Empowering Their Voices: Students Sound Off on Puget Sound

Empowering Their Voices: Students Sound Off on Puget Sound

Empowering Their Voices: Students Sound Off on the Puget Sound

by Nancy Skerritt and Kristin Edlund

What makes work truly meaningful? Creating curriculum that harnesses and nurtures the student’s voice is challenging work. We believe that engaging students in real world problems that affect their lives is central to engagement. Grade Nine students in Maple Valley, Washington participate in a unit of study entitled “Sounding Off on the Puget Sound.” The unit provides rich opportunities for our students to learn critical and creative thinking skills, Habits of Mind, and to practice real world problem solving.

The work in the unit is authentic, rigorous, and project based. Students participate in an online digital learning community. All six hundred experience a trip on a Washington State ferry, and they create projects of their own choosing where they “Sound Off” to a self-selected audience. The unit culminates in a call to action where the students research a community service organization for their own involvement, learning what it means to practice civic responsibility.

At the heart of this unit is a shift in voice: Whose voice is heard? In the past, the teacher’s voice has dominated the conversation. Our new model values the student’s voice – not in random or isolated ways, but by carefully orchestrating curricular opportunities. We achieve our curriculum goals by structuring experiences that allow students to find their own voice and build the skills to make their voices heard. How do we accomplish this? We focus on the processes of learning and connect students to their own local community.

One year ago, we made a decision to abandon outdated content in our Grade Nine social studies course and to invite our students to explore the critical issues challenging the health of our Puget Sound. Our unit is designed to teach students how to investigate any issue by considering baseline data, examining this data over time, and making inferences from the data about how our environment is changing.

Students consider the ways in which marine life populations are affected by water quality, the impact on local seafood industries, and projections for how our lifestyle will change if the Sound is allowed to degenerate through pollution and other human interactions. The message is clear: Students can have impact by making their voices heard, taking simple actions like cleaning up after pets, and by getting involved in local com-munity organizations that are designed to improve the quality of our environment for our students today and into the future.

Strategies for Investigating an Issue

Within the structure of the unit, students gather information, interpret this information and then take action. Students investigate stakeholder groups to understand competing wants and needs. They use thinking skills like Point of View and Analysis to explore how human actions and interactions affect the health of the Sound. Drawing on case studies from other parts of the country, they learn about the complexity of environmental issues by exploring a parallel issue in the Florida Everglades. The students study the wants and needs of the various stakeholders and search for a solution that takes into account the competing interests.

Students build on this background knowledge to research our local stakeholders: the timber industry, the commercial fishing industry, tourism, recreation, Native American interests, and wildlife. The students are acquiring the thinking skills and Habits of Mind to investigate issues and to draw their own conclusions. A key goal with this unit is to foster critical and creative thinkers who have skills that transfer to any issue, problem, or concern. We believe that these thinking skills lead to empowerment and honor individual points of view.

Problem Solving

The students then use a problem solving model to form their own opinions and ultimately to create an action plan where they can become personally involved in cleaning up the Sound. The model begins by summarizing the situation and crafting a question to focus thinking: “Evidence shows that the Puget Sound is polluted. There are various stakeholders who have vested interests in the future of the Sound. Considering the com-peting interests of preserving our environment, supporting our economic growth, and honoring our culture and traditions, how can the health of the Sound be preserved for a sustainable future? “

After analyzing the interests of the multiple stakeholders, the students develop their own point of view with evidence. Students have applied the thinking skills of Problem Solving, Point of View and Analysis. They have learned and practiced habits of mind such as thinking flexibly and applying past knowledge to new situations. Rather than passively studying a local issue, the students are actively engaged in developing their own point of view so that they can be part of the solution to a complex problem directly affecting the quality of their lives. The learning is relevant and rigorous. Students are respected as young adults with good ideas for improving our world.

Technology for Collaboration

Technology can be a powerful motivator for students when it provides a social context for their learning. In addition to utilizing a variety of technology tools for research and production, students in the Sounding Off unit collaborate creatively in an online learning community.

Web-based tools allow this virtual space to mirror elements of students’ social networks while scaffolding their collaborative skills: students learn to respond professionally and respectfully to one another’s ideas, and to incorporate others’ ideas into their own work responsibly.

Student posts begin as structured responses to prompts and evolve into more spontaneous expressions as the unit progresses. The online venue also provides a record of the class’ learning over time; the history of students’ posts allows the class to reflect on their evolving understanding of complex issues. Students’ individual voices gradually form a chorus in which their distinct tones can still be heard.

