Guide to Curriculum Units by Fellows of the Yale National Initiative 2024

Preface

In April 2024 the Yale National Initiative to strengthen teaching in public schools® accepted teachers from fifteen public school districts in nine states to participate in five national seminars led by Yale University faculty members. The Initiative, which builds upon the success of a four-year National Demonstration Project (1998-2002), promotes the establishment of new Teachers Institutes that adopt the approach to professional development the Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute developed and has followed since 1978.

Teachers Institutes are educational partnerships between universities and school districts designed to strengthen teaching and learning in a community’s high-poverty, high-minority public schools. Evaluations have shown that the Institute approach exemplifies the characteristics of high-quality teacher professional development, enhances teacher quality in the ways known to improve student achievement, and encourages participants to remain in teaching in their schools.

Thirty-three of the teachers, named Yale National Fellows, were from school districts that are planning or exploring the establishment of a new Teachers Institute for Chicago, IL; the Navajo Nation, AZ; Pittsburgh, PA; Richmond, VA; San José, CA; and locations in Texas. Other National Fellows came from existing Teachers Institutes located in New Castle County, DE; New Haven, CT; Philadelphia, PA; and Tulsa, Oklahoma. Overall, about half of the National Fellows participated in national seminars for the first time.

The National Fellows attended an Organizational Session of the seminars held at Yale on May 3-4. The seminars reconvened on campus during a ten-day Intensive Session from July 8-19 and concluded in mid-August when the Fellows submitted their completed curriculum units. The five seminars were:

  • “Landscape, Art, and Ecology,” led by Timothy Barringer, Paul Mellon Professor in the History of Art;
  • “A History of Black People as Readers: A Genealogy of Critical Literacy,” led by Roderick A. Ferguson, William Robertson Coe Professor of Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies and of American Studies;
  • “Poetry as Sound and Object,” led by Feisal G. Mohamed, Professor of English;
  • “Energy: Past, Present, and Future,” led by Gary Brudvig, Benjamin Silliman Professor of Chemistry; and
  • “Evolutionary Medicine,” led by Paul E. Turner, Rachel Carson Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology.

The purposes of the program are to provide public school teachers deeper knowledge of the subjects they teach and first-hand experience with the Teachers Institute approach to high-quality professional development. This reinforces their leadership in an existing Teachers Institute or prepares them to lead the development of a new Teachers Institute. Each teacher writes a curriculum unit to teach their students about the seminar subject and to share with other teachers in their school district and, through our website at teachers.yale.edu, with teachers anywhere. The curriculum units contain five elements: content objectives, teaching strategies, examples of classroom activities, lists of resources for teachers and students, and an appendix on the district academic standards the unit implements. In these ways the curriculum units assist teachers in engaging and educating the students in their school courses.

The curriculum units National Fellows wrote are their own; they are presented in five volumes, one for each seminar. We encourage teachers who use the units to submit comments online.

The Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute® is a permanently endowed academic unit of Yale University, which undertook the National Initiative in 2004.

Landscape, Art, and Ecology

Introduction by Timothy J. Barringer, Paul Mellon Professor in the History of Art

Introduction coming soon!

Synopsis of the Curriculum Units

24.01.01 - Art in D.C.: Using Rock Creek Park as Our Playground

by Sandy Alvarez

Children learn through play; they love being outdoors and are curious, creative individuals. The unit "Art in D.C.: Using Rock Creek Park as Our Playground," intended for first graders, will leverage children's curiosity and love for play and the outdoors by exposing students to art through nature. They will learn about American landscape painters, such as Thomas Cole, Frederic Edwin Church, Albert Bierstadt, and Thomas Moran, and how they were inspired by nature. Students will explore nature just like these artists did two centuries ago--through art itself. Students will have the opportunity to see how nature influences their own art as they learn to draw the National Park System's oldest natural urban park, Washington, D.C.'s Rock Creek Park, en plein air. Students will also learn how artists influenced the overall National Park System. To that end, this curriculum unit will review the history of Rock Creek Park and the larger National Park System. Students will answer questions such as "How did the work of artists play a role in the development of national parks?" Students will use art as a vehicle to learn about nature and experience nature to learn about and create art.

