As we continue to push the idea of helping students to think cognitively to think, create, and produce, we must recognize that there isn’t a Fast Track version of that. We must allow them to hone those skills, but do so in ways that it is visible and in front of us.
One way is with the concept of local and global challenges. The Millennium Project, for example, identified 15 of these global challenges facing humanity:
In addition to projects like this, we can also start to think about the meaningful and real concerns that are happening in a local neighborhood or within the school, trying to get students to begin to believe that they are capable and helpful and valuable consumers, producers, creators, makers, so that they can actually inform and shape the world as they’re growing into it, as opposed to being told that they have to wait until graduation before they can have impact.
So that’s the heart and the imagination as to not just looking at these local and global challenges, but also starting to see:
In what ways can that be part of their school learning experience, as opposed to being a sideline or a co-curricular or an after-school experience?