Determining What is Lifeworthy Learning in School
"You've got to be very careful if you don't know where you're going, because you might not get there." -Yogi Berra
In a previous post, I asked those that I am connected with online what they feel is the one thing a student should know, understand, or be able to do by the time they leave their respective school.
I also asked this same question of the members of our school leadership team, our school's parents, and our outgoing 5th graders.
Why do this? We have two days of curriculum writing planned for next week. Our goal is to develop at least an outline of six content units of study for each grade level. There's so much to teach and not enough time. We have to be picky about what's essential. These units will be scheduled throughout the year, hopefully incorporating literacy and other areas of instruction. Using the Understanding by Design process (Wiggins and McTighe, 1998), we also hope to create more useful assessments for our students, performance tasks that allow them better opportunities to show what they know.
By gathering input from more stakeholders, the idea is there will be more ownership in this process of designing instruction. Parents and students have also been invited to our actual curriculum writing days. Their roles will be as a representative voice for all students and parents as we work together to make their school experience even better. Our school definitely has some successes, but we also have opportunities for growth, such as making learning opportunities more accessible for our marginalized students, and to better integrate technologies so they are a transformative piece of instruction, instead of merely augmenting current practice.
I took all of the input provided by our teachers, parents, students and my PLN, and condensed their ideas down into six-word-or-less learning statements. They were written on large Post-its and displayed in our LMC, which will serve as our workspace.

I left some spaces open, to allow for more suggestions for what we as a school community feel is an essential outcome of a student's school experience. David Perkins refers to this idea of what's essential as "lifeworthy learning", from his book Future Wise: Educating Our Children for a Changing World (Jossey-Bass, 2014). LIfeworthy learning goes beyond basic skills, preparing for an unknown future and expecting students to generalize bigger concepts across disciplines and experiences. It is more than just a personalized learning experience or a fun activity, Perkins states.
The basic curriculum can't be molded around the individual enthusiasms of learners. We need to figure out what's likely to be lifeworthy for most students, kindling enthusiasm there as much as we can while also making room for individual learning experiences. (16)
Here are a few of our proposed lifeworthy learning statements:
[gallery type="slideshow" link="file" ids="21191,21192,21193,21194,21195"]
You can view all of the statements by clicking here.
The purpose for this display will be to look for ways to include these skills and understandings within units of study when appropriate. This process will happen after we review our mission and vision, recommit to our beliefs and best practices, and introduce the Understanding by Design process.
Here are a few questions I'll be throwing out to our group when we arrive at this point in our time together:
What is stated here and it should be?
What is not stated here, but you feel should be?
What is not stated here, and it should stay that way?
This last question might be the most important. I have found conversations around instruction to be very powerful when a faculty finds consensus on what to stop doing in classrooms. Writing these obituaries may have a larger impact than on anything we might add to our instructional toolbox.
What are your thoughts on this process? Have you had any experience in determining what's essential and lifeworthy for student learning with a group of educators? How have you "trimmed the fat" from curriculum in a fairly agreeable manner? Comments on this topic are welcome here.
(For a good description of this unit design process, check out the post Planning for the Planning on the Two Writing Teachers blog.)