Final Project: Week One


Week One | 4/27–5/1


You will use this week to transition into the Final Project. You must first decide what to do with any ongoing projects. You can use your existing work as part of the Final Project or submit all of it as evidence for your Q4 evaluation. There are other options.

Start with the overview:

Final Project: Overview

Continue by looking through the calendar for the next seven weeks:

English 12 Calendar: April 27 – June 15

Then make sure you’ve bookmarked the main post for the next seven weeks:

Final Project: Documents & Posts

Finally, choose one or more of the following as your focus for the next five days:

  1. Finish a second project (as established here) that you want to finish this week, and then finish it.
  2. Wrap up your work on a second project, and then prepare to move onto the Final Project.
  3. Identify the parts of your current project-based work that could be used for a Final Project.
  4. Begin the analytical and introspective work for Week Two.

Whatever your focus is, you’ll have an assignment on Google Classroom to help you transition into this final part of the year. Remember that you can individualize almost every aspect of this work, from the timeline to the final product, by advocating for yourself.

Use the comment section below to ask questions — especially ones that could benefit others!

Final Project: Overview

Click to see the full image, courtesy of Cognitive Media, RSA Animate, and Ken Robinson.


Senior Talk 🠊 Final Project


We started our year with Ken Robinson’s “Changing Education Paradigms” TED Talk, with plans to end the year with your own senior talks — a chance to experience what Robinson describes in the following excerpt:

An aesthetic experience is one in which your senses are operating at their peak, when you are present in the current moment, when you are resonating with the excitement of this thing that you’re experiencing, when you are fully alive. An anesthetic is when you shut your senses off and deaden yourself to what’s happening…

We are getting our children through education by anesthetizing them. And I think we should be doing the exact opposite. We shouldn’t be putting them to sleep. We should be waking them up to what they have inside of themselves.

During this period of distance learning, the spirit of our second-semester projects remains the same: to wake up the part of you that you’ll need next year, no matter the path you’ve chosen. The more authentic and personally meaningful the work is, the better.

In the wake of COVID-19, of course, we must make some changes. First, the formal presentation outlined in February is no longer required. It is still possible, and if you wish, you can produce and record a Senior Talk that is virtually identical to what you would have done.

The second change is that you can choose from a wide range of possible final projects. You will be given a week just to think divergently about what this final project can be.

In the same TED Talk quoted above, Robinson defines divergent thinking like this:

This is why you’ll be instructed to use as much of your other second-semester projects as possible as part of this Final Project. You are not required to start over. In fact, you are strongly encouraged to use whatever you can from the work you’ve already done to help you.

The third and final change is that you’ll be given the project steps by week, with dates for May and June of 2020 detailed for each part of the final project. Your project should be finished and submitted between May 25 and June 5. See the new calendar posted here: http://sisypheanhigh.com/malachite/?p=4157.

The icons for each step are used with permission from the Noun Project. Details here.


Assessment & Grades


Please be sure you have read the following:

  1. April 14 Course Update: Senior Projects Redux
  2. April 16 District Notice: Grading Letter to Staff and Community

The April 14 update explains where we were at the end of Q3, how to navigate leveled instruction like these posts, and where to find information about every original second-semester project. On April 16, the district posted an update about the adoption of a Pass/Incomplete option for Q4.

All assessment and feedback will continue exactly as it always has in here, with the silver lining of not having to convert grade abatement profiles into a 100-point score. The profiles, skills, and traits are universal and universally useful, so we’ll stick with them:

Even the usual GAP protocol can be used without any changes. There will be regular Google Forms sent to students to collect evidence of their work, which will provide all the fuel for feedback we need. The daily requirements will be the same, as well:

  • Check Google Classroom once a day.
  • Check in and set a goal each day.
  • Advocate for individual help and feedback as necessary.

Most importantly, the idea of individualizing these projects remains at the center of the process. It was that way in February, and it’s that way now. We’ll work together to do what is right by each of you.

Ask questions about the overall project below.

Final Project: Documents & Posts

Below is a list of resources for the final seven weeks of the year. Please bookmark this page. Updates will be rolled out here.


