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UN Sustainability Goals Tournament with Andrea Wong

Kathy Hays
Kathy Hays over 1 year ago

I always love the last few weeks of the school year… and not just because they are the last few weeks of the school year! Many of my favorite OER activities are from Era 7, such as The Dollar Street Project, The World in 2050, and the UN Sustainable Development Goals. What I love most about them is the way they challenge students to think critically and discover ways they can actively shape and influence the future of our world. 

 This year I decided to revamp the way I introduce the UN Sustainable Development Goals. In the past I noticed that my students often chose six goals at random without giving it much thought. This led to them researching a goal they didn’t feel passionately about and resulted in lackluster action on their part when they got to the final portion of the activity. Here are the steps I took to encourage students to be more intentional with their choices.

1. Many of my students were still unclear about the true meaning of sustainability.I started class with this video from UCLA and asked students to write their own definition of sustainability.

2. Next, we watched We the People to get a general overview of the 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals.

3. I then assigned each student one goal and gave them 5-10 minutes to do a quick read on the goal, analyze the infographic, and write down the facts they found to be most shocking or      interesting. I used the first goal, End Poverty in All Its Forms Everywhere, to model this activity for them. 

4. Next came the competition! Although all 17 of the UN Sustainable Development Goals are significant, I wanted to see which matters my students felt were most pressing. I used this   template to make a single elimination bracket. For each match I had students share what they learned about the goal they were assigned and then had all students get up and out of their seats to vote for the goal they felt was most imperative (go to the front of the room to vote for goal 1, the back of the room for goal 2, and so on). I did this purely based on numbers and gave students a sticky note to jot down their thoughts as they moved around the room, particularly with the matches they disagreed with. 

5. The competition inspired informal debates between students but also helped them discover a goal they were more passionate about. My students are still in the midst of their research and action plans, but based on what I’ve seen so far their action plans are already more meaningful. I was also able to share some articles from the new Climate Project since so many of the goals align with climate change. A few students were even inspired to take the semester-long course next school year!

  • What are your favorite end of year activities?
  • How do you ensure students choose topics they are passionate about?
  • Who else is planning to teach the new Climate Project?

 Share your thoughts and questions in the comments below.

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  • Adriane Musacchio
    Adriane Musacchio over 1 year ago
    Kathy Hays said:
    What are your favorite end of year activities?

    The World in 2050 seems like such a fun activity! My favorite end of year activity is the Little Big History Project! We have a fair at my school down in the auditorium, so it really feels like a celebration of learning. It's 3 weeks until our fair and it is officially GO time! I'm excited to see each students' BHP topics go from written papers to creative poster boards & presentations! 

    In terms of having students choose topics they are passionate about- I find that this takes time. It actually took me a while to feel okay with a little  unstructured research time. This is essential in trying to find topics that students actually are interested in! 

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  • Adriane Musacchio
    Adriane Musacchio over 1 year ago
    Kathy Hays said:
    What are your favorite end of year activities?

    The World in 2050 seems like such a fun activity! My favorite end of year activity is the Little Big History Project! We have a fair at my school down in the auditorium, so it really feels like a celebration of learning. It's 3 weeks until our fair and it is officially GO time! I'm excited to see each students' BHP topics go from written papers to creative poster boards & presentations! 

    In terms of having students choose topics they are passionate about- I find that this takes time. It actually took me a while to feel okay with a little  unstructured research time. This is essential in trying to find topics that students actually are interested in! 

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  • Andrea Wong
    Andrea Wong over 1 year ago in reply to Adriane Musacchio

    Adriane Musacchio , it is amazing that you have a fair to showcase all of your students' hard work! Are parents able to stop by to see all of the projects? Or are other classes able to attend? I would love to hear more about how the fair is structured. 

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  • Adriane Musacchio
    Adriane Musacchio over 1 year ago in reply to Andrea Wong

    Definitely something we all look forward to! It’s nice to end the year with some excitement :) We typically take photos for the families to view after the fair. The fair itself is open to the internal school community only, so different classes come down during different periods to come celebrate and learn with us. Students set up period 1, present periods 2-5 (the same way one would during a science fair). I have tables set up with stations. Each student station has a trifold board and a laptop for a Google slide or anything else they’d like to show digitally. Students are asked to have some kind of “fun” or interactive component. For example, my Endorphins group will be having a small basketball hoop station where they have visitors try to get a ball in the hoop. The idea they have is to allow their audience to release some endorphins during their presentation on endorphins (cool right?!). Though each group will get many visitors throughout the day, they will be judged by only 3-4 judges on the BHP LBHP project rubric. Judges are a combo of former BHP students & teachers of all different subject areas. We eat lunch period 6 and have an award ceremony period 7! That’s pretty much how the day goes.

    Let me know if you have any other questions! If you have the time I highly recommend trying it out one year! It is so much fun :) 

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