Calvin's Ecosystem Preserve
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Calvin College
and the Grand Rapids Christian Schools have been awarded a $30,000 grant
from the National Science Foundation. The grant, given through the Independent
Colleges Office, is intended to help attract college students to careers
as science teachers and will enable the Grand Rapids Christian Schools
to implement an inquiry-based science curriculum into their new balanced
calendar school, which opens in August 2002.
The balanced calendar
school is the latest in a series of new innovative educational programs
offered by the Grand Rapids Christian Schools. The balanced calendar
concept will add two weeks to the start of the school year and two weeks
to the end, thus shortening the traditional summer vacation by four
weeks. In addition, there will be breaks every seven weeks during the
school year, which will return those four weeks of vacation to the calendar.
The balanced calendar
program will also give the K-5 students an opportunity to do extracurricular
study during the weeks off. For example, students might spend a week
at Calvin's Ecosystem Preserve or at a camp. The NSF grant will help
the GRCS develop a science curriculum for the balanced calendar school
that will focus on inquiry-based learning, helping students to develop
a questioning attitude about what they are experiencing, rather than
on just memorizing the facts of science.
This, in turn,
leads them to shape their own learning. For example, students will be
encouraged to study the environment around their school, to raise questions
about potential problem areas and to propose solutions to the problems.
That system of
learning at the K-5 level has been a major focus of research at Calvin
College in recent years. This summer, thanks to a grant from the Howard
Hughes Medical Institute, Calvin is working with the Grand Rapids Public
Schools to develop a K-5 inquiry-based science curriculum. That partnership,
which sees Calvin professors and students work with K-5 teachers, will
be a model for the new Calvin-GRCS collaboration.
Each GRCS teacher
chosen for the balanced calendar school will be paired with Calvin students
for two years. During 2001-2002 the Calvin students and the GRCS teachers
will learn about inquiry based teaching and plan the curriculum for
the balanced calendar school. The students also will serve as classroom
aides in the regular classroom.
During 2002-2003,
the first year of operation for the balanced calendar school, the Calvin
students will work as partners with the teachers to implement the curriculum.
Calvin students will also help plan the week-long enrichment experiences.
Most of the $30,000 grant ($20,000) will pay for scholarships for the
Calvin students. The remaining money will be used for stipend funds
for the GRCS teachers, a stipend for the project director and to pay
for extra supplies.
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