Google Documents


Final Calendar | tinyurl.com/2020-cal-v2

April 27 Lettertinyurl.com/sh0427-letter

Final Project: Printable Week-by-Week Guide | tinyurl.com/sisyphus-tedx-dlc


Project Posts


English 12 Calendar: April 27 – June 15

Final Project: Overview

Week One | 4/27–5/1

Week Two | 5/4–5/8

Week Three | 5/11–5/15

Week Four | 5/18–5/22

Week Five & Week Six | 5/25–6/5

Week Seven | 6/8–6/12


Project Posts (Embedded)


English 12 Calendar: April 27 – June 15

Final Project: Overview

Final Project: Week One

Final Project: Week Two

Project-Based Learning: ETA Models

Final Project: Week Three

Final Project: Week Four

Final Project: Week Five & Week Six

Final Project: Week Seven

 

English 12 Calendar: April 27 – June 15

Download a printable copy of the calendar here: tinyurl.com/2020-cal-v2.


Week One | 4/27–5/1


You will use this week to transition into the Final Project, which is explained in full in an instructional post and document that will be available on April 27.

After reading that post, wrap up any other ongoing projects. That does not necessarily mean abandoning them! You can use them as part of the Final Project, submit them as part of your project-based learning evidence for Q4, or continue them because they matter to you.

One of the goals for this week is to remind you that these last six week of your high school career are an opportunity to create something meaningful. It is the most important goal, in fact.

To do much of anything meaningful, you must have a solid understanding of what is required and the timeline for completing it. This calendar is an overview. The instructional post is also required.

Starting with Week Two, you’ll be focused on the final project.


Week Two | 5/4–5/8


Final Project: Step #1 | Choosing a Topic

Even if you already had a project underway, you will work on this. You’ll consider other options, get feedback, revise what you have, and so on.

Use this week to sort through the work you’ve done this semester with the end goals of the Final Project in mind. What do you have that will help you the most? What will contribute to the best process and product?

You will be given plenty of examples of atypical projects this week — everything from podcasts to video essays. You’ll be asked to read, watch, and analyze some of those examples in order to decide what you will create.

By the time you get to the start of Week Three, you should have a solid idea of where you’ll end up by June 5.


Week Three | 5/11–5/15


Final Project: Step #2 – Step #3 | Research & Purpose

You will be given a Google Form and Classroom assignment on May 11. You’ll need to submit your statement of purpose and evidence of your research. This will be due on May 15.

This week is also about potential design elements, potential final forms, and a potential audience for your project. You should be collaborating as often as possible with your peers and teachers to arrive at the crux of this project — its reason for being, in essence.

The statement of purpose will match the ones taught before March 12, and the research evidence will match the kind of evidence you usually submit to prove your reading and writing.

You’ll continue this work into Week Four.


Week Four | 5/18–5/22


Final Project: Step #4 – Step #5 | Research & Design

Your statement of purpose should lead immediately into the design stage. You’ll need lots of feedback and redirection to produce the script, blueprint, etc, required here.

You will be given a second Google Form and Classroom assignment on May 18. You’ll need to submit evidence of further research, as stipulated in the guide to this project, and then a final script, blueprint, etc. This will be due on May 22.

There will be a separate assignment posted to Turnitin.com on Monday, May 18. You’ll need to submit your written design(s) there to check your originality.


Week Five | 5/25–5/29


Final Project: Step #6 | The Final Project

You must complete your project this week or next. You’ll be responsible for an asynchronous submission, which means you will not be presenting live. Whatever you record, write, publish, etc, will be handed in when its ready.

You will also share the work in the way that makes the most sense. We’ll expand the list of options as we go, and it will help to think divergently about your audience. Should you publish what you write? Share out a video through social media? Post a link to a website or YouTube channel?

There are many, many more options. You might choose to do something live, using Zoom or another tool to host a discussion. You might use social media as the basis of the project itself — a gallery through Instagram, for instance. Perhaps you’ll share your work through Reddit and then document the results in an essay.

You will be given a third Google Form and Classroom assignment on May 25. You’ll be required to submit the final project through this form, solving any problems that arise with your teacher’s help.

Note that you have two weeks to submit a project. The deadline is June 5, so work on the projects can continue into Week Six.


Week Six | 6/1–6/5


Final Project: Step #6 | The Final Project (Cont.)

