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Publications

Tools and resources to support transforming learning and reimagining high school.

The Found Project
Asking Students, What have I “found” during the pandemic? Who am I now?
As we embarked on a new school year, and students and faculty returned to the classroom, we recognized that despite what appears to be some semblance of pre-pandemic life, in…

As we embarked on a new school year, and students and faculty returned to the classroom, we recognized that despite what appears to be some semblance of pre-pandemic life, in reality, things are and will never be the same. The year of 2020 was one of painful loss as was the first half of 2021. On top of the enormous loss of lives, the COVID-19 pandemic and the ensuing isolation suspended many of our daily freedoms and challenged us in unprecedented ways.

When we were considering how to best support the return to school, we came across Documenting Your Life During Extraordinary Times by The New York Times Learning Network. We reached out asking them to collaborate, using their resources to create “The Found Project,” a project based unit that ensured schools could welcome students back to classrooms with a learning experience that would help them process and explore the trauma of the last 18 months. The Found Project asks students to think about themselves, what they lost and found during the pandemic, and how these discoveries have shaped the person they are in this moment.

This short unit can engage both teachers and students in a transformative learning experience, build community, foster reflection, and reestablish a connection to school. It was designed to be flexible and adaptable to meet student needs in different contexts. We hope it can help schools anywhere meaningfully engage students and strengthen culture and community.


Blog

The news, research, ideas, and opinions from across the Springpoint ecosystem.

Featured Post

Purpose Is the Bridge to Rigor, for Every Student

By: Elana Karopkin-Gold After my last post on rigor and purpose, two questions emerged that initially seemed to pull in opposite directions. One colleague asked:  What about students who find meaning precisely in difficulty - who thrive on texts like Shakespeare or problems that resist easy entry? The other question…

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Let’s Persevere With College and Career Ready

"Kid, I'm Sorry, but You're Just Not College Material." This provocative Petrilli post attacked a core edreform goal of preparing all students for success in college. It also kicked off quite a discussion (see more responses here). For me this string goes back (aging myself) over twenty years since we moved from "voc" ed to CTE to CTE college ready. As we all know voc ed resulted in dropouts who required a "training" program and we all remember the results from the Federal training grants. I was responsible at GSS for both the youth employment and Adult employment programs (in addition to the school and family work). Though most of the youth programs were gutted by congress due to low outcomes (etc.) the adult programs and outcomes essentially demanded that we recruit high performing adults, recently unemployed with skills to meet the performance outcomes. GSS eventually decided to close those programs because our service population was not prepared to meet them. We collaborated with CDC's for industry specific programs that were privately funded – needless to say – only one of those efforts resulted in meaningful employment. Read More

Positive Youth Development & School Design

We are pleased to release "Positive Youth Development & School Design," a new report that synthesizes the most current research on youth development and its impact on schools. We expect this report to benefit design teams in our network as they begin to develop their school models, and we are excited to share it with the broader school design and education reform communities as well. Read More

What Does Mastery-Based Grading Look Like?

Last week, iNACOL and CompetencyWorks released "Progress and Proficiency: Redesigning Grading for Competency Education," a paper that offers valuable insights into alternative grading systems that support mastery-based school models. The paper details the limitations of traditional grading systems, and shares lessons from the field around how to effectively implement and communicate mastery-based grading in a classroom, school, and community context. Read More

Accelerating Adolescent Learning Through High School and Beyond

Researchers at MIT and Duke University just released a study entitled Small Schools and Student Achievement: Lottery-Based Evidence from New York City. The findings add to the available evidence about New York City's success. They show that students who attend small, nonselective high schools earn more credits, score higher on Regents exams, and have a significantly better chance of graduating and attending college than comparable students in schools that have not been explicitly designed to give them the supports they need. The results are striking for several reasons. Read More

Welcome to the New Springpoint Website

Springpoint has been hard at work over the past few months and we are proud to bring you our new website. Read More
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