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Adventures in After School Learning Blog

After School Enrichment Curriculum and Ideas

Playing Canister Shakers

-By Mike DeBritz on Monday, May 21, 2012

Here is a sample from our Playing with Percussion DVD where Brian Melick walks teachers and students through the playing techniques for shakers.  This is the first of five home made percussion instruments students make and play throughout the course.  At the end of each activity, kids have fun starting a musical conversation with the Call and Response technique. Enjoy!

 

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Finding that Teacher

-By Mike DeBritz on Wednesday, November 02, 2011

I talk to after school directors about our course topics all the time. Many agree that forensic science (for example) is interesting and would be something fun for their kids.

But even if a course is under consideration, the first question that usually comes up is, "Who can I get to teach this?"

The first thought, which makes perfect sense and is ideal, would be a science teacher.  But unfortunately in most schools that's a long shot. They're either too busy with their daily class schedule or not interested or coaching or any number of other reasons. 

But maybe it’s time to look for another kind of teacher…one who's curious and just as interested in learning something new as her students.  After all, diving into a problem and figuring it out is what we do most everyday in the real world. Talk about teaching life skills!

Over the years we've had a wide range of individuals, everyone from college kids to seasoned teachers, successfully teach forensics after school.   

I believe the main reasons are:

  1. Forensics is High Interest:

    Both students and teachers are fascinated by this topic. This helps teachers reach outside of their comfort zone and take a shot at learning something new along side their students.  

  2. Thematic Design:

    Teachers understand a mystery and can easily transfer that familiarity to their students, making the goal of the course extremely clear. We're here to solve a classroom caper utilizing forensic science.

  3. Step-by-Step Lessons:

    Once a potential teacher understands that all the lessons and hands-on activities are planned out and ready to deliver, they know they won't be forced to wing it. We also provide training tips to help teachers get off to a good start. 

  4. Materials are Included:

    Another challenge with getting busy people to do science experiments of any kind is acquiring and managing supplies. Our kits come with everything they need, from mini-microscopes to certificates of completion.

  5. Hands-On Learning:

    This creates an active learning environment which is more fun to lead. Time flies by when kids are busy observing, experimenting, recording data and advancing their theory of the case.

So if you're in recruiting mode for a new teacher, keep in mind that perfect person may be closer than you think!

 

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Train the trainer for the Cookie Jar Mystery and the Cookie Jar Case

-By Mike DeBritz on Wednesday, September 07, 2011

Here are two more presentation you can use to get your new staff up to speed on both the "Cookie Jar Mystery: A Study in Forensic Science" and "The Cookie Jar Case: A Mock Trial Role Play." This combined with our training tips should help them feel confident and prepared to solve this classroom caper!

 

Open in PDF
Download the complete PowerPoint presentation for the "Cookie Jar Mystery" and script here.


Open in PDF

Download the complete PowerPoint presentation for the "Cookie Jar Case" and script here.

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Train the Trainer for the Missing Money Mystery

-By Mike DeBritz on Wednesday, August 31, 2011

More training tools for the "Missing Money Mystery: An Introduction to Forensic Science."

 

Download the complete PowerPoint presentation with script here!

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Training the Trainer

-By Mike DeBritz on Wednesday, August 17, 2011

It seems more and more these days, time for specialized training is at a premium. When I say specialized I mean, a training on a particular process, software or curriculum that only applies to one or two staff members.  

Maybe it’s the strain on budgets or just the impracticalities and inefficiencies of bringing so many people together at once. It’s hard to say exactly.

Many site leaders I know will kick off the year with a one or two day training to cover everything needed to get operational like working with a student information system for attendance, lesson planning or a refresher on classroom management.  They get a lot of business done here and also get to check off the mandatory training hours many states require for certification.

So to help our customers with individual training needs, we’re continually working on discrete “train-the-trainer” materials designed for site leaders working with one or two instructors.  This seems to work better for most sites’ time budget and applies the training only to the teachers that have an immediate need. Once a couple of teachers have run through a course, they’re in excellent position to be a training facilitator for the next block.

Here’s a sample “train-the-trainer” presentation for “Being an Artist: A Cubism and College Experience.” 

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21stCCLC Summer Institute

-By Mike DeBritz on Wednesday, July 06, 2011

The big event for 21st Century Community Learning Centers is just 3 weeks away!  The forecast for weather is hot and humid. 

This is the second year that the conference has been held in the nation's capital.  It should be interesting, the feds have new tools for training they're featuring and it looks like STEM will be a continued focus in breakout sessions.

Here's a quick look at the agenda and what's on the schedule as of now, click to jump over to the latest updates:

Travel budgets have been hit hard this year which forces many organizations to only send one or two key representatives.  The good news is that more and more of the presentations are being posted online. 

 I hope to see many of you there, travel safe!

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Take a Jog Around the Web

-By Mike DeBritz on Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Have you heard of Jog the Web?  It’s new service that’s has filled an interesting niche in free web tools.  They launched early last year and have now launched a community version (free) for educations called "Jog EDUC" .