For instance, at the beginning of the Sounding Off unit, pairs of students choose one word to express their impression of Puget Sound. They post their word on the class site. As students explore the economic, cultural, and environmental issues facing Puget Sound, they are periodically asked to post additional one-word or one-phrase summaries of their understanding. Students comment and elaborate on each other’s posts, and the growing list of words and phrases generated, along with the support for those summaries, represents an increasingly sophisticated interaction with those issues.

The students are asked midway through the unit to use a web-based video generating tool to create a short video that incorporates images, words and music to express how their perceptions of Puget Sound issues have changed. With technology tools, students apply principles they have learned about how artists use those elements to provoke an emotional response in the public. The videos, in addition to synthesizing the class’ learning up to that point, serve as another opportunity to scaffold student skills, in preparation for the culminating Sounding Off Project.

The online learning community also provides the opportunity to expand the classroom beyond its walls. As students learn about Puget Sound stakeholders, those stakeholders and other experts can join the virtual community and contribute to the students’ learning. Students are empowered by interacting with adults as equal participants in exploring the real issues that affect their lives.

Certainly, technology provides powerful tools for generating creative products. However, in this unit, technology’s true power is found in its ability to foster community – to break down walls between individuals both within the classroom and beyond it. The structure of the online learning community provides a safe place for students to try out their voice, while the widening circle of that community allows them to amplify it.

Field Experiences

While the online learning community provides an engaging virtual experience for students, we find that there is no substitute for engaging students in the real world outside the classroom – for getting up close and personal with the issues. In Sounding Off, this means getting the students down to the waterfront and out on the Sound itself. In an era where field experiences are often the first casualties of budget cuts, we remain committed to these opportunities for all students.
We are equally committed to ensuring that the field experience is one of the most meaningful learning experiences the students will have throughout their educational career. This requires careful planning and orchestration of activities that are integral to the learning goals of the unit.

During the Puget Sound field experience, students engage in activities at two sites: the Seattle Aquarium and on board a Washington State Ferry. At the aquarium, students explore the marine habitat and the wildlife that calls the Sound home. They use their field journals to make observations, compare and contrast, generate questions, and pose problems.

On board the ferry, students hear from stakeholders representing different interests related to the health of Puget Sound. The stakeholder’s interest might be economic, environmental, or cultural/historical. Students have the opportunity to interact with stakeholders who might represent state fisheries, non-profit habitat restoration organizations, Native American tribes, large shellfish corporations, or others.

To prepare for the field experience, students research the stakeholders and their points of view in advance, generating questions in their field journals. On the ferry, students use their field journals to organize information around key thinking skills. Both at the aquarium and on the water, students use their field journals and cameras to capture evidence regarding the economic, environmental, and cultural/historical aspects of Puget Sound.

While our community sits right in the Puget Sound’s watershed, this field experience represents the first time many of our students have ever actually been out on the water. The powerful impact of this opportunity is evident in students’ reflective letters to stakeholders and in the way the field experience continues to influence student thinking well after it has ended. Interacting personally with the Sound’s stakeholders while out on the Sound itself is an experience that can’t be replicated in the school building.

Sounding Off! Project

The Sounding Off! Project provides a framework for students to make their voices heard. Using the structure for projects provided by Ted McCain in his book Teaching for Tomorrow, students work as a member of a team. They design projects for the purpose of raising awareness about the health of the Puget Sound. The projects educate and call their audiences to action. Students choose their message and their target audience. Then they select a medium that will best communicate their message. They manage their team and project in the online learning community.

The projects vary widely based on the audience, medium and message. For example, one project team might create a picture book for kindergartners showing strategies for home water conservation while another team might create a video podcast to highlight the importance of habitat conservation to share with our legislators. Students are encouraged to use their individual talents to make a statement. They present their project to their chosen audience, “sounding off” on the state of the Puget Sound and sharing how people’s actions can make a difference.

Choice is at the heart of this project, and students exercise their creativity and their passions as they communicate with an authentic audience about the state of the Sound. Projects have included a website for learning about the danger of bulkheads, paintings that depict the past, present and future of the Sound, movies to promote stewardship, poetry, and children’s games.

Community Service

The unit culminates with the students investigating community service organizations, exploring answers to these questions: What is community service? Why is it important? How is service a component of citizenship? Students research community organizations that are involved in cleaning up the Puget Sound. They study the mission of the different organizations, and using a decision making model, they select an organization in which to become involved. Students contact the organization of their choice, learn about the organization’s service projects, and then commit to involvement in one of these projects. Students reflect on their participation by considering how they are making a difference in promoting the sustainability of the Puget Sound . They are doing real work that has value beyond the classroom and can take pride in making contributions to their community.

