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  • planning
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Where to begin teaching BHP?

Kerry Lynn
Kerry Lynn 9 months ago

Hi everyone!

I've been looking at BHP for a few months and am starting to plan for the school year. What advice do you have for getting started?

  • How do you plan for the year? How much time do you spend on each activity and unit?
  • What are your favorite activities to get students hooked on BHP?
  • What skills do you think I should introduce first?

Any and all advice is greatly appreciated!

Thanks,

Kerry

Adriane Musacchio , Jessica Lindenmeier (f129eb4b-0746-4b67-ad09-7d64569fae90 ,Laura Massa , Brad Vonck 

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  • Bryan Dibble
    +1 Bryan Dibble 9 months ago

    Kerry Lynn Like Gwen Duralek said- what is your timeframe?  There is a wide range here in the forum.  Many get to teach the class all school year, others have semesters, and some, me for instance, teach BHP three times a year in trimesters.  Donnetta Elsasser teaches BHP a few days a week over I believe a semester.  So there is a wide range and many teachers who can match you up to a plan of action.  Here is a list of my topics and timeline on a trimester-

    Week 1- Introductions, vocabulary activity for the course, course outline, building a personal timeline (understanding thresholds)

    Week 2 - Claim testers, understanding claims, writing claims.  Big History initial assessment.

    Week 3 - Origin Stories and the Big Bang Threshold 1

    Week 4 - Threshold 2 and 3- Stars Light Up and Elements Form

    Week 5 - Threshold four, Our Solar System and Earth

    Week 6 - Life - Threshold 5

    Week 7 - Threshold 6 collective learning and early humans

    Week 8 - Threshold 7, Agriculture and Civilization

    Week 9 - More Threshold 7, Cultures and World Religions

    Week 10 - Little more Threshold 7, Exploration, Expansion and interconnectedness/ Globalization. 

    Week 11/12 - Speed of information Threshold 8.

    Week 12/13 - The future

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  • Kerry Lynn
    0 Kerry Lynn 9 months ago in reply to Bryan Dibble

    Thank you, Bryan Dibble . Wow, teaching the course three times in a school year is impressive!  I teach BHP to freshmen as part of a year-long world history course. I've got a lot of flexibility as long as I cover the standards.

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  • Todd Nussen
    0 Todd Nussen 9 months ago in reply to Kerry Lynn

    Hi Kerry and welcome.  I also teach BHP to freshmen as a year-long course.  Let me know if you have any general or specific questions.  I'm in New York.  Where are are you located? 

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  • Kerry Lynn
    0 Kerry Lynn 9 months ago in reply to Todd Nussen

     Todd Nussen , thanks so much for the welcome. I am teaching in Arizona and we begin school next week. What activities do you use to hook students during the first week? I want to get students excited about this new course. The History as a Mystery and History of Me seemed engaging. What do you recommend for starting the year? 

    Thank you!

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  • Todd Nussen
    0 Todd Nussen 9 months ago in reply to Kerry Lynn

    I highly recommend Big History on a Football Field.  It's completely engaging, becomes an excellent reference throughout the year, and it's fun.  Depending on the weather, you can always do a modified version in your school gym or the hallway.  

    Take a look at the activity and figure out what works best for you.  In my version, I print out the thresholds on different pieces of paper and then I divide the class into three groups.  Group one is given the task of trying to put the thresholds in order and space them out correctly, then as the next group goes (and the last), I provide a little bit more information and let the group ask me a question.  

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  • Todd Nussen
    0 Todd Nussen 9 months ago in reply to Kerry Lynn

    I highly recommend Big History on a Football Field.  It's completely engaging, becomes an excellent reference throughout the year, and it's fun.  Depending on the weather, you can always do a modified version in your school gym or the hallway.  

    Take a look at the activity and figure out what works best for you.  In my version, I print out the thresholds on different pieces of paper and then I divide the class into three groups.  Group one is given the task of trying to put the thresholds in order and space them out correctly, then as the next group goes (and the last), I provide a little bit more information and let the group ask me a question.  

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  • Kerry Lynn
    0 Kerry Lynn 9 months ago in reply to Todd Nussen

    That looks like a great activity, and I like getting students outside and moving! I noticed there's some math involved. Do you do this with the students? I worry it would scare my kids and they would lose interest before we got to the field.

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