"I have always imagined that Paradise will be some kind of library." ~ Jorge Luis Borges

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

People who made a difference....in seventeen syllables

The fourth grade teachers and I were planning on collaborating on a biography unit, but schedules and testing got in the way.  Last week, I found myself with two weeks of classes left with a biography idea still floating about in my head.  
I adapted the unit and trimmed it down. The district curriculum has the students exploring the character traits and obstacles of the biography subjects as well as how the time and place played a role in the person's life. I dropped the time and place element and had the students focus on the character traits and obstacles. The students also determined why the person made a difference. The process was a bit rushed and a bit messy, but it was also beautiful and rich.  (All the projects are below!)


Class One:
In groups of four and five established by the classroom teachers, the students chose and read a biography from a preselected collection.

I decided to see how spare the students could be in synthesizing the biography. Could they do it in seventeen syllables? The students the used the Haiku template from ReadWriteThink. They brainstormed keywords about their person and then crafted a Haiku poem that captured the essence of their person - the person's personality traits, accomplishments, or obstacles that he or she had to overcome.



Class Two:
I reviewed the project expectations and modeled creating an Animoto movie.

The groups evaluated and edited their Haiku poems. After approval from me, they used Animoto to bring create a visual and musical presentation of their Haiku. Like their work on the personality beverages, the students understood that the goal was to find a theme, images and music that supported the text of their Haiku as well as what they knew about their person.

As I said, it was a bit rushed, but I am proud of the work these fourth graders created. Hare are people who made a difference, in seventeen syllables:
Nelson Mandela



Eleanor Roosevelt



Horace Pippin



Abraham Lincoln
(these are two separate videos)






Jacques Cousteau



Albert Einstein



John Appleseed Chapman



Babe Ruth



Bass Reeves




Esther Morris



Henry Box Brown



Sylvia Earle



Juliette Gordon Low



Alice Roosevelt Longworth



Joseph Boulonge



Mercy Otis Warren



Booker T. Washington



Nikola Tesla



Bob and Joe Switzer



Alexander Calder







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