(Developed for English Language Arts, grade 1; recommended for Art, grades 1-12, and English Language Arts, grades 1-5)

24.01.02 - The Land & The People: Ecocritical Art Analysis of Industrialization

by Kariann Flynn

In this 6-week curriculum unit, newcomer MLL students will analyze images from the American Industrial Revolution and the Mexican Industrial Revolution. Students will learn how industrialization in these two countries has shaped the physical landscape, as well as the landscape of living conditions and outcomes for human populations. Students will apply an ecocritical lens to observe, question, and analyze the environmental degradation of a landscape and the impacts on local human populations; moreover, they will reflect upon the ways in which U.S. policy and transnational industry are driving environmental and social issues in the border cities of Mexico. This unit's content objectives are embedded with language objectives intended to scaffold student progress toward English proficiency and mastery of grade-level knowledge and skills that can be applied in content area classes.

(Developed for English Language Development Level 1, grades 9-12; recommended for American History, World History, and English Language Arts, grades 9-12)

24.01.03 - The Art of Understanding and Connecting through Butterflies

by Stephany Jimenez

Art often serves as storytelling and it has the power to convey emotion and awareness. From an ecological standpoint, it can also support an understanding of organic life's interconnection as well as cultivate empathy for the world around us. By exploring nature in artwork with a purposeful lens, we discover new ways of seeing the value of all living things as well as their right to be on earth. This is a multispecies study that cogitates a way to think about who speaks on behalf of nature, and uses various art forms to contribute to participatory valuation and decision-making processes about nature itself, and the lives that inhabit it. More importantly, this is an analysis of a passionate immersion in the interrelated lives of monarch butterflies and humanity migrating in order to uncover new understandings, relationships, and accountabilities. The idea is to explore such connections through art and become responsive to the diversity of life that constitutes the world. The objective is to enlighten the connection between monarch butterflies and immigrants to reframe the perception of their existence, and establish a foundation for growth mindset through mindfulness and transformation.

(Developed for IB MYP Visual Arts, grades 7-8; recommended for Visual Arts, grades 6-8)

24.01.04 - The Eye of the Beholder: Climate Change Awareness

by Willie Keener

My synopsis is based on a small rural school district in Texas. This paper is designed to raise climate change awareness and capture the moments through Visual Arts. Students will go through a series of learning experiences over a 4 to 6-week period that will allow them to learn about the history of Texas, the oil industry/potential climate change issues, and the fundamentals of Art and photography with an emphasis on picturesque and sublime. Also, they will have an opportunity to collaborate with small groups and peer teaching and use Costa's levels of questioning. They will do kinesthetic learning to keep them active and engaged. Then, they will do presentations to assist with public speaking and leadership (with sentence stems). Each student will have a portfolio created. Lastly, the students will do Gallery walks and use critique sheets to judge their peers' artworks constructively. This has more depth because it will also share moments of my personal history and others as I go through interviews and readings to develop the unit for the students.

(Developed for Art, grades 6-12; recommended for Art, grades 6-12)

24.01.05 - Manufacturer's Mist: How the Anthropocene is Filled with Dead Men's Souls

by Alima Saffell McKnight

In this curriculum unit, students will grow their understanding of climate change, the effect humans have had and continue to have on the environment, and begin to understand how and where they can act. This learning will take place against the backdrop of a digital game where the aesthetic is landscape paintings depicting the evolution of said climate crisis via industrialization. The purpose of this unit is to help students feel connected to their environment in a way that, even though they may be culpable (yes, even at their young age), makes them feel capable of fighting for a more sustainable way of living. Ultimately, students will create a point and click game of their own to showcase what they have learned in terms of climate change culprits and sustainability options in an effort to challenge their cohorts and present solutions to climate problems.

(Developed for Digital Literacy, grades 3-5; recommended for Visual Art, Literacy, and Digital Literacy, grades 3-12)

24.01.06 - Landscape Keeps Score: Empire, Waste, Deep Time, and Art

by Amanda McMahon

Plastic won’t degrade for centuries; nuclear waste will remain dangerous for millennia. But what does a millennium mean? Beyond human life span, it seems beyond understanding. This unit seeks to contextualize the scale of the problem to better communicate to students how the Anthropocene threatens us and our future.

