program when they had completed another, as it meets their needs.Wow imagine if students could decide how best education and assessment fits their needs and pursue courses that provide excitement and enrichment rather than credit hunting for university.

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  3. Love your ideas Dave. As Technology teachers we are some of the fortunate few - there is so much opportunity for collaboration across subjects and out in to the community. Imagine the day when students can self select a 'topic' and all the learning and corresponding assessment drops out. We just had a screening of 'Most likely to Succeed' a documentary about education and curriculum reform in 21st century America. Teachers acted as facilitators and the final assessment was an opening evening where all students exhibited collaborative projects and the community was invited to critique. Inspiring to say the least....

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  4. I'm looking forward to future of Education I think it will be exciting. I think that eventually secondary courses will become similar to University, where students have more choice and flexibility in their pathway of learning. Like your idea Dave of anytime any place, digital learning certainly opens this avenue.

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