Edutopia - June/July 2008 - (Page 30) Speakers at the Cooper-Hewitt program recommended bringing industry professionals and students together, encouraging them to study existing urban designs. This was precisely what Michelle Biagas did early in 2007, when a group of sixty architects from the Dallas-based firm Perkins + Will came to New Orleans and worked with Priestly students to create a plan for the site of their future school. They collaborated on everything, from taking measurements at the location to planning how to completely refurbish the building to figuring out how to make the building green. Biagas points out that the ongoing support of Cooper-Hewitt and its network of design professionals has proved invaluable. “A City of Neighborhoods was the single best development my team experienced,” she says. “They’ve embraced us and said ‘OK, we’re going to help you succeed.’ They’re both a great support system and a great teaching resource.” Great Expectations school counselors, and principals from the Big Easy (a name now more ironic than apt). Caroline Payson, the museum’s director of education, realized the need for this focus after talking with educators when she was in post-Katrina New Orleans for a conference in early 2007. “They understood why design was important not only to help them cope with what was happening but also to give them a leg up,” recalls Payson. “People make design decisions every day, and these decisions are crucial to the future of the city. Kids in New Orleans need to understand this, because they will be rebuilding the city for the rest of their lives.” Payson also foresaw how it might boost the teachers’ morale. “Coming to New York was a way to help the teachers heal and dream about the future as well,” she says. “They wanted to walk down a street where the buildings weren’t falling down. It was very important for them at a time when they were holding it together for their students, yet their lives were as devastated as the kids’.” The five-day workshop in New York City kicked off a multiyear, continuous exchange of ideas and resources among workshop attendees, Cooper-Hewitt staff, and local New Orleans’ partners, including Global Green USA, the Historic New Orleans Collection, Tulane University’s School of Architecture, and Make It Right, actor Brad Pitt’s initiative for rebuilding the Lower Ninth Ward. Kim Robledo-Diga, Cooper-Hewitt’s school-programs manager, who makes regular trips to New Orleans to follow up with participants, notes their progress, and says she has been impressed at how energetically they have “jumped on what they learned.” Robledo-Diga cites Jacalyn Moss, lead teacher at the Alternative Learning Institute, a public school within Orleans Parish Prison, located in downtown New Orleans. As a result of design tips that Moss passed on to her students, they transformed their drab, storm-damaged classroom into a bright, inviting space. On May 6, 2008, A City of Neighborhoods participants reunited on their home turf for a design fair organized by CooperHewitt and held at the Jackson Brewery, in the French Quarter. At the event, students showcased their design projects alongside New Orleans designers. Events such as this are expected to continue for several years as New Orleans rebuilds, neighborhood by neighborhood. As part of their New York experience, some participants of the June workshop went to the site of the World Trade Center attacks. As survivors of our nation’s greatest natural disaster, they immediately grasped the impact JAIL-SCHOOL REJUVENATION of the country’s For more about the Alternative Learning most devastating Institute, go to terrorist act. For edutopia.org/prison-school Biagas and others, Ground Zero served as a reality check about the work she and her fellow New Orleanians face. “It was a sobering experience,” recalls Biagas. “Six years later, the area still has not been rebuilt. I realized it’s going to take at least six years or maybe ten or more for our community to come back.” But it will come back, brick by brick. And that work has already begun. e Evantheia Schibsted is a contributing writer for Edutopia. FROM THE WRECKAGE: Survivors of Hurricane Katrina took an emotional tour of Ground Zero in lower Manhattan. Meaningful Streets Beverly Cook, a fine arts teacher at Eleanor McMain Secondary School, in New Orleans, found comfort in the camaraderie of sharing Katrina-related experiences with fellow teachers. She benefited on a professional level as well, particularly after taking the tour of Chinatown, an aspect of the program that involved hands-on exercises for exploring the neighborhood’s past and present as well as coming up with design ideas for its future. “I became much more aware of ghost paintings on walls and buildings,” says Cook. “Now I look at my own surroundings in a different way.” As a result, Cook created a lesson in which students plan and lead a tour of neighborhoods throughout New Orleans. The essential point of this project-learning exercise is for students whose lives and surroundings have been so severely disrupted to learn the history and architectural growth of the city and how it reflects cultural and political influences. “They were each assigned a neighborhood to research,” Cook says. “They wrote and memorized scripts and were handed a microphone. Each child became a tour guide.” 30 EDUTOPIA JUNE/JULY 2008 http://edutopia.org/prison-school
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Edutopia - June/July 2008 Edutopia - June/July 2008 Contents UpFront Feedback Dispatches Sage Advice Ask Ellen Head of Class Cool Schools Design Young Minds, Fast Times Wii Love Learning No More Pencils, No More Books Tech Without Support All the Right Moves Room to Learn Heart & Soul Pop Quiz: Jeff Corwin Edutopia - June/July 2008 Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Edutopia - June/July 2008 (Page Cover1) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Edutopia - June/July 2008 (Page Cover2) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Contents (Page 1) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Contents (Page 2) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Contents (Page 3) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Contents (Page 4) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - UpFront (Page 5) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - UpFront (Page 6) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Feedback (Page 7) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Feedback (Page 8) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Feedback (Page 9) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Dispatches (Page 10) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Dispatches (Page 11) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Sage Advice (Page 12) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Sage Advice (Page 13) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Ask Ellen (Page 14) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Ask Ellen (Page 15) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Ask Ellen (Page 16) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Head of Class (Page 17) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Head of Class (Page 18) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Head of Class (Page 19) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Head of Class (Page 20) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Head of Class (Page 21) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Head of Class (Page 22) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Head of Class (Page Bind-In1) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Head of Class (Page Bind-In2) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Head of Class (Page 23) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Cool Schools (Page 24) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Cool Schools (Page 25) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Cool Schools (Page 26) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Cool Schools (Page 27) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Design (Page 28) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Design (Page 29) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Design (Page 30) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Design (Page 31) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Young Minds, Fast Times (Page 32) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Young Minds, Fast Times (Page 33) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Young Minds, Fast Times (Page 34) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Young Minds, Fast Times (Page 35) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Young Minds, Fast Times (Page 36) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Wii Love Learning (Page 37) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - No More Pencils, No More Books (Page 38) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - No More Pencils, No More Books (Page 39) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - No More Pencils, No More Books (Page 40) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - No More Pencils, No More Books (Page 41) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Tech Without Support (Page 42) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Tech Without Support (Page 43) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - All the Right Moves (Page 44) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - All the Right Moves (Page 45) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - All the Right Moves (Page 46) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - All the Right Moves (Page 47) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - All the Right Moves (Page 48) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - All the Right Moves (Page 49) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - All the Right Moves (Page 50) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - All the Right Moves (Page 51) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - All the Right Moves (Page 52) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - All the Right Moves (Page 53) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Room to Learn (Page 54) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Room to Learn (Page 55) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Heart & Soul (Page 56) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Heart & Soul (Page 57) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Heart & Soul (Page 58) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Heart & Soul (Page 59) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Pop Quiz: Jeff Corwin (Page 60) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Pop Quiz: Jeff Corwin (Page Cover3) Edutopia - June/July 2008 - Pop Quiz: Jeff Corwin (Page Cover4)
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