Thursday, October 4, 2018

Genius Hour


I love the idea of Genius Hour. It encourages lateral, creative and critical thinking. It is an innovative way of meeting educational standards. It is fun because the students get to choose what they want to learn, research, modify, build, invent, and/or create do what interests them and not just do something they are required to. It allows them to find themselves in their creative work. They get to be in charge of their education. Too often we see students who grow bored because they don't enjoy what they are learning. Genius hour can be a great way to engage these students. It is differential learning as each student is working at their level.

Being a passionate art lover, I decided to tackle an art project that I haven't done before - a 3d mural. It was an interesting experience that I really loved. It was interesting to learn about the different types of materials available and experiment with some of them. What I didn’t take into account though was the cost and time involved. I had underestimated both. It was really frustrating when the clay I chose first time didn’t dry as it was supposed to. There were lots of cracks when it dried. Assuming it was because I used more water than needed; I redid again using the same clay and still ended up with the same result. I had to then change the clay and redo the work. Thankfully this time round it worked well. It was a great learning experience. It was exciting to learn new ways to create textures and play around with them. Also learnt the hard way that mistakes made are not easy to correct. It was challenging to work around these mistakes but at the same time it brought out the creativity in me to make the mistake work. The project is not completed yet. It now needs to be colored. I am hoping I should be able to complete it in a week. 

I would definitely want to use Genius Hour in my class. While browsing for ideas I came across this one that really interested me - Scaffolding Genius Hour. I have been following Dan Meyer on Twitter for some time and really like his ideas. So why not use Dan Meyer Three-Acts Math Tasks as a way of building up to a full scale Genius Hour project. Dan has put together a great list of problems where students could pick out a question that interests them or begin asking their own essential questions. Students can get used to thinking outside the box, working on problems that do not have a definitive start or end point at all while still working in the comfortable confines of just answering a math problem.

5 comments:

  1. These turned out amazingly well!! Frankly, it could be something that you could use for ornaments or decoration around the holiday season. I am certainly not an artsy person, so I give you credit for accomplishing something like this.

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  2. These are beautiful! I am very interested to see them painted. Hats off to you for figuring out that you needed different clay. I would have gotten so frustrated and just gave up. I whole heartedly agree that a Genius Hour allows students to be in charge of their education. It helps them learn about things they may not ever have the opportunity to learn about.

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  3. It looks great! Congrats on the progress. Being able to do something you're passionate about makes this activity worthwhile. I'm sure if you get a bit of time, this will turn out great! Good luck!

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  4. This is beautiful, so impressive. Awesome thing about Genius Hour is that I would never choose something like this (b/c I'm not at all artistic!) but love the outcome. I also love your blog - really visually appealing!

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  5. I am so impressed with your project! I am sure it was a labor of love. Thank you for sharing your Dan Meyer link. I'm sure it will be helpful to others too!

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