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Panorama comments on Open thread, Oct. 26 - Nov. 01, 2015 - Less Wrong Discussion

4 Post author: MrMind 26 October 2015 08:34AM

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Comment author: Panorama 28 October 2015 12:10:22PM 4 points [-]

The Tech Elite’s Quest to Reinvent School in Its Own Image

A Day in the Life

Like a true startup, Khan Lab School constantly changes its schedule to accommodate evolving workflow and logistical demands. Different age-groups follow different self-paced lesson plans, but here’s an example of a day at the Lab School.

9–9:15 am: Morning Meeting

A daily all-school meeting where students learn about things like current events, view the work of their fellow classmates, and focus on relationships.

9:15–9:45 Advisory

Students break out into cohorts sorted by age. They attend one-on-one meetings with advisers to set personal goals. (One ambitious 12-year-old hopes to launch a small-scale NGO.) Some days include “Goal Studio” time to work on these independent passion projects.

9:45–10:45 Literacy Lab, Part 1

Teachers cover all the essentials, from developing main ideas to composing blog posts.

10:45–11 Morning Break

11–11:30 Literacy Lab, Part 2

Instructors use digital tools like Lexia and LightSail to assess students’ reading levels and work with individuals on problem areas.

11:30–12 Inner Wellness

Students improve their mental well-being by practicing mindfulness.

12–12:45 pm Lunch

12:45–1 Afternoon Meeting

Another schoolwide gathering for announcements and updates.

1–2:30 Math/Computer Science Lab

Using videos from Khan Academy, students practice skills at their math level. Younger students receive more direct instruction, while older students might work on a collaborative engineering project.

2:30–3 Outer Wellness

Students participate in physical fitness activities, including gardening and playing sports like field hockey, soccer, and Ultimate Frisbee.

3–4 Cleanup, Read Aloud, Flexible Pick Up/Recess

4–6 Studio Time/Pick Up

During this optional period, students work on their own without direct supervision, though the staff is available for help.

Comment author: Viliam 29 October 2015 08:45:12AM *  4 points [-]

Students ... attend one-on-one meetings with advisers to set personal goals.

How many students? How many advisers? How much minutes per one? What are the remaining students doing?

Teachers cover all the essentials, from developing main ideas to composing blog posts.

This is the only hour in a day where students [EDIT] learn [/EDIT] something other than math or reading. Nice to know that if you compress all the remaining subjects into one hour daily, there is enough time left for composing blog posts.

I suspect this will go like most of the educational suggestions:

  • an article full of applause lights
  • social media hype
  • ...no, there is no step 3; specifically you will never see the experimental results
Comment author: ChristianKl 29 October 2015 02:58:50PM 1 point [-]

This is the only hour in a day where students do something other than math or reading.

Do you consider mindfulness practice math or reading?

I suspect this will go like most of the educational suggestions:

The article isn't about a suggestion but a real world experiment.

Nice to know that if you compress all the remaining subjects into one hour daily, there is enough time left for composing blog posts.

There no suggestion that subjects get compressed into one hour daily. It a shedule of a single day without a suggestion that every day is the same.

Comment author: Vaniver 29 October 2015 05:10:08PM 0 points [-]

Nice to know that if you compress all the remaining subjects into one hour daily, there is enough time left for composing blog posts.

One assumes that during the 'reading' section one could be reading nonfiction material on the other subjects.

Comment author: ZankerH 28 October 2015 05:32:57PM 2 points [-]

I need some calibration here. Is this satire?