Engagement leads to empowerment. We want to graduate students who know that they can make a difference and have the tools to act. Learning must be relevant and real. Our students discover how they can take action to have impact. This life lesson will last long beyond the accumulation of content. Students learn problem solving, decision making, persistence, and interdependence. They practice civic involvement through a call to action. Our democracy relies on involved citizens, and our students learn that they have empowered voices through their study of the Puget Sound. They develop the awareness that what we do today does indeed make a difference for the future.

How do we know that these kinds of learning opportunities are more meaningful for our students than traditional approaches?

We’re listening to their voices.

For more information about the Sounding Off on the Puget Sound unit, please contact Nancy Skerritt in the Tahoma School District at nskerrit@tahomasd.us

References:
Costa, A. and Kallick, B. (2009) Learning and Leading with Habits of Mind. Alexandria: ASCD
McCain, T. (2005) Teaching For Tomorrow: Teaching Content and Problem Solving Skills. Thousand Oaks: Corwin Press

Nancy Skerritt, the Director of the Teaching and Learning Department, has been with the Tahoma District for 9 years. She previously worked in the Snoqualmie and Auburn School Districts. One of her most interesting assignments has been the development of the Elementary Core Curriculum in the Tahoma district. She has expertise in thinking skills instruction and she works with the Washington State Commission on Student Learning to assist with the design and implementation of the Washington State assessment system.

Kristin Edlund is a curriculum specialist in the Tahoma School District in Washington State and author of the middle school Habits of Mind curriculum. She has written social studies units that integrate the Habits of Mind and thinking skills, and she supports teachers in implementing this curriculum in the classroom. Edlund teaches classes in integrated curriculum, thinking skills, and Habits of Mind throughout western Washington and has presented at numerous state and national conferences. She worked as a teacher-librarian for 12 years before entering administration. She can be reached at the Tahoma School District office at kedlund@tahomasd.us.

Cultivating Environmental Literacy and Sustainable Food through a Community Ambassador Program

Cultivating Environmental Literacy and Sustainable Food through a Community Ambassador Program

Cultivating Environmental Literacy and Sustainable Food through a Community Ambassador Program

by Jessica Day, Claudia Ludwig, and Nitin S. Baliga,
Institute for Systems Biology

Project Feed 1010 (PF1010) was founded in 2015 in response to a need identified by educators: students need to understand and be prepared to positively impact our food system in the future. Globally, one in three people (2.6 billion) suffer from some form of malnutrition1, and in 2015, 12.7% of Americans were not food secure2. By definition, these individuals experiencing food insecurity do not have access to sufficient, safe, and/or nutritious food to maintain a healthy and active lifestyle. Our food system itself is also headed toward a catastrophic situation resulting from water shortage (at least 40% gap between demand and supply by 2030), and rapid shrinkage of per capita arable land3. In addition, population growth (expected to reach 10 billion by 2050) is outpacing agricultural innovation, creating a demand that the industry will not be able to satisfy4. Put in simple terms, food insecurity is a complex issue with complex consequences. Understanding complexity and finding solutions to these real-world issues requires systems thinking – both in research and in education.

See student perspective on this program at  https://clearingmagazine.org/archives/20457

 

In 2015, the United Nations led a call to action by announcing the 17 Global Goals for Sustainable Development, which aim to improve lives by 2030. Goal 2, Zero Hunger, pledges to end hunger, achieve food security, improve nutrition and promote sustainable agriculture5. Fortunately, as the need for innovation becomes more apparent to reach this goal, job opportunities in STEM (science, technology, engineering, math) fields are rapidly expanding. First-hand, real-world experience in systems biology and sustainable agriculture can prepare students to enter and be successful in these career fields. Furthermore, these experiences inspire and motivate non-STEM track students to stay informed on local and global issues as an environmentally-literate citizen.

Embedded within an award-winning education program (Systems Education Experiences; SEE) at Institute for Systems Biology (ISB), the PF1010 Ambassador Program set out to prepare high school students for success in future careers through innovating solutions to complex issues (such as food insecurity), and advocating as a leader for local community needs. Students gain critical thinking and complex problem-solving skills by applying SEE’s proven curriculum and systems-thinking strategies to find solutions to real-world phenomena. For example, one real-world problem identified by the scientific community was the gap in knowledge regarding the composition of the agricultural microbiome in aquaponic systems – sustainable food-growing systems gaining in popularity due to their low dependence on natural resources and relatively high plant yield. Using this real-world problem as a prompt, students designed experiments to explore microbial communities and contributed to meaningful scientific research, all while learning valuable skills they could apply to solving complex problems in the future. The broader impact of this program manifests itself as students apply their new knowledge, skills, and interests to address needs in their own communities as community ambassadors.

