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  • >>Narrator: Creating the school to serve nearly 500 three-

  • to five-year-olds might seem like the recipe for disaster.

  • Some days are chaotic here.

  • Like when the Auburn University Pep Squad shows up.

  • Or when a tornado touches down nearby.

  • >>Principal: Boys and girls,

  • please move into your weather locations at this time.

  • We will come around and check on everyone.

  • >>Narrator: But on a typical day, the students and staff

  • at Alabama's Auburn Early Education Center are busily engaged

  • in learning adventures, like sailing a cardboard cruise ship to Africa.

  • >>Teacher: Okay, Jordan and Dylan are going

  • to pass your life vests out to you.

  • >>Narrator: Or flying a plastic plane to Brazil.

  • >>Teacher: You go ahead and give Ara your boarding pass.

  • >>Narrator: For them the lifelong learning exploration can't begin

  • too soon.

  • >>Teacher: Bon voyage!

  • >>Narrator: Just about everything that goes

  • on here involves long-term projects that students undertake as a class.

  • >>Sandy: Do you know where that is, what it's called?

  • >>Student: South America, Brazil.

  • >>Sandy: It is Brazil and this is the place

  • that you are you are studying about.

  • >>Student: That is a big place!

  • >>Narrator: The theme for each project evolves

  • out of the natural curiosity of the kids.

  • >>Teacher: Here is some information about the camel,

  • and it says, "The animal..."

  • >>Narrator: Once the students decide on a theme, teachers guide them

  • to resources and books and on the Internet,

  • to help focus their efforts.

  • >>Lilli: Let's say that the theme is Brazil.

  • And they begin to study Brazil by going the Internet,

  • they look up information.

  • Then they decide if we want to go there.

  • And the teachers pose to them, "Well, how can we get there?"

  • >>Student: And if they didn't have the map, they couldn't get there.

  • >>Sandy: They couldn't get there!

  • >>Lilli: Then they may decide, "Well, we're going by plane,

  • we need to construct some type of model of plane.

  • And the teachers get the Internet resources, the book resources.

  • They take them on the field trip.

  • >>Sandy: Where did you get the information to know that?

  • >>Sandy: Well, we went to the Auburn Airport to see all the instruments.

  • There was instruments inside planes to make it work.

  • >>Student: These make us how fast we're going, how slow and these...

  • >>Lilli: The kids are very highly motivated to be involved,

  • because they're doing it for a reason.

  • It's not just an arbitrary "cutesy" activity

  • that has no real meaning or value for them.

  • So that's why teaching using thematic curriculum keeps the kids very

  • engaged in the activities.

  • >>Teacher: You have to have your passport to get on the plane.

  • >>Student: This is your Captain speaking, we're flying to Brazil,

  • and we don't expect a lot of turbulence.

  • >>Lilli: All of it involves developing the plan,

  • carrying it through, writing about it, and cooperation, problem solving,

  • critical thinking, are all pieces to getting that project complete.

  • >>Stayce: Remind everybody what we decided

  • that we needed at our funeral.

  • >>Narrator: With a bit of skillful coaching, everyday events,

  • like the death of the class pet praying mantis can trigger

  • engaging projects.

  • >>Stacye: Can you share with them what you decided needed

  • to go on the tombstone?

  • >>Student: Bugs' name.

  • >>Stacye: Bugs' name.

  • >>Narrator: After her students decided

  • to give the deceased a funeral, teacher, Stacy Jones,

  • found a way to fold all of their required curriculum into the project.

  • Among other things, they practiced writing and drawing

  • by designing invitations for the ceremony.

  • >>Stacye: I got in science.

  • I got in social studies.

  • I got in math, I got in writing.

  • I got in everything all through an authentic purpose for learning.

  • They were interested.

  • And once you have been interested, they can't get enough information.

  • They love school, because they're interested, because it's authentic.

  • >>Student: I went to the dentist for them to take pictures of my teeth.

  • And I got...

  • >>Narrator: Since most kindergartners favorite subject is themselves,

  • personal stories are at the center of the literacy curriculum here.

  • >>Student: I forgot that I had a virus.

  • And when I went home, I threw up on myself.

  • Are there any questions?

  • >>Narrator: Each day, three students get a chance to tell their story,

  • and answer questions about it.

  • >>Stayce: At the beginning of the year, every story is one sentence.

  • "I went to the beach."

  • "I went shopping."

  • "I went to the mall."