This will be the second week of sharing out what you’ve created, with a deadline of June 5 for most students. Any exceptions to that deadline will be determined this week. Remember that individualizing this process is down to you.

One of the goals of these two weeks is to shine a spotlight on your projects, so you should start thinking about the community around us, from Brewster to the wider world. Does your project lend itself to a larger stage? How can you connect your work with more people?

All of this will be done at your discretion, based on your wishes and needs. The academic requirement for English 12 will remain the formal assignment that was distributed on May 25. The deadline for submitting work will be June 5.

Once you’ve shared and celebrated your projects, you’ll move into the last step of the process.


Week Seven | 6/8–6/12


Final Project: Step #7 | Assessment & Reflection

Note that we’ll use this week to wrap up any remaining projects. The academic work is self-assessment and reflection, and it can be done as soon as you receive the assignment.

The formal assignment will be given in two parts: an online form and an essay prompt. The online form will ask you to self-assess the process and product created for your Final Project. The essay prompt will ask you to turn that analysis into a piece of writing.

You will be given the final Google Form and Classroom assignment on June 8. You’ll have until June 12 to finish both parts of this step.

The last day for most students is June 25, regardless of how long distance learning continues. For seniors, however, the last day is Monday, June 15.


The Last Day | 6/15


This will be our last day together, and we’ll use it to recognize the impact of some of the best projects created during the previous seven weeks.

Senior Projects Redux

René Magritte, Time Transfixed (1938)

Full steam ahead.


Quick Read: What to Know


① You are not responsible for every scrap of understanding in every post.

There are levels to this kind of interstitial instruction, which is why it’s called interstitial.

In other words, there is no expectation that you exhaust every post and letter. The depth is there for students who would benefit from that depth.

To paraphrase the end of this essay by John Holt: Dive into these lectures and lessons, take the parts you understand, skip the parts you don’t, get what you can out of it, and then get to work.

As you do the work, you can ask questions, get clarification, and revisit these posts. It’s part of the process, and the process is the key.

An example is the writing from today. There is this “quick read,” then the rest of the post; then there is a letter to stakeholders that links to additional information; and on top of that, there are the updates through Google Classroom and ParentLink that likely brought you to this post.

The depth here helps. Do what you can, push yourself when appropriate, and advocate at all times.

② You are responsible for continued project-based learning.

The rest of the year will continue your project-based learning, which is enabled by flipped instruction, and which is ultimately assessed through profiles.

The goal of any project is to hone universal skills and traits. The purpose of instruction is to facilitate your creative efforts. Feedback is scaffolded and individualized, and you are empowered to use the space to help each other.

That goes for the digital space, too. Losing our classroom is a terrible blow; maintaining this digital connection will help us recover.

③ You are now required to complete only a “senior talk” and one additional project.

The Senior Talk will need to be adjusted, but there’s a silver lining: You now have the option of choosing from many different final products. We will workshop the list as we go, and some of the options are explored further in this post.

The same step-by-step guide and instructional posts can be used for this Senior Talk:

One other project is required. You can include any projects started in February and early March. We will also workshop how to adjust the process and product for your choice. For a recap of what projects are required, use the letter sent to stakeholders today and the original webpage:

Make this choice manageable for yourself. As long as you communicate your needs, this can all be individualized, which is why the most important step, as always, is to establish a feedback chain.

Read on for more on each of these updates.


① Leveled Instruction


Two things to keep in mind about all the writing I do for you:

  1. There are many points of entry and departure in each instructional post, so you can choose how much to read at one time. You never need to dig every scrap of understanding out of these.
  2. The more you read, of course, the more you’ll be able to do. There are levels.

The first point there was hammered home, I hope, through our unit on reading and the answer to why we read in particular1.

The second point is illustrated by Friday’s post:

April 10, 2020

You can take your time with this sort of instructional post. There are multiple points of entry, plus simplified or summarized instructions on Google Classroom.

If you take that extra time to read more deeply, you’ll be better equipped to individualize the work. You can take as much time as you need, however. There are levels to this.


② Not an Overhaul


The focus of your second-semester projects has always been on how you learn, what skills you need to hone, and how each project prepares you for the future. It’s been an exercise in individualizing project-based learning as much as possible. That is a universal framework.

