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Stars in the Parks

PROJECT DESCRIPTION

Students explored how people use parks to connect to themselves, each other, and to nature while also learning about the stars on trips to these parks.

INSTRUCTORS

Brittany Perro, Charley Jacob, Chris Olivas

SCHOOL SITE

High Tech Middle North County

LEVEL

Middle School (6-8)

SUBJECTS

English, Math, Science, Social Studies

ELECTRICITY USAGE

Some Electricity

LESS THAN FIVE MATERIALS

False

TEACHERS NEEDED

Multiple Teachers

BOOK CHAPTER

II: In the World, With the World

Project Introduction

How have people used the night sky to make decisions in other times and cultures? How do people use nature to connect to themselves, each other, and the environment? Are public parks a luxury or a necessity?

In early 2019, an impasse on the federal budget led to the closure of national parks. Eighth graders were curious and passionate about how the shutdown was affecting the parks and the role of parks in people’s lives. Students explored how people use parks to connect to themselves, each other, and to nature. Students used the design thinking process to create a product that preserved and enhanced a local, state, or national park. They visited various parks to do field work for their products and wrote about “peak moments” that often occur when humans are immersed in nature.

The project launched with a trip to a state park, where students established their first relationship with park rangers who spoke about their needs. Two of the park clients wanted the students to help develop products that would encourage and teach users about enjoying the parks at night. That dovetailed perfectly with teacher Chris Olivas’s passion for astrophotography and his desire to teach about astronomy, light, and photography.

The team came up with a rough list of potential products based on their clients’ needs. Students responded to an interest survey, and wrote “job applications” to be on various product teams.

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 understand the earth/sun/moon relationship, the scale of the universe, gravity, Newton’s Laws of Motion, light, and the electromagnetic spectrum
  • To learn exponential expressions, scientific notation, and doing scaled drawings/designs
  • To understand the politics behind national, state, and regional parks, and how citizens can use writing to engage in the political process
  • To experience immersion in nature while reading literature about immersive nature experiences
  • To learn and practice the iterative design thinking process with a real client

Design Thinking

The project was structured around the design thinking steps of empathize, define, ideate, prototype, test. During visits to the parks, students observed and interviewed rangers about their park’s needs. They came up with solutions, prototyped them, and received feedback from their clients. Products resulting from the design process included:

  • A hiking trail informational kiosk
  • A scale model of the solar system for a hiking trail
  • “Remixed” park emblems for “Park After Dark” events
  • An infographic about the “dark sky community” guidelines to be posted in campsites
  • A curriculum for teachers and rangers to use on overnight camping trips about the night sky
  • “LEAVE NO TRACE” signs for the Anza Borrego flower fields
  • Night sky astrophotography

While each group of students focused on a product for a different client, all students engaged in reading and writing about nature and the history of national and state parks. The whole class read Krakauer’s “Into the Wild” and debated the beauty and pitfalls of nature, as well as the mental health mysteries and issues raised by the book. Writing products included essays arguing whether national parks are a luxury or a necessity, and a composite essay entitled “Dear National Parks” that combined each student’s favorite moment in the parks, which was shared with Kamala Harris, who was then a California senator.

Scaffolding & Differentiation

Many of the texts used for the project were challenging for eighth graders. The teaching team used a variety of scaffolding techniques for close reading and writing — including graphic organizers, close reading steps, sentence starters, partnered text translation and analysis.

Brittany and Chris created multiple opportunities for self-assessment, through writing and editing rubrics and assessments of prototypes. According to Brittany, the biggest change in students may have been in their understanding of how they could make an impact. At the start of the project, many voiced frustration about neglect and vandalism of the parks, but had a sense of “Yeah, but there’s nothing we can do.” By the end of the project, they saw how small acts, such as reducing light pollution, cleaning up parks, and advocating with elected officials can make a difference.

Exhibition

At an evening school exhibition, students showed their design process and products; they created stations about particular research topics, such as the dark sky communities movement. They recreated the side of the bus from “In the Wild”. One group created a film about young people connecting with nature and created a virtual campfire using video projection.
After the exhibition, the groups presented their products to their park ranger clients, and spent a service day working in one of the parks.

Project Resources

Students Holding Final Product – Stars in the Parks

Dark Sky Communities Infographic

Dear National Parks Letter

Final Product Description – Stars in the Parks

Parks At Night Video – Stars in the Parks

Community Partners Video – Stars in the Parks

Design Thinking Video – Stars in the Parks

Remixed San Dieguito River Park Logo

Peak Moments Presentation

Different Types of Parks Presentation

Night Sky Teaching Curriculum

Dark Sky Poster – Stars in the Parks

Mindfulness Monday Presentation Slides

Luxury or Necessity Essays – Stars in the Parks

Anza-Borrego Flower Fields “Leave No Trace”

Students Presenting – Stars in the Parks

Students Hiking by a Lake

Ideate and Iterate Template – Stars in the Parks

Empathy interview Questions – Stars in the Parks

Empathize and Define Template

Students with Leave No Trace sign

Anza-Borrego Solar System Walk Guide

Andromeda Galaxy Photo

Camping Trip Group Preparation Sheet

Stars In The Parks – Summary Video

Questions and Goals – Stars in the Parks

Stars in the Parks Project Description

Stars in the Parks Book Page

  • Brittany Perro, Charley Jacob, Chris Olivas, Electricity, English, High Tech Middle North County, II: In the World, With the World, Math, Middle School, Multiple Teachers, Science, Social Studies, Stars in the Parks
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