FFirst, students will study the past by reflecting on the rise and (climate-change fueled) fall of Cahokia, a pre-Colombian metropolis. Then, students will explore the present by learning about how plastic can be re-contextualized by re-using it to create artwork. Finally, students will look to the future by learning about the hurdles in creating a nuclear waste warning that will last ten thousand years. Students will take on the design challenge, creating their own model and justifying the design using art historical analogues.

Through this exploration, students will understand how history impacts their world today, and how their choices today will impact their community's future

(Developed for Art 1 and 2, grades 9-12; recommended for Art 1-4, grades 9-12)

24.01.07 - Extraction of Profits in the Gold Rush: Chinese Miners and California Ecology

by Melissa Muntz

This unit is an attempt to tell a history which occurred at the intersection of race, class, and industrial scale extractive economics. The major difficulty in constructing this unit is to weave together the narratives of white and Chinese immigrants to California to gain wealth and prosperity and the counter narrative of environmental destruction on an Industrial scale. Chinese immigrants are commonly included in history textbooks in their role building the Transcontinental Railroad. The part of the historical narrative that is usually left out is the broader story of Chinese participation in mining across the western USA both before and after their participation in the building of the railroads. The Gold Rush tends to be framed as a time of heroic, individual, white, male subjugation of the land in a quest for personal fortune, however this unit argues that Chinese men ought to be part of this foundational myth, and that the myth itself needs to be revised to include the corporations which organized large scale mining, government laws which favored some groups over others, and the rapid adoption of industrial technology to exploit and destroy the landscape.

(Developed for U.S. History Ethnic Studies, grades 11-12; recommended for U.S. History, grades 7-12, and Social Studies, grades 3-5)

24.01.08 - Art of the Mushroom

by Kasalina M. Nabakooza

The Art of the Mushroom is a visual arts unit written for students in grades 3-4. The main objective of this interdisciplinary visual arts unit is that students will experience how close observation to demonstrate their way of seeing mushrooms. Close observation can heighten our interest in, and understanding of, the natural world. Students will look closely at mushrooms through interdisciplinary learning to experience artmaking as a process. Students will create artworks made from a wide range of materials that reflect the variety of mushrooms. This interdisciplinary study of mushrooms bridges art, science and history and promotes visual literacy. Using learning progressions students will acquire a conceptual framework for thinking about their relationship to their environment. This visual art unit is centered on the mushroom motif that teachers can use to encourage students to make meaningful and aesthetically dynamic art. It teaches students patience and to appreciate what can be overlooked or underappreciated.

(Developed for Visual Arts, grades 3-4; recommended for Visual Arts, grades 3-4)

24.01.09 - Traces of the Past: From Landscape to Cityscape

by Christopher Snyder

Every city was, at one time, not a city. The evolution of any landscape into a cityscape can take years, or decades, or even centuries. Ever since moving to the city of Pittsburgh over two decades ago, I've been drawn to the intersection of how history, both positive and negative, has shaped the evolution of our city, whether it be the neighborhoods where I have lived, the neighborhoods that I have taught, or the multitudes of neighborhoods that I drive through on my way to and from work. How did we get here? What did it look like before? What will it look like many years from now?

Once known as The Gateway to the West and always in flux, Pittsburgh is a hodgepodge of diverse neighborhoods shaped, separated, and brought together by economical and industrial impacts along with geographical and topographical influences. This unit will use visual sources, maps, photographs and paintings, to delve into how these factors shaped who we are as a city, who we are now as a city, and who we plan on becoming in the next ten, hundred, or thousand years.

