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Passion projects during pandemic keep School District 8 students engaged

Crawford Bay students are coming up with unique ways to learn
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Crawford Bay Elementary-Secondary has been lending out equipment to students — including sewing machines — to pursue passion projects. Photo submitted

Submitted by School District 8

Students across the Kootenay Lake school district, and all over the province, are now into their fifth week of home-based learning. With no standard for what at-home education looks like, teachers have been tasked with creating customized learning environments and plans for many of their students.

For some students, that has included having a say in what they want to learn.

Following the spring break, teachers at Crawford Bay Elementary-Secondary School connected directly with their students. The Grade 7-to-12 students were asked specifically about what types of activities they each found motivating, and during this un-precedented time of stress, what kinds of activities might bring them joy.

Students were asked to select a passion project they would be interested in pursuing over the weeks and possible months ahead that would help them develop tangible skills, alongside their curricular content.

Suggestions included learning to play a musical instrument, learning a new crafting skill or even something like juggling. Students were strongly encouraged to pick something that did not involve more screen time, seeing that much of the course work would already be delivered through online platforms.

The result? In addition to the success of a device lending program for students requiring technology to access online learning content, Crawford Bay school has also been kept busy loaning out archery sets, painting sets, sewing machines, felting kits, musical instruments, microscopes, telescopes, and more.

One student even requested a broken mini-dirt bike that had been donated to the school shop class. Tools from the shop class were provided and the dirt bike is now running. That particular student is now designing a way to turn it into a backyard rope-tow for next year’s ski season.

Matt Winger has been the home/school liaison at Crawford Bay, working hard to remove barriers to student success and authentic learning. As the school librarian, he has also been tasked with making the resource deliveries twice a week to students in the community.

“I feel a little bit like Santa Claus! The kids are always excited to see me when I make a driveway delivery.”

Winger has been teaching a course called project-based learning with senior students at Crawford Bay for the last five years. He suggests this new blended learning model might be a window into what could possibly be next for education models.

“Instead of being the expert teacher, we teachers are becoming expert learners, helping to inspire our students and encouraging them to seek out that which they are intrinsically motivated to learn about.”