Thanks to generous funding from the Vancouver Foundation, student-led inquiry projects are in full swing across the province. Students, with direct support from educators, are taking ownership over their learning in new and exciting ways. They are generating their own ideas about
what they want to learn and how they will learn it, and often times, inquiry
has become a powerful way for students to connect to history and build identity.
For instance, Ecole
Davis Rd. Elementary in Ladysmith (SD #68) is focusing their inquiry around
introducing the use of an Aboriginal Value System to increase respectful
communication and actions within their community of learners. Pacific Coast School, a non-traditional
school in Prince Rupert (SD #52) is focusing on the concept of stewardship. Students will develop individual inquiries
around what it means to be a steward of the environment, depending on the
expertise of the Aboriginal Education Department and sharing the learning with
the community Aboriginal Council. Both
school inquiry teams have been influenced by the First People’s Principles of Learning, developed by British Columbia’s First Nations Education Steering Committee, to
shift their thinking around using wise ways to develop Aboriginal understandings.
School teams are also learning strategies that support
developing a good inquiry question, and how to remain focused on that question
throughout the learning process.
City
Central Learning Centre in Surrey (SD #36) is demonstrating this by
providing students with self-regulated learning strategies to promote
successful student inquiry in an alternative school setting.
We’re excited by the projects underway and how students,
teachers and communities are coming together through inquiry and learning.
For a full list of school questions this
year,
click
here.
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