(Developed for Visual Art, grade 5; recommended for Social Studies, Science, and History, grades 4-12)

24.01.10 - The History of Richmond through Maps

by Greysi Vasquez

If I’m being completely honest, the unit topic that I find the most boring to teach to my 10th grade history class is the Industrial Revolution. As much as I tried, I could not find inspiration enough to make this topic interesting. The following curriculum unit sets up an in-depth analysis of Richmond, Virginia through the lenses of industrial, environmental, and artistic changes. By studying maps, students will gain a deeper understanding, more than just geographical representations, on how maps are cultural documents. This unit aims to improve students' historical knowledge while developing their critical thinking, empathy, and visual literacy skills to understand the impact of industrialization. Teaching strategies in this unit will include lectures, discussions, map analysis, identifying key features, and examining what these sources reveal about their time. We will also analyze artistic responses to industrial changes and how the society and landscape changes of Richmond is seen through the various paintings, illustrations, and interpretations from people of their time. The close connection between the Industrial Revolution and the city of Richmond also makes this topic particularly relevant and engaging for my students because it offers them a unique perspective of their local history within a global context.

(Developed for World History 2, grade 10; recommended for U.S. History, grade 11)

Synopsis of the Curriculum Units

24.02.01 - Parody and Counter-Narrative in Art: Viewing Against the Grain

by Brandon Barr

This unit defines and explores the use of parody and counter-narratives in visual art as a means to challenge, critique, and subvert dominant cultural narratives. Students will engage with five artistic works: George Washington Carver Crossing the Delaware: Page from an American History Textbook by Robert Colescott, Washington Crossing the Delaware by Emanuel Leutze, Shadows of Liberty by Titus Kaphar, American Gothic by Grant Wood and The New American Gothic by Criselda Vasquez. Students will learn how parody and counter-narrative function as tools of resistance and commentary. The unit will encourage students to "read against the grain" by examining the underlying messages and ideologies that these works seek to expose or disrupt in hopes that students can become more active agents of social change.

This unit is designed for a sixth grade English Language Arts classroom to extend the learning of a previously developed unit titled Image as Text written in 2017. The unit could be used in middle school or high school art, humanities, or English classes. It assumes little-to-no background knowledge in analyzing art or with the history associated with the works of art. 

(Developed for English Language Arts, grade 6; recommended for Social Science and English, grades 6-12)

24.02.02 - Reading in the Dark: Freedom of the Mind and Body

by Deirdre Brooks

This curriculum unit focuses on the journey African Americans had in their  pursuit of obtaining literacy skills. These skills would then be developed into tools to gain freedom during slavery; freedom of the mind and body through reading. The content background for this unit will be broken down into two sections, and from these sections one will have the knowledge needed to deliver the unit. This is not to say that one must solely use the information being provided, but rather view and utilize the given material as a steppingstone in understanding the subject matter of literacy in the black community. The two sections to be discussed will present information in regard to literacy developed during slavery, and literacy during the time period of Reconstruction within the black community.  When discussing literacy during the time period of Reconstruction, there will also be a discussion centered around the freedmen schools established during the time of Reconstruction by the Freedmen’s Bureau. In correlating past history with relatable current subject matter, in the unit I will also acknowledge the establishment of Armstrong High School in Richmond, Virginia, and the Jefferson School in Charlottesville, Virginia. Armstrong High School, initially known as the Richmond Colored Normal School established in 1867 by the Freedmen’s Bureau, is the feeder high school for Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School.

(Developed for U.S. History, grade 6; recommended for U.S. History, grade 7)

24.02.03 - Inspiration via Critical Literacy: Filling Gaps in the Canon

by Josefa Castelli

“Hey, did we forget to invite someone?” – all of canonical literature

How do we acknowledge and encourage our students’ questions about why they don’t see people who look or sound like them in the texts they encounter throughout their academic journey?  Paulo Freire, Toni Morrison, and many, many English teachers I know would recommend promoting a classroom culture in which those questions are at the heart of what it means to be a reader.  This is critical literacy.  Join me and my students as we learn how Black creatives have read critically and responded to the ways in which they were not represented by the canon.  Explore texts from Alice Walker, Lorraine Hansberry, Ken Harper, Charlie Smalls, and other monumental Black writers, thinkers, and creators that have addressed the gaps they found in what they read and viewed.  Encourage your students to question what they read and the authors who produce that content by showing them examples of others who have done the same.  Allow them to participate in research through which they can connect with other intellectuals who knew to question the world around them, and create when they found the answers lacking.

