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ComplexCity

PROJECT DESCRIPTION

Teachers devised a project to stimulate students to think critically about their communities. They created conceptual maps of the city to communicate a message they cared about.

INSTRUCTORS

Margaret Noble, Rachel Nichols

SCHOOL SITE

High Tech High Media Arts

LEVEL

High School (9-12)

SUBJECTS

Arts, Math, Social Studies

ELECTRICITY USAGE

Some Electricity

LESS THAN FIVE MATERIALS

False

TEACHERS NEEDED

Multiple Teachers

BOOK CHAPTER

I: Invention and Reinvention

Project Introduction

“A city is a particular kind of place, perhaps best described as many worlds in one place; it compounds many versions without quite reconciling them, though some cross over to live in multiple worlds… An atlas is a collection of versions of a place, a compendium of perspectives, snatching out the infinite ether of potential versions a few that will be made concrete and visible.” – Rebecca Solnit, Infinite City

Inspired by Rebecca Solnit’s book of conceptual maps, Margaret Noble and Rachel Nichols devised an experiential project to stimulate students to think critically about their communities. Students created their own conceptual maps of the city to communicate a message they cared about.

In this project, students researched, interviewed, and investigated their city and community in myriad ways. By compiling their work and making idiosyncratic maps of San Diego, they were challenged to rethink what they understood to be the reality of the built environment around them, as well as to accept the new knowledge that their classmates contributed. Using Solnit’s Infinite City as one model, and their own creative explorations as another, they made a series of maps of San Diego highlighting contrasts or injustices in the city.

The teachers launched the project with a challenge to map their school, with “significant moments” they had experienced in its various locations. The resulting maps and keys highlighted everything from the touching to the ridiculous: “Where I fell in love”, “Where I puked”, “Where my favorite teacher’s room is”. When layered upon each other in transparencies, the students surprised themselves with their portrait of the school.

While Margaret was teaching the students design skills, in Rachel’s class, they were reading texts on cities and the built environment including Jane Jacobs, Rebecca Solnit, and Natalia Molina. Students chose an issue that they were passionate about to research and represent in a conceptual map. Field work at the Historical Society and visits from local experts complemented their research. The resulting maps, which told stories such as the locations of banks vs. check cashing stores, bike paths vs. bicycling deaths, public places allowing skateboarding vs. those allowing dogs, were ultimately compiled in a self-published book.

Want to see the whole project? Click the button to download the pages from the book that discuss this project!

Want to see the whole project? Click the button to download the pages from the book that discuss this project!

changingthesubject.org

Project Learning Goals

  • To think deeply about issues that matter to them
  • To research and write a paper about something they care about in the city
  • To effectively translate a complex issue into visual art

Scaffolding & Differentiation

The element of choice was the center of this project — students researched and represented an issue or topic that they deemed important. The teachers chose the launch exercise as a map of school instead of home specifically because they knew that one of their students was homeless at the time. Readings were broken down into short sections and teachers supported those who needed it.

Assessments

Students wrote a research paper on their chosen topic and created a proposal for their conceptual map. Multiple critiques focused on whether the maps were in fact communicating the students’ arguments effectively.

Exhibition

In an evening exhibition, the maps were projected in a looping slideshow on the sides of various school buildings. Inside the school, individual maps and essays were displayed. After the semester ended, students continued to work on the project, publishing a book of the maps.

Project Resources

ComplexCity Final Maps

Student Made Floor Plans

Projection of a Map on a Building

ComplexCity Exhibition

Complexcity Example Map

Complexcity Book Page

  • Arts, ComplexCity, Electricity, High School, High Tech High Media Arts, I: Invention and Reinvention, Margaret Noble, Math, Multiple Teachers, Rachel Nichols, Social Studies
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