  • And as the children are asking these questions, they realize,

  • "I need to be sure to say these details,

  • because it's a pretty important part."

  • >>Student: I fell, and then I hit my head on my table.

  • It was a round table, and it was a coffee one.

  • >>Stayce: Journal is great.

  • Academically, they're writing, they're reading every day.

  • But more importantly, they're going to be talking

  • to people the rest of their life.

  • So that's my big push for it is learning how to socialize

  • and communicate with other people.

  • >>Stayce: All right, which story are you going to vote on?

  • Are you going to vote on the teeth?

  • Are you going to vote on the sick?

  • >>Narrator: The students consider each story and vote on which one

  • to write about and illustrate that day.

  • >>Stayce: Hey, guys, I'm looking for those periods

  • that go at the end of sentences.

  • >>Stayce: Now I hear another sound in "hi-s."

  • "Hi-s."

  • >>Student: "C?"

  • >>Narrator: Early student writing rarely conforms

  • to conventional spelling rules.

  • But principal Lilli Land sees value in allowing creative alternatives.

  • >>Lilli: A five-year-old child should not be expected

  • to spell every word conventionally correct.

  • Many 35-year-olds may not spell every word conventionally correct,

  • but use "spell check" when they're on the computer.

  • But with a young child, you want to turn them onto the writing.

  • "Man, I can write this!

  • You know, I can be an author!"

  • >>Student: I'm having a good time.

  • >>Lilli: So you get those juices going, you get the kids interested.

  • They write, and then the way

  • that they write gives the teacher very useful information

  • about where they are in their development in the stages of reading.

  • >>Coach: I would probably say you're exactly right.

  • Most of the time we're going to see that "s," it's going to be an "s."

  • >>Stayce: Right.

  • >>Coach: And we're still looking at September

  • so let's look at where he is now.

  • >>Stayce: All right.

  • >>Narrator: In addition to a dedicated reading coach,

  • the Center has installed "Smart Boards" in every classroom

  • to enhance their literacy effort.

  • >>Sandy: What's that letter?

  • >>Student: "b."

  • >>Sandy: "b."

  • All right.

  • Here's what I want you to do.

  • I want you to pull this "b" on top of that "d."

  • Pull it down.

  • Now, are they the same?

  • No.

  • >>Sandy: Before you could show it to them.

  • But the fact that they can bring it over and put it on top of each other,

  • and because they can manipulate it, makes it so much easier for them

  • to learn, and it's so much fun for them to do.

  • And they're actually in charge of it.

  • they have the power.

  • And therefore, it's more pertinent to them, I think.

  • >>Sandy: What's that letter?

  • "n"

  • >>Sandy: What's that letter?

  • "e"

  • >>Sandy: What's that letter?

  • "n"

  • >>Sandy: Look how smart you are.

  • You're so smart, I can't even take it!

  • All right, what comes after...

  • >>Interviewer: How do you like going on the big white boards,

  • and going on the Internet?

  • >>Jared: You can just learn!

  • >>Lilli: Technology has really just taken us to another level.

  • >>Teacher: It says, "All the plants or plant life of a place."

  • >>Lilli: When kids have questions about things that they are learning,

  • then it's just with a click of the mouse, and they're there.

  • And not only can they just get information,

  • but they can see all kinds of pictures.

  • They can see video clips.

  • So it just opens the door to their world of learning.

  • >>Sandy: Look!

  • It's not anaconda.

  • It's an otter!

  • Why do you think the otter's coming up there?

  • >>Student: Because he eats anacondas!

  • >>Sandy: He's probably saying, "Look!

  • I have dinner.

  • I'm going to eat me some anacondas," isn't he?

  • >>Sandy: These kids have a very authentic, real purpose for learning.

  • >>Teacher: Now, Jordan's going to stamp your passport.

  • >>Lilli: We're trying to teach them to be lifelong learners.

  • What are resources?

  • When you want to find something out, what do you do?

  • You don't go to an adult, and just have them feed you all the

  • information you know.

  • You have to learn to be a problem solver.

  • And you have to be resourceful.

  • And we have to keep them excited about the process of learning.

  • >>Student: Don't go yet!

  • Because there's lots of airplanes and birds covering the sky.

  • >>Student: Okay.

  • I'm hanging up.

  • >>Narrator: For more information on what works

  • in public education, go to edutopia.org.

>>Narrator: Creating the school to serve nearly 500 three-

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