Science students writing skits about cell parts. Using facts from various resources for content. Having a visiting language arts teacher (who happens to work in the cafeteria) come do a lesson on how to write plays and skits. Pairs of students writing skits. A few groups of three. A few working solo. Figuring out with the help of student input how to evaluate the skits. Developing a rubric. Videotaping their performances. Two-way evaluations: teacher and groups. Ralph requests to review the videoclips at a more in-depth session at home.
Nikki Nucleus: " I'm in complete control of this cell and loving it! I'm glad to have a helper, the nucleolus." (Nucleolus looks intently at the clock on his cell phone.)
Sally Cytoplasm: "I support you in my cell matrix. Without me, you, Ms. Nucleus, could not suspend yourself properly."
Nikki Nucleus: "Yeh, I admit it....without your protoplasm, all the organelles would be like floating randomly about."
Micky Mitochondrion: "What about me? I provide power to the cell and so much more. You guys ever here about ADP conversions? Gather around and let me tell you...
Sally Cytoplasm: "Oh, no...look at the time...I have to pick up some organelles and transport them to this man's spleen..." I gotta go"
ETC.
Students asking to expand slits and bring props from home and have a second taping. Teacher happy.
Skits become for complicated. Teacher really happy.
Ah, teaching... what a joy!
ReplyDeleteIndeed. I miss that aspect of the art. Not the minutia.
DeleteIf you were my science teacher, I might have actually learned to enjoy science. You know how to include the whimsy and the wonder in science.
ReplyDeleteI wish you would have been my AP Bio teacher. That would have been life-changing! I so enjoyed the alliterative names.
ReplyDelete