Posts Tagged ‘urban studies education’

June 15th, 2010

The Kensington Art of History Project

By Ian Charlton

ElcentroblogimageundertheelEl Centro students document the neighborhood. Images from the Kensington Art of History blog.

This past Friday I spent the afternoon at Norris Square Presbyterian Church for the Kensington Art of History Project. There, students from El Centro de Estudiantes, a school started in 2009 by the non-profit Big Picture Philadelphia in association with Congreso de Latinos Unidos, presented their findings on the history of Kensington and Norris Square neighborhoods in an exhibition called “Threads of History: A Living Museum of Kensington’s Past and Present.” The multimedia presentation, which included photos, texts, old maps of the neighborhood, and most notably, performances by the students, was informative and entertaining. Most impressive was the depth of research done by the high-school students and the engaging way they presented the material. The project was devoted to relating the experience of past immigrants of Kensington and the problems they dealt with — like the necessity of child labor — to the experience of recent immigrants to Kensington today and the struggles they face. I really enjoyed the humorous interaction performed by two students, playing John B. Stetson and one of his employees, in which the employee begrudgingly accepts a meager amount of cash offered by Stetson out of his own deep pockets.  Visit the Kensington Art of History project’s blog for more about the students’ research, including photos and video.   Read more about Big Picture Learning’s  project-based schools here, here, and at the Philadelphia Public School Notebook blog.

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March 8th, 2010

Pavements and Podcasts: Urban Studies at Masterman High

By Amy Jane Cohen

CoverMy most memorable project in high school was one in which I researched my own house.  I remember how thrilling it was to find my house on old maps at the Historical Society, to see my street address in City Directories, to trace the deeds of my house at City Hall, and to find census data at the Free Library.  By finding out about my house, I also learned about the history of my neighborhood and of the city of Philadelphia.  Indeed, when I think about why I decided to major in history at college and to become a teacher of history, I know that completing that project was a pivotal event.

As a 21st -century teacher of social studies, I wanted to give my students the opportunity to experience a similar hands-on and highly relevant research process. I also recognized, however, that today’s students have a range of presentation tools available which were unimaginable when I was in high school.  I share with my students my prized project, painstakingly put together with construction paper, handwritten pages, and even crayon.  They (and I) find it hard to believe that in 1981, this constituted an “A” project:

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