SHARED STORIES
Hope of Detroit Academy
Recycling dumped tread into community-based cred
- Training on youth leadership and youth voice methods
- Partnership grant for resources related to recycling program and tire program
- Curriculum supplied by Creative Change Educational Solutions about the twelve types of brownfields and how they affect the community, both economically and environmentally
- Southwest Detroit Environmental Vision donation of recycling bins
- Working with local politicians and community members to raise awareness of the tire dumping issue and increasing accountability
- National Wildlife Federation Schoolyard Habitat resources
- Southwest Detroit Environmental Vision provided supplies, resources and staff to lead tire sweep and recycling campaign.
- Great Lakes Bioneers Detroit provided the platform for a student presentation on their culminating project.
- Creative Change Solutions provided curriculum resources on brownfield identification
- Neinas Elementary Teachers, June Clora and Lisa Lipscomb were also involved in this project.
The relationship between HODA and SEMIS began with a connection to SEMIS steering committee member Johnny Lupinacci and Tracey Durandetto, and focused on the arts and recycling through the support of Matrix Theatre Company. The original trainings included SEMIS first PD series focus on “The Story of Bottled Water,” testing water quality of bottled vs. tap water, a school wide water use study supported through SEMIS staff, creating puppets from recycled water bottles. Teachers engaged from the school also joined forces with Neinas Elementary through the support of SEMIS grant through Matrix and support of the Southwest Detroit Environmental Vision, developing common curriculum with partners that allowed for cross-disciplinary work, like the tire sweep project. While some teachers have left HODA, the legacy of school-to-school learning and partnership created the groundwork for the current teachers engaged with SEMIS initiative level grants, which provide region-wide grants for projects across communities with similar project themes. HODA plans to participate in future multi-school initiatives, like schoolyard habitat and playground greening, through partnership with Sarah Halston, Neinas Elementary and John Paul II Elementary. The 2014 Summer Institute focused on one such collaborative project, the tire sweep, and engaged new teachers and long-term SEMIS teachers in tours of this project and its progression through the years.
Powerful Place-Based Education Characteristics:
- Finding and inviting experts and community members into your classroom
- Forming community partnerships
- Using an inquiry approach
- Creating lessons and projects that provide for student voice and student driven inqiury
- Providing opportunities for students to see the “results” their work in the school and community
- Conducting meaningful community mapping/inventory activities
- Helping students to identify and choose the community issues they want to address
- Helping students to take action to protect, preserve, re‐vitalize a place
- Helping students to take action to address public policies that harm life
- Putting students in the position of “teacher” (e.g., during Community Forum, PBE conference,
- Summer Institute, presentations to their community)
- Linking place‐based projects to the exploration of mindsets that are hurting the Earth and us such as
- consumerism, being human‐centered, etc.
- Involving families in place‐based projects
- Creating maps of brownfield sites
- Interviewing local tire distributers
- Field trip to Cass Community Services, witnessing how to make tire mats
- Panel of experts from Southwest Detroit Environmental Vision (SDEV) about recycling topics
- Petitioning parents and community members (500 signatures) to urge the city to clean up an illegal dumping site.
- Presentation at SEMIS Community Forum at University of Michigan Dearborn
- Presented at Great Lakes Bioneers Detroit
- Civic engagement techniques (petitioning parents, working with City Council and community groups)
- Land use and geography lessons