The difference now is that we all need to cope with the present. This is the makerspace in action: We have very real, very pressing problems; they are problems of identity, anxiety, connection to others, misinformation and information; and we can address those problems through reading, writing, and discussion.

Before we get to the projects, another link to the trio of updates from last week:

Distance Learning: Week 3
• April 9 Update
• April 10 Update

Again, there are multiple points of entry. Read what you can, when you can.

Of special note is that Q3 grades will be finalized and posted on Friday, April 17. On Wednesday, you’ll be asked to self-assess, just like always, and then to work out any issues over the next two days.

Then Q4 grades will be pass/fail, which is a boon to us. Remember what grade abatement is and isn’t — which means we can now focus on authentic purposes and audiences.

This post prioritizes your projects around a few of these ideas:

  • Which projects might help you sort through the current situation?
  • What will connect us to each other through projects in the Humanities?
  • Which products have different audiences, now that we are all living and working online?
  • What still helps the most to prepare you for next year?

It’s not an overhaul. These are the same projects you started in February. You need the option to streamline and simplify them, however, and that’s what you have: the option to set a manageable schedule for yourself.

After you’ve read the next portion of this post, use the comment section to ask questions. That, too, is part of managing your own schedule. Continue to advocate for your learning.


③ Required Projects


Senior Talk

The Senior Talk is still a requirement, and you must still work with the instructional post that links it to the Pareto Project:

✰ Pareto Projects and Senior Talks

You must also use the step-by-step guide, which only needs slight alterations to function through distance learning:

Every step still works, including the final steps, regardless of the final form of the talk. We can even use the original sign-up document:

We need to think creatively about what that presentation could look like. There are no bad ideas right now, and I will share examples of video essays and other “talks” over the next few days.

In addition to this Senior Talk (which needs a new label, since “talk” is no longer exactly fitting), you must complete one additional project. They are listed below in a suggested order.

Commencement Address

This is an important opportunity to reflect on the learning community you are leaving in June. Whether you share the final product or not, this is the kind of writing you should be doing during a pandemic: personal, audience-driven, reflective.

The resources include examples of commencement addresses, but you can consider open letters and other digital formats. The key is the universal guide’s focus on audience. That guide is below, followed by the instructional post for this project.

✰ Commencement Address

I want you to think seriously about writing this in order to share it.

Pareto Projects

You might prioritize these projects precisely because we are learning from home. It’s why this post was put together for you:

April 9, 2020

Scroll down to the second section of that post, and note that there has been a cultural shift toward “passion projects” since COVID-19 hit us.

If you choose to work on a Pareto Project, it might turn into one of the other projects. It might become something we didn’t predict at all. It might continue into the summer. Regardless of the arc of that work, you have a unique learning opportunity.

In fact, this is a chance for you to build habits that will carry over into next year. Passion projects are the best way to do that, because they demand more structure from you. You build the scaffolding, and you fill it in.

Self-Prescribed Book Project

If you are able to use your time now to read, you may find no better time to become a better reader. That growth can then be turned into a project you design:

✰ Self-Prescribed Book Project

If nothing else, working further on a book you’ve chosen is a chance to discover or rediscover the part of you that loved reading when you were younger.

Below are the resources you’ve used or helped to create so far:

Research-Driven Writing

This is listed last here only because research-driven writing is part of the rest of pretty much every other item on this list. In fact, a research paper could explicitly be the product or outcome for the rest of the projects.

Don’t mistake this as a knock against research-driven writing. This is actually the most important set of skills on here: the ability to synthesize viewpoints, identify bias, craft an argument that deals with an issue, etc. It’s only that these skills are part of everything else, and time is of the essence.

To write an effective research-driven paper of any kind, you can follow this guide:

The rest of what you need is in the instructional post:

✰ Research-Driven Essay


  1. I haven’t used footnotes in a while, so let’s see if that code still works. Here is the end of an excerpt by John Holt that has been assigned off-and-on for a while now:

    This is exactly what reading should be and in school so seldom is — an exciting, joyous adventure. Find something, dive into it, take the good parts, skip the bad parts, get what you can out of it, go on to something else. How different is our mean-spirited, picky insistence that every child get every last little scrap of”understanding” that can be dug out of a book.