It’s part of a series of new web tools, often described as web 2.0, designed to help you organize resources from multiple websites.  It’s a fun tool that can fit in after school as both a presentation tool or as a straight resource.  Also, this could be a great way to wrap up a project and have kids present on what they learned.  They can use websites as slides almost or mini demonstrations that help emphasize and illustrate a point, like adding relevant websites about water conservation, for instance. 

If you’d like to show a number of images or sites with interesting information to a class, it can be a hassle to stop your flow and navigate into your bookmarks or click a link from a word doc. Then you better hope you can jump out of PowerPoint or whatever presentation software you’re using smoothly.  With Jog the Web, after setting up an account, you build your web show with titles, descriptions and links to your related sites.

Here’s a quick example.  I want to create a "Jog" of all the forensic science web resources we have for the “Cookie Jar Mystery.” They're currently listed at the end of each lesson in your Instructor's Guides and are also under “Tools for Teaching”  section on our website.  The web page again cumbersome to stop, find and click during a presentation.

So I simply snipped the ones I wanted, logged on to Jog the Web and created a simple list of all my links and gave them titles. When completed it looks like this:



Click the image above to check it out! You can navigate with the large arrows in the top left hand corner or select pages from the menu on the left. It’s a breeze. And like everything today, they make it easy to share with on your blog, Facebook page or send a plain old email to a friend or colleague. 

So give “Jog the Web” it a try, it’s easy, useful and a lot of fun!

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The Missing Money Mystery-Sample Orientation

-By Mike DeBritz on Wednesday, May 11, 2011

 

Welcome to your orientation for The Missing Money Mystery: An Introduction to Forensic Science, an interactive curriculum designed for students in Grades 3-5.

Using real laboratory techniques and materials, students create theories about the “crime,” of a classroom burglary, and much as real detectives (and real scientists!) use their powers of critical thinking to track down the thief.

Along the way your student will practice critical thinking, acquire new vocabulary, explore careers in forensics, and become acquainted with scientific procedures and processes they will encounter in their classrooms.

The entire mystery is revealed to your students through a series of letters our fictional teacher who writes to his friend (your teacher) because his specialty is more environmental science and he feels he’s a little too close to the case to be objective.

Students begin by being introduced to Mr. Pfister, a forth grade teacher at Oakwood Elementary School. He’s a fun teacher that has a passion for environmental science. One of his favorite things to do each year is to take his class on a field trip to the nearby recycling center. To fund the trip, his students collect cans and bottles and redeem them for 5¢ each. The trip costs $50 so that means collecting a lot of cans and bottles!

To keep the students’ spirits up, Mr. Pfister plans a pizza party for when they reach the halfway mark, which he just learned they passed when he dropped everything the day before so far at the redemption center. Unfortunately, upon arriving to his classroom the next day, Mr. Pfister could see something was wrong, a number of things disturbed and the field trip money gone! Who could have done this?

Mr. Pfister was very upset when he found the money missing, but being the curious and resourceful teacher that he is, he decided that with a little research, and his spectacular computer skills, he would begin an investigation himself!
He logged on to the classroom computer and searched for information on forensic science--forensic science includes different types of science that are all brought together to solve crimes.

Mr. Pfister discovered the website of the FBI, or Federal Bureau of Investigation, which listed the steps he should take to begin his investigation. And before the students arrived, he followed one of the first steps listed: he conducted a careful search to locate clues. As for the remaining steps, Mr. Pfister needs help!

Mr. Pfister has identified four suspects who had the opportunity to steal the money. He reads how important it is for forensic scientists to leave their emotions and feelings out of their criminal investigations. But all of the suspects he identified are former students of his who were attending after school club meetings on the Monday that the money went missing.
Mr. Pfister's Letter
After introducing the students to the crime scenarios, your class will get started with Lesson 1, called "The Eyes Have It: Organization and Observation." In this lesson, students will be introduced to the process of criminal investigation. It will be crucial that students observe and record accurately the details of the evidence from the crime scene.

Students will have the opportunity to work in pairs and groups to practice their own observational skills using a variety of objects. Recording will be done in the form of lists and data tables. The properties of foreign coins—size, shape, color and texture—will be used to complete the tables.

In addition, measurement and the appropriate abbreviations for specific units will be addressed. An evaluation of these skills will take place as students attempt to identify specific objects based on their peers’ data.


As your class continues on to Lesson 2, “Missing Money Map-Making: Evidence at the Crime Scene,” they will take observe a crime scene set up by your teacher. Students learn the procedures and steps in a crime scene investigation like securing the scene which I have done, is to conduct a search for any evidence that might be damaged by weather or time, such as tracks or prints of some kind.

Students are introduced to the term “chain of custody” and the importance of handling and documenting every piece of evidence found at the crime scene. They will plot locations of evidence, and they will use triangulation to determine the distance of evidence from fixed points.

