Presenting
Your Case for a Place
Virginia
DeNucci
REACH Teacher (Gifted/Talented)
White Bear Lake Schools
I teach GT (Gifted/Talented) students and I open up the
Journey North adventure as a class for 4th and 5th graders that meets
once a week. (Since I work in 3 buildings, this was a total of about
30 students) Each student is assigned one Mystery City. As a team, the
students share all the information about their photoperiods - and later
their research clues. Students are given a Journey North journal with
specific assignments to be completed and discussed. The week in which
the final predictions are due, each student is expected to "present
his/her case" including reasons (proof) to support each clue. Each
student creates a poster presentation to help explain their reasoning.
After the Mystery Cities have been revealed, the students conduct further
research about foods native to their Mystery City country. They are
to find a recipe from that country, make it, and bring it to the final
class, which is our "ethnic picnic".
Journey
North is an excellent program for my students. They have so much fun
- but at the same time they are learning so much - and the best part
is that they APPLY their research skills in a real life situation. I
find the students working as a team - helping each other out - giving
feedback to reasoning. (This is not always common among Gifted students,
so I see this as an excellent avenue to practice collaboration.)
If
you have tips you'd like to share, please write to Journey North feedback
form