    I think that applies equally to a post on here. Dive in, take what you can, skip what you can’t, maybe circle back later on. Treat it as part of a much larger whole. 

Final Assessments


In-Class Focus and Feedback


Before we talk about anything else, here is your reminder that in-class focus and your use of feedback will determine the majority of your grade for the second semester:

All second-semester projects have rolling deadlines. You can set specific deadlines and checkpoints, because everything can be individualized; you are most likely, however, to prefer to do your work at your own pace.

That means that your choices in class, from the goals you set each day to your ability to avoid distraction, will contribute directly to your profile. Until June, there is no such thing as “late work”; there is just the evidence of your choices.

You have four or five projects to consider. You can individualize the work. There isn’t much excuse for being off-task and unproductive when you have that much agency and autonomy.


Repeated: Deadlines and Grades


June 2 is the end of GAP Q4B and the last official day for Senior Talk presentations. June 3–5 will be used for late presentations, second attempts, and other last-minute adjustments. June 5 is the soft deadline for all work

June 8–12 is when we will solidify final grades, including scores for the final exam, and final averages. Senior grades will be finalized and posted on June 12.

Except for your final exam, you control the deadlines and feedback given to these projects. Feedback on your work is the same as it ever was:

The process of grading you is also the same as it ever was:

Grades are based on evidence of universal skills and traits. Feedback uses those same universal languages. Grades and feedback are most dependent on your in-class focus and use of feedback, and you will do best when you focus on growth, collaboration, and transparency.

Exception: final exam

Your reflection on the Senior Talk is your final exam. Unlike the evidentiary approach of the GAP scoring process, this is the qualitative assessment of a single artifact. It is graded through a writing rubric based on our universal writing process.

Here is a folder with a collection of these rubrics:

The two that will be used for the final exam are these:

You must follow all separate instructions and guidelines for this reflective essay.


Repeated: Artifact Checklist


These are the artifacts due during the second semester. Consider the etymology again: An artifact is anything made with skill. Each of these artifacts will either be a formative step or part of a summative project.

  1. Self-Prescribed Book Choice | Completed online through a Google Form.
  2. Self-Prescribed Book Project | Presentations, projects, discussions, etc. Submitted in class and/or online according to individual needs.
  3. Research-Driven Essay Focus | Completed online through a Google Form.
  4. Research-Driven Essay | Final draft and links to any online publishing. Due on Google Classroom.
  5. MLA-Formatted Research-Driven Essay | Properly formatted submission to Turnitin.com.
  6. Commencement Address | Final draft and links to any online publishing. Due on Google Classroom and Turnitin.
  7. Pareto Project Student Work | Presentations, projects, discussions, etc. Submitted in class and/or online according to individual needs.
  8. Pareto Project Final Self-Assessment | Completed online through a Google Form. Two parts.
  9. Senior Talk Statement of Purpose | Completed online through a Google Form that also sets the time for the actual presentation.
  10. Senior Talk Script | Final draft due through Google Classroom. Must also be submitted to Turnitin.com.
  11. Senior Talk Presentation | Presented to an audience in a space of the presenter’s choosing.
  12. Senior Talk Reflection & Final Exam | Final draft due through Google Classroom. Must also be submitted to Turnitin.com.

 

Final Obligations

Five months later, we return to the root of obligation — ligare, “to bind,” which can be positive or negative. Let’s talk about the former usage.


Repeated: What Our Makerspace Does


Core English courses that are not affiliated with the College Board nor a state or local college enjoy a bit of freedom from the traditional superstructure of high school. The foundation is the same — that’s why the district’s SCP looks just like our set of universal skills and traits — but what we build is different.

Through the end of Q2, this has meant dividing our year into skill-based units and units based on essential questions and authentic problems:

① The Age of the Essay
② What Is Literature For?
③ The Practice of Empathy
④ Organization: Getting Things Done
⑤ When the Truth Isn’t Sufficient

This structure derives from what a Humanities makerspace is. Read that explanatory post again. This time, pay attention to the following section:

The problems students face [in a Humanities makerspace] are the problems all of us face, and they are exactly the problems that the Humanities exist to solve:

What does it mean to be a human being?
What does it mean to coexist in a society?
What are my beliefs?
How do I want to live my life?