At the end of the lesson Students are asked which piece of evidence found at the crime scene was most important and what is there theory of what happened? They are directed to write down any supplications in the pages called “Detectives Notebooks”.

Let us know what you think of this orientation?

 

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We Believe In Teachers

-By Mike DeBritz on Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Across the USA, the teaching standards movement has its pros and cons. Working against it is the notion that somehow teachers need more guidelines to legitimize their practice; on the other hand, standards help uncover the wide range of things that teachers know and are able to do.

Like it or not, the standards movement is here to stay. At Community Learning, we want to let teachers know: we believe in you. We know teachers are the most important influence in students’ lives and the key to student achievement.

We’ve built our Course Kits with teachers in mind. All of our lessons are structured in ways that not only emphasizes student learning, but also extend the influence of good teaching practice beyond the school day—into after-school programs or other youth serving organizations and groups.

Community Learning Course Kits

  • Take a “teaching and learning” approach, emphasizing the relationship between instructor and learners
  • Promote disciplinary literacy in music, art, science, ELA
  • Offer students developmentally appropriate, cognitively challenging tasks
  • Encourage instructors to “coach” learners through their activities
  • Help teachers strengthen professional practice; build relationships with students and parents; explore project-based approaches to teaching that are coherent and structured; and discover new avenues for quality instruction. 
  • Support teachers through professional development and training.

We’ve got our eye on standards—keep checking our blog and see how we keep up with changes in your world!

-Guest  post by Shelly Rafferty Withers

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The Cookie Jar Mystery-Sample Orientation

-By Mike DeBritz on Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Please review and comment on this sample overview, designed for new teacher orientation.

Welcome to a brief orientation that will introduce you to a fun, hands-on and comprehensive course that will enthuse and enrich your students attending your program!
 
The Cookie Jar Mystery: A Study in Forensic Science is a project-based and well integrated set of learning activities that immerses kids in the role of junior crime scene investigators. There are four suspects and a number of clues left at the crime scene, which is a science classroom.
 
This course provides a great balance of fun and learning that has resonated with after school leaders across the country. The Course Kit comes complete with step-by-step Instructor's Guides, Student Books and all required supplies. 
 
The crime scenario starts when an unsuspecting teacher Mrs. Randall, discovers her cookie jar smashed upon entering her classroom. A bit shocked having used the cookie jar as an incentive for years, she stays calm and snaps a couple pictures with her digital camera, bags the evidence and cleans up the shards of glass before her class was due in any second.
 
Always the educator, Mrs. Randall finds a teachable moment in this unhappy situation. She gives an accurate account of what was observed when she first saw the broken cookie jar, covers some of the obvious clues, and then proposes employing forensic science to get to the bottom of this heinous crime...her class agrees and is excited to get started!
 
That class becomes your class and is exactly how your teacher introduces this fun topic to your middle school students. Great for after school because although rich with learning, it's doesn't sound like class work, they're solving a mystery....it's an idea that kids understand and embrace immediately.
 
Your students will work in teams, just like we do in the real world, examining clues, conducting experiments, analyzing results, making predictions and ultimately determining the guilty party!

In Lesson 1, called "Heads-Up: Observation Skills," The Cookie Jar Mystery opens with your teacher introducing the crime scenario to your students. This includes the who, what and where surrounding the incident of the broken cookie jar. Students will view a photo taken by the fictional teacher Mrs. Randall, as she found her famous cookie jar and evidence when she entered her classroom.

Students are introduced to what a forensic investigation really means. They first learn that one of the most valuable skills of a crime scene investigator is observation. Examining the crime scene closely and understanding what to look for is an absolute necessity. Your students will participate in a couple of activities to test their observational skills. This involves teaming up with a partner and looking at photographs of various events.

Working in pairs, students will look at the photographs briefly and try to recall specific details. From there, they'll fill in the answers and observations in their Student Activity Books, an activity that's replicated in every lesson. Then the class will get together to compare notes and discuss their findings.

This is the framework for each lesson: the Instructor introduces the evidence they will explore together, offers background information and context, then the class proceeds to a lab activity. All results discovered in the hands-on activities are captured in the Student Activity Books. These books will be theirs to keep at the end of the course, so the background information and findings will available for future reference.

Each lesson has wrap-up questions that help your Instructor prompt the students to get a discussion going about what was learned.

In the Lesson 2, "Beyond the Naked Eye: Handwriting Analysis," 
Students will examine the note left behind and learn about handwriting analysis.

They'll learn about "non-request" writing, a sample obtained before the crime, and "request" writing which is a sample obtained when a suspect is under investigation. Students will learn how handwriting examiners interpret individual style and apply these skills to the note found at the crime scene.

They will examine "request" samples from each suspect and conduct a detailed analysis of each sample to determine a match. Students will also examine their own handwriting with a partner to break down their style and tendencies.

At the end of each page will be a reference and links to the next page...please leave a comment below if you think this will be a helpful tool for your teachers!

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