PROGRAM OBJECTIVES

PF1010’s commitment to environmental literacy, building leaders in Environmental Education (EE), and advancing efforts to motivate the public to take informed actions on environmental and civic issues, is evidenced through its Ambassador Program. The year-long program is comprised of an immersive, on-site summer internship opportunity followed by an ambassador-designed community outreach experience during the school year. It was strategically designed to provide hands-on experiences for students to gain knowledge and skills that are essential for 1) solving complex problems central to future innovation and discovery and 2) serving in leadership capacities 3) communicating effectively both personally and professionally.

In addition, the PF1010 Ambassador Program was also developed to address the enormous gap between the number of high school students who apply for rigorous, authentic STEM internship experiences, and lesser number of positions actually available. For example, SEE receives nearly 300 high school internship applications each year to fill between 10-12 positions. Including the PF1010 Ambassador Program as a summer experience allows SEE to provide an opportunity for 6-18 additional students each summer. These students serve as both community leaders and peer trainers, making this model a scalable solution that requires relatively little time management and financial support.

PROGRAM TIMELINE

The PF1010 Ambassador program is comprised of 6 to 18 high school students, who are trained in food security, sustainable agriculture, and systems-thinking through an intensive 6-8 week summer internship experience at ISB. To ensure equitable, inclusive EE, participants of various backgrounds and community needs are recruited. Ambassadors gain content knowledge and skills using SEE’s NGSS-aligned curriculum6 and conduct aquaponic and hydroponic experiments in both greenhouses and laboratory environments; however, the exact framework of these experiences is modified annually to reflect community needs and institute resources. As their summer learning experiences end, the students’ role as an ambassador begins. Ambassadors use their newfound knowledge, skills, and confidence to design and implement a program in order to take action on environmental issues of concern to their community. They also transfer the knowledge they gain through this process to open-access, online resources (blog posts, integration plans, materials lists, blueprints, grant proposals, etc.) accessible through their PF1010 ambassador profile7. This profile serves as a valuable resource as it creates a positive online presence for each student and aids them during their academic and career journeys. Finally, throughout the school year, ambassadors are mentored and supported by the PF1010 team and ambassador alum through monthly virtual meetings. The team uses this time to ask questions, provide advice, and share successes. At the end of the school year, PF1010 organizes an Ambassador Showcase, where family, friends, and PF1010 community supporters gather at ISB to hear final presentations and celebrate the ambassador’s impact and hard work.

PROGRAM IMPACT

Developed to diversify and strengthen the environmental research field, as well as provide skills training and authentic research experiences for students, this scalable year-long program has cultivated and supported 3 cohorts of 36 total high school students since 2016 from the Puget Sound region in Washington state, mostly from underrepresented and marginalized groups. To date, this program has provided ~200 hours of interdisciplinary EE focusing on sustainable agriculture, food security, aquaponics, systems biology and career exploration. Through program evaluation, all ambassadors agreed that the internship contributed positively to their self-confidence, felt it would be a valuable experience for others, and that it increased their interest in pursuing research in the future.

PROGRAM DEVELOPMENT

In addition to providing an authentic, hands-on experience for students to become inspired and empowered, PF1010 modified this program each year to reflect additional needs in research and educational resource development within ISB. This program could easily be modified to account for specific institute objectives and/or needs.

For example:

Additional research technicians were needed to maintain and sample experimental aquaponic systems for scientists in 2017; therefore, ambassadors were each assigned a system to manage and sample throughout the summer as part of their training experience.

The Seattle Youth Employment Program (SYEP) requested ISB be a host for Seattle youth in search of 150 hours of employment experience in 2017; therefore, 2017 Ambassadors were recruited and financially supported through SYEP during their summer experience at ISB.

PF1010 developed a new, standards-aligned curriculum module which needed to be field-tested in 2018; therefore the 2018 Ambassador program was structured as a “short course” in which Ambassadors received a 33-hour course completion certificate from SEE.

Due to the success we observed in both ambassadors and the development of our program and research, we recommend other educators also strategically develop their programs to address the needs of their communities while also making progress toward achieving milestones in their own organizations. This real-world application and career-connected learning piece will provide ambassadors with context and relevance in an otherwise siloed experience. If you are an educator interested in developing an Ambassador program, consider asking yourself a few key questions as you begin planning.

