All Content from Business Insider 09月18日 16:10
怀俄明州高中推行个性化学习,为学生规划多元未来
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怀俄明州乌普顿高中(Upton High School)为82名学生引入了创新的个性化学习模式。该模式打破了传统教育的单一路径,允许学生根据个人兴趣和职业规划,选择大学、职业培训或直接就业等多种发展方向。学校通过“开放时段”让学生自主实践所学知识,并在社区企业的大力支持下,为学生提供丰富的实习和工作体验机会。尽管转型初期面临挑战,但该校已成功为学生打造了一条更具适应性和个体化的成长之路。

🎓 **个性化学习路径:** 乌普顿高中打破传统教育模式,为每位学生量身定制学习计划,让他们能根据自身兴趣和职业目标,选择进入大学、职业学校或直接就业等不同的未来发展方向,真正实现“以学生为中心”的教育理念。

🤝 **社区紧密合作:** 学校与当地企业和组织建立了深厚的合作关系,为学生提供真实的实践机会。学生可以在当地的食品店、餐馆或利用专业技能(如编程、无人机摄影)为本地商家提供服务,这不仅巩固了课堂所学,也为他们毕业后的就业奠定了基础。

💡 **自主学习与实践:** 学校设有“开放时段”,学生可以自主选择如何运用所学知识,例如进行科学实验、参与项目研究或进行独立学习。这种模式极大地激发了学生的学习主动性和创造力,让他们在实践中成长。

🌱 **应对时代变革:** 面对日益增长的对大学学位价值的质疑,乌普顿高中积极探索多元化的教育路径,确保学生了解并能够选择最适合自己的发展道路,而非被单一的升学目标所束缚,体现了教育对社会经济变化的敏锐洞察。

Upton High School in rural Wyoming implements a personalized learning structure.

"Do you want me to set your hands on fire?"

Normally, my answer to that question would be no. But I decided to put my faith in the hands of Joslyn Pischke, a 15-year-old sophomore at Upton High School in Wyoming.

I rolled up my sleeves and wet my hands and arms up to my elbows as Pischke added dish soap to a small tub of water. At Pischke's direction, I scooped up some bubbles and held them in my hands.

"Don't freak out," Pischke told me, and then she set the bubbles on fire.

To my own surprise, I didn't freak out as my hands went up in flames. We were in a high school science classroom, and when Pischke asked her teacher if she could demonstrate this experiment on me, the teacher said yes without any hesitation. Pischke, who plans to go to college after she graduates to study equine science, told me that she has thrived under the school's personalized learning model because it has allowed her the agency to direct her educational path.

For the past couple of years, I've reported on the shifting conversation surrounding the value of a college degree; more Gen Zers are choosing to forgo college in favor of other routes, like trade school or directly entering the workforce. Upton is directly taking on that shift by making sure students know college is not their only option. The goal, as seen on posters plastered around the high school, is to be college, career, or military ready.

Before I visited Upton in early September, I'd spoken with teachers and administrators about the personalized learning structure it had adopted for its 82 students. I thought I knew what it meant: Teachers work with each student and give them individualized lessons and assignments based on their learning pace and interests.

I wasn't wrong; that is, in part, what personalized learning is. But at Upton, I saw that it was much more than that. While there are time periods reserved for the more standard lectures, there are what the school calls "open periods," during which students can choose how they want to put into practice what they learned. And teachers really mean it when they say that students can choose what they want to do. When I looked around Pischke's science classroom, I saw at least five different projects that students were working on, which they selected themselves and were approved by their teacher.

Signs on Upton High School's vision for students are posted on the school's walls.

I was surprised at the level of personalization at Upton — from what I saw, each and every student was on a different path that they selected to best suit their needs and interests. Additionally, having attended a traditional public high school, the structure of the classrooms struck me. Every class that I walked into looked different, with some students sitting on couches, others working alone at desks, and some standing in clusters. The only classroom I saw that had the standard lecture format with desks in a row was the math class.

As the teachers at Upton told me, switching their learning structure was an uphill battle. Of course, it would be a much different undertaking at a bigger school or somewhere with different workforce demands and every teacher would need to be on board.

Surrounding area of Upton High School.

The power of community partnerships and clear communication

When I walked into Joe's Food Center, the town's grocery store, around 5 p.m., a senior at Upton was working the register. I asked her what she thought about the school, and she told me she really liked the structure.

Two minutes down the road, I walked into Remy's Diner, and I was greeted by another senior. He told me that the school allowed him to complete all of his assignments and lectures in the morning so he could work at Remy's in the afternoon as part of a work-study program.

The small community is a major benefit for students at Upton. Not only are local businesses willing to work with the students — they sometimes request it, as Karla Ludemann, the school's computer science teacher, told me. Her students have used the coding and tech skills they learned in class to create websites for local businesses and use their drones to take aerial photos of the area for the city.

Amanda Knapp, the school's guidance counselor, also told me that businesses have been more than willing to give students work experience. Sam Johnson, an 18-year-old senior who never wanted to go to college, said that he loves hunting, and Knapp arranged for him to get a hunting apprenticeship while in high school. That opportunity led him to secure a job as a hunting guide upon graduation.

Upton's model isn't possible everywhere, though. Joseph Samuelson, the school's principal, told me that the school made mistakes eight years ago when it switched to personalized learning — the district moved too quickly, and both parents and teachers weren't given sufficient warning. This led some parents to withdraw their kids from the school, and just four teachers from the original staff now remain, likely a result of the lack of training they received on switching to a personalized model.

Knapp also told me that being a small, rural school is a benefit that other public schools in the nation don't have. Wyoming's agriculture industry dominates the economy, and it opens up career opportunities and apprenticeships for young students, enabling those who want to enter the workforce after high school.

Additionally, a small population is easier to corral on a learning model switch, and larger public schools would encounter more hurdles getting everyone on board.

More broadly, I found Upton students' perspectives on their paths postgrad to be emblematic of the national shift we're seeing in the value of college. When I was in high school, college was the only option I was given, and I'm glad I went — it opened up career opportunities for me that I wouldn't have been able to get otherwise.

When I walked around Upton's library during seniors' free period, I saw three girls sitting in a booth doing homework. I asked them what their plans were postgrad, and they all said college: two of them are going to study business, and one of them wants to study nursing.

I walked over to another senior and asked him what he was working on. He told me he was taking a college course, so I asked him if he was planning to go to college, and he laughed. "Definitely not," he said. "Trade school."

Read the original article on Business Insider

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个性化学习 Upton High School 职业教育 怀俄明州 教育创新 Personalized Learning Upton High School Vocational Education Wyoming Education Innovation
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