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Improving Learner Experience: Agency, Community, Challenge

By Tom Vander Ark — July 17, 2017 3 min read
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New tools and strategies that provide the opportunity to create powerful learning experience (LX) improve every year. Last month a group of regional and national LX experts met with teenagers trained in design thinking at #LXsummit 2017.

Hosted by Boise nonprofit One Stone, the convening was an opportunity to learn together about promoting student agency, measuring what matters, and scaling personalized learning. As discussed last month, One Stone is a student-led and student-centered organization with a track record of creating powerful developmental opportunities after school. The #LXsummit was hosted, in part, to celebrate the first year of operation of the One Stone high school and inform the path forward.

Students like Jared (below) discussed the Bold Learning Objectives (BLOB) at One Stone. At the heart of the matter for One Stone founder Teresa Poppen is student voice--developing the agency that allows students to express who they are with confidence.

Place-Based Education

One of the highlights of the summit was a walking tour of downtown Boise with a focus on place-based education (PBE). The tour was led by Nate McClennen of Teton Science Schools (see a recent post), the national leaders in PBE, and One Stone opportunity wrangler Neva Geisler. We were able to record it so you could join in the tour without leaving your chair, so check out this podcast:

Podcast Highlights

McClennen recapped the six elements of place-based learning: local to global, learner-centered, inquiry-based, design thinking, community as classroom and interdisciplinary approach. He sees place-based education at One Stone as a true example of student agency, where “students are at the center, involved in projects that not only increase learner outcomes and engagement but truly create positive change in the community.”

Neva noted that given needs for skilled employment, the Idaho’s State Board of Education set a goal for 60 percent attainment rate of a college or post-secondary degree (for 25- to 34-year-olds) by 2020--a 10 point improvement over current levels. A high percentage of Idaho workers earn at or below the federal minimum wage. “The current state of affairs is an economic development issue we have to crack,” said Geisler.

A quick mile loop revealed dozens of project- and service-based learning opportunities including:


  • Homeless shelter, senior living center and low-income housing;
  • Learning corridor including incubator Trailhead, library and Boise State (see podcast);
  • Anne Frank Memorial and The Cabin, a center for writers;
  • Meeting space JUMP, Simplot and downtown businesses; and
  • The Boise River Greenbelt.

“When you think of the entire community as your classroom, you have unlimited opportunities. Imagine the diversity of learning experiences you can offer students to make learning real-world and relevant,” said Neva.

A five-minute exercise revealed examples of projects focused on each of the elements of PBE:


  • Conditions that create homelessness;
  • Analysis of river flow including what influences it, who manages it, and who is impacted;
  • Floating the river with students that wouldn’t have access; and
  • Studying connections between protests at the capitol and national and international movements.

LXtras

Other LX magic moments included:

For more, see:

The opinions expressed in Vander Ark on Innovation are strictly those of the author(s) and do not reflect the opinions or endorsement of Editorial Projects in Education, or any of its publications.