For example:

  • What student and environment-related needs exist in your community? Ex: STEM internships, aquaponic research, curriculum development
  • What resources and/or incentives are available for students? Ex: Stipends, short course certifications
  • Which local and/or national organizations could you partner with to legitimize the experience? Ex: Seattle Youth Employment Program, Seattle Parks and Recreation
  • How will you measure the impact the program has on students? The community?

Summary

As evidenced by the success and feedback from ambassador alumni, the PF1010 Ambassador Program has proven to be an effective experience that prepares students and citizens to be confident community leaders and complex problem solvers. Alumni are compelling communicators and innovators who care about making a difference in their various fields of interest. Due to the student-led ambassador training model, this program is highly scalable, requires low time management, and is relevant in many contexts. We believe it can be leveraged in many environments – schools, universities, nonprofits, after school programs, etc. – anywhere an educator can develop opportunities for students to feel empowered and supported to make a difference in their communities.

Acknowledgements
The success of this program is possible due to the generous training and resources provided by ISB scientists (Jake Valenzuela, Wei-ju Wu, Serdar Turkarslan, Rachel Calder, Annie Otwell, Matt Richards), ISB visiting scholars (Shari Carswell, Barb Steffens, Emily de Moor, Emily Borden, Amanda Cope, Dexter Chapin), the ISB communication team (Hsiao-Ching Chou, Allison Kudla, Joe Myxter), ISB undergraduate intern Kourtney Tams, and ISB high school interns (Linnea Stavney, Ivan Esmeral, Sarah Brossow, Annabelle Smith); donation of greenhouse and classroom space from the Black Farmers Collective’s Ray Williams and Northeastern University; web-based data management hub development by Ian Gorton and Northeastern University graduate students; engineering and construction support from Jeff King and Ray Williams; donation of aquaponic kits from AquaSprouts and aquarium materials from Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center; student project support from ambassador high schools; and funding from the Seattle Youth Employment Program, the Microsoft Giving Campaign, CrowdRise donors, DonorsChoose, and the National Science Foundation (NSF MCB-1616955, MCB-1518261, DBI-1565166, MCB-1330912).

1. World Food Programme. <https://www1.wfp.org/zero-hunger>. Web Accessed Mar 4 2019.
2 Coleman-Jensen, A., Gregory, C., & Singh, A. Household Food Security in the United States in 2013. USDA Economic Research Service. 2014.
3 “The business opportunity in water conservation”, The McKinsey Quarterly 2009. McKinsey and Company. Dec 2009.
4 “Creating a Sustainable Food Future”. Synthesis Report. World Resources Institute. Dec 2018.
5 Sustainable Development Goal 2. Sustainable Development Goals Knowledge Platform. United Nations. <https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/sdg2>. Web accessed Mar 4 2019.
6 Modeling Sustainable Food Systems Curriculum. Systems Education Experiences. <https://see.systemsbiology.net/modeling-sustainable-food-systems/>. Web Accessed Mar 4 2019.
7 Project Feed 1010 Ambassador Profiles. Project Feed 1010. <http://www.projectfeed1010.com/ambassador-profiles/>. Web Accessed Mar 4 2019.
AUTHORS

After Jessica Day received her master’s degree in wildlife science, her passion for both science and science education led her to inspire others as a high school science teacher in Texas. Compelled to make a wider impact, Jessica later transitioned into project management at Institute for Systems Biology in Seattle in 2015. Here, with the support of ISB’s scientists and educators, she developed and managed Project Feed 1010 until 2018. Jessica continues to pursue opportunities to impact science and education, and currently manages agricultural research and extension projects at Clemson University in Clemson, South Carolina.

Claudia Ludwig grew up in the midwest where she always found ways to explore nature, even in the midst of Chicago. With degrees in Biology, Chemistry and Education, Claudia taught middle and high school science and made her way to Washington state. Experiential learning brought her to Institute for Systems Biology where she learned how to bring systems science to her students and to other teachers. She continues her work at ISB by striving towards a world where all people, especially those from underserved communities, participate in systems science.

Nitin S. Baliga grew up in Mumbai, India where, at a young age, he witnessed disparities in education and food security which have fueled his work. After completing his degrees in microbiology and marine biotechnology, he came to the Univerisity of Massachusetts, Amherst to complete his PhD in microbiology. He then joined ISB in Seattle, as one of its founding scientists in 2000. Since that time he has made significant contributions to systems-level cellular studies and to science education by translating his research into teaching modules and new programs.