An English classroom is also the home of soft skills, including self-awareness and self-efficacy, which raises a few more questions for the makerspace:

What does it mean to be educated?
What is the purpose of school?
How does each of us learn best?
What are the most important skills and traits for our futures?

Like any makerspace, we experiment to find solutions to these problems and answer these questions. We collaborate, ask experts, do research. We try to think outside the box. We sometimes try to dismantle the box to build a better one.

The tools and components we pour out on the table are a set of universal skills and traits, our connections to other human beings, and the literature and nonfiction that best teaches us how to be human.

In your final semester, you might study whether video games can be art, whether obscenity has an objective definition, whether schools take care of mental health effectively, or any of a dozen other authentic issues. These might be part of a research paper, a book project, a speech, a presentation, or your own self-directed project.

You are making meaning now. It all comes down to you.


Repeated: Second Semester Projects


The major five projects are tied together through the concept of project-based learning and the underlying paradigm shifts of the Humanities makerspace. The instructional posts for all projects are listed here:

Each of these projects will be your best examples of what you are capable of in this learning environment. There may be formative assignments given to help you along, and individual assignments will be available according to need and interest.

On Google Classroom, the Stream, as always, will show you updates, newly posted assignments, announcements, and so on. Under Classwork, in order from the top, you’ll find the following resources and categories:

  • TPXA :: Brewster High School Library | Digital resources for every project.
  • Daily Calibration | Start-of-class worksheet, post, and check-in forms. You must set a specific daily goal here.
  • Second Semester Projects | Submission hub for all evidence related to the five major projects, plus an overview of the second semester.
  • Second Semester Formative Work | Checkpoint assignments, Google Forms, and other formative steps related to each project.
  • Individual Work | Appears as a category if you’ve been given an individual deadline, assignment, modification, etc. Reminder: Almost everything can be individualized.

Deadlines and Grades


June 2 is the end of GAP Q4B and the last official day for Senior Talk presentations. June 3–5 will be used for late presentations, second attempts, and other last-minute adjustments. June 5 is the soft deadline for all work

June 8–12 is when we will solidify final grades, including scores for the final exam, and final averages. Senior grades will be finalized and posted on June 12.

Except for your final exam, you control the deadlines and feedback you are given for each project. Feedback is the same as it ever was:

The process of grading you is also the same as it ever was:

Grades are based on evidence of universal skills and traits. Your feedback uses that same universal language. Grades and feedback are most dependent on your in-class focus and use of feedback, and you will do best when you focus on growth, collaboration, and transparency.

Exception: final exam

Your reflection on the Senior Talk is your final exam. Unlike the evidentiary approach of the GAP scoring process, this is the traditional assessment of a single artifact. It is graded through a writing rubric based on our universal writing process.

Here is a folder with a collection of these rubrics:

The two that will be used for the final exam are these:

You must follow all separate instructions and guidelines. As a final exam, this paper will constitute one-fifth of your final average.


Artifact Checklist


These are the artifacts due during the second semester. Consider the etymology again: An artifact is anything made with skill. Each of these artifacts will either be a formative step or part of a summative project.

  1. Self-Prescribed Book Choice | Completed online through a Google Form.
  2. Self-Prescribed Book Project | Presentations, projects, discussions, etc. Submitted in class and/or online according to individual needs.
  3. Research-Driven Essay Focus | Completed online through a Google Form.
  4. Research-Driven Essay | Final draft and links to any online publishing. Due on Google Classroom.
  5. MLA-Formatted Research-Driven Essay | Properly formatted submission to Turnitin.com.
  6. Commencement Address | Final draft and links to any online publishing. Due on Google Classroom and Turnitin.
  7. Pareto Project Student Work | Presentations, projects, discussions, etc. Submitted in class and/or online according to individual needs.
  8. Pareto Project Final Self-Assessment | Completed online through a Google Form. Two parts.
  9. Senior Talk Statement of Purpose | Completed online through a Google Form that also sets the time for the actual presentation.
  10. Senior Talk Script | Final draft due through Google Classroom. Must also be submitted to Turnitin.com.
  11. Senior Talk Presentation | Presented to an audience in a space of the presenter’s choosing.
  12. Senior Talk Reflection & Final Exam | Final draft due through Google Classroom. Must also be submitted to Turnitin.com.