Wednesday, July 3, 2013

20% time in the classroom

20% Time: You are a genius, the world expects your contributions!

I am considered by many to be a little bit of a control freak (or a lot of bit of a control freak).  This year, the flipped classroom was my first step away from that "control-freakness."  Though the AP scores have not been released yet to show data on how much the flipped class improved instruction in my classroom, I know for a fact students were taking more control of their own learning.  After the AP test, there are about 4 weeks of school left without much content to cover.  I took a large step outside of my "control" comfort zone and implemented a 20% project or Blank White Sheet project with my kids.

If you have not heard of 20% projects, you are in for a treat!  In 20% classrooms, students are given about 20% of the time to work on anything they want.  This could be one day a week or a block of time every other day or a chunk of time at the end of the year. Students are given time to brainstorm something they want to know more about or something they want to do better.  Depending on the level of students you are working with, you might need to give more or less guidance.  

I started my 20% unit by sharing the rationale behind Google's 20% time.  Google gives their employees 20% of the time to work on any projects they want.  Gmail was actually a 20% brainchild! I asked them to consider something they thought could be made better or simply something they wanted to learn more about.  We brainstormed in small groups and shared out, which led to many a-ha's.

As the instructor, my job was simply to provide resources for students as they decided on what their project would be.  I also spent time helping students brainstorm what they wanted to do and pushing them beyond simple projects that they could do without much effort or risk.  I emphasized that it was ok to FAIL!

Here are a few case studies of what my students decided to do
  • Build an app that would help with our freshmen mentoring program.
  • Create a blog showing how to make healthy cookies.  Her first batch was a flop, but we shared this with the class as a learning experience for the next batch.
  • learning Welsh
  • Preparation for the ACT
  • Blog of poetry
Want more resources?  Joy Kirr (who I follow on Twitter @Joykirr) collects 20% resources and posts them to this live binder site.


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