Active Learning Requires Innovative Learning Spaces
A few years ago, there were a lot of traditional classrooms in El Paso with low-level test prep activities in a low-tech environment.
When you visit El Paso classrooms today, you are much more likely to see active learning–engaged students doing challenging work, often in two languages and using the latest technology.
With the recent passage of a $668.7 million construction bond, El Paso students will have the opportunity to learn in modern facilities that reflect our active learning vision. We are thankful for El Paso voters and for their confidence in our vision and ability to provide all students with innovative spaces to learn in.
Here are a few ways active learning spaces differ from traditional classrooms:
All students deserve modern facilities that are more reflective of what you see on the right-hand side. Active learning requires that students have space to work, build, iterate, communicate and ultimately have learning experiences that are not pre-planned.
Active learning is already alive and well in El Paso classrooms. Teachers like Jill McGee, 2016 El Paso Elementary Teacher of the Year, support that active learning is really helping with student engagement and performance. In the video below, she shares how she has worked to implement these ideas in her classroom.
Teachers are receiving support from coaches and our district partner engage2learn, who is working to help us implement active learning. One of the first examples of new learning spaces in El Paso are the six New Tech Network schools. We took down walls in existing school buildings to create big classrooms for integrated project work. Students and teachers express how much they like teaching & learning in these spaces.
Another example of how EPISD is providing students space for active learning is through Project Lead the Way. Students at Chapin High School were asked to create a winter wonderland village resembling the Victorian age. The students said scratch that, let’s use what we have been learning in our six Principles of Engineering classes and make modern, innovative and sustainable winter wonderland villages.
Students created the villages entirely out of recyclable materials. Daniels-Sherman, magnet coordinator, said that students had to incorporate engineering principles that they were learning about such as circuitry, architecture, creativity and design.
I’d argue that if they weren’t in a classroom space that encouraged them to see endless possibilities and where they felt they had the tools to do so, they might not have felt so compelled to create such innovative projects.
The spaces where we ask students to be active learners is almost (if not equally) as important as the ideas behind active learning itself.
For more, see:
- Transforming Teaching and Learning at an Early Age: EPISD Early Childhood Integration Model
- Active Learning Inspires El Paso Teachers & Students
- El Paso Adopts Active Learning with Plan That Powers Innovation
This post originally ran on EDU Transformed
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