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There are two key
elements to the Ideal Schools approach to education. The first element is a
project-based curriculum and the second is a learner-centered orientation.
These two elements shape all other decisions concerning faculty, school
policies, assessments, and physical space.
Our project-based
curriculum is designed around having students complete demanding projects or
solving complex problems that require students to find new information from
several academic content areas in a strategic and goal-directed way and to
apply that information individually or as part of a group to complete a high
quality product or a careful analysis of a problem.
The antithesis of
the project-based approach is the traditional approach of dividing the school
day into six or seven academic subjects without making clear the connections
between the content areas and the problems to which the content knowledge would be
relevant in the world outside of school. The project-based approach teaches
academic content in a context which makes the utility and relevance of the
content clear. The traditional approach leaves the student to figure out how
unrelated content connects, if at all, and to what end instruction aims.
While a
project-based approach increases student engagement and aids learning, it also
reinvigorates instruction of discrete subject matter areas. Subject-matter
instruction serves the purpose of helping students complete projects and solve
problems, which puts the subject matter instruction in a context that helps
students understand why learning math or history, for example, is important and useful. So,
students will learn math, science, economics, political science and history, among other subjects, while
completing a wide range of interesting projects, including designing and
building actual things. In this way, traditional content is used as a tool to help
students understand and solve real problems.
The high school
curriculum builds towards a senior project each student chooses. This final
project is the final assessment of our academic program, to ensure students
have successfully completed their coursework and have learned what the school
set out to teach, and it is an opportunity for students to focus on a subject
they care about. They can build on the foundation of knowledge and skills that
results from this project in college and beyond.
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