(Developed for English Language Arts, grade 7; recommended for English Language Arts, grades 7-12)

24.02.04 - The Why and How of Reading: Literacy Skills from Primary Sources

by Danina Garcia

This unit guides students in analyzing five instances of historical, activist literacy: Frederick Douglass learning to read in the 1830s, the Philadelphia Institute for Colored Youth beginning in the 1840s, student writings from the Carlisle Indian School in the 1880s, the founding of Third College by the Lumumba-Zapata Coalition in 1970, and the beginning of Black Lives Matter at School Week of Action in the late 2010s. In each case study, students use a mix of primary and secondary sources to identify specific reading skills demonstrated by the readers and writers of the past and apply Gholdy Muhammad’s five pursuits of skills, intellectualism, identity, criticality and joy. This unit also reviews basic literacy concepts such as phonics and fluency, for both teachers and students, and would work well in a late middle school or high school context where many students are reading below grade level. During their study of these successful readers under fire, students will generate their own personal syllabi, combining a variety of texts in order to chart a personal path towards improved literacy and intellectual self-development during and after high school.

(Developed for English I, grade 9, and English IV, grade 12; recommended for English, grade 8; English I, grade 9; and English IV, grade 12)

24.02.05 - Through the Labor of Literacy

by Tyriese Holloway

This unit focuses on educators supporting students by understanding the political dimensions of illiteracy, using it as a theoretical foundation. It empowers students to take ownership of their lives and histories, exploring essential questions such as defining intelligence, the role of learning in intelligence, and the influence of teaching experiences. Texts include Carol Dweck’s “The Secret to Raising Smart Kids,” Paul Lawrence Dunbar’s “Sparrow” alongside Maya Angelou’s “I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings,” and Evie Shockley’s “The Lost Love Letters of Frederick Douglass” complementing Frederick Douglass’s narratives.

Using Penn’s Literacy Network’s “Four Lenses of Literacy” within a digital curriculum (StudySync), the unit integrates meaning-centered, social, language, and human lenses. These lenses support students’ diverse needs in navigating digital learning environments, encouraging engaged and active learning.

(Developed for English I-Honors, grade 9; recommended for English I, grade 9)

24.02.06 - Freedom Dreaming: Critical Thought Through Imagination

by Zanneta Kubajak

The primary purpose of this curriculum unit is to empower students to visualize what changes they wish to see in society and to create tangible steps toward actualizing that vision. In this curriculum, students will engage in collaborative inquiry and critical self-reflection to create solutions for societal issues that are relevant to them, a process known asfreedom dreaming. By analyzing historical and contemporary social movements, students will be led to purposefully use their imagination to articulate the societal struggles that affect them and to create a plan to actualize their visions of a better world.

This unit was created with grades 6th– 8th in mind, however it is adaptable for all grade bands. It is designed to explore the concept of freedom dreams through a logical sequence where students weave through an arc that begins with a fully realized collective dream and leads to deeper inquiry into a diverse range of stories and outcomes. By exploring different freedom dreams, students will cultivate a deep understanding of the power their imaginative renderings hold. It is my dream that students will leverage their experience from this project outside of the school building and continue dreaming and imagining and dreaming again and reimagining until their dreams are reflected in world.

(Developed for Social Studies and Music, grades 7-8; recommended for Social Studies/Civics, Media Arts, and Interdisciplinary Studies, grades 6-8)

24.02.07 - Teaching Theater in a Minority-Majority Classroom

by Raymond Marshall

This course unit, intended for teachers of Theater and fine arts, will look at the many contributions that black and latino actors, playwrights, and directors have made on the theatrical landscape of America.  It can often be difficult to bridge the gap in experience and availability of theater to underserved communities.  Teaching, as I do, in a poorer, minority-majority district, I have seen firsthand the struggle to get students to buy into an artform that many of them have absolutely not experience with.  I hope by presenting this unit to them, that students of all backgrounds can come to find that theater has meaning and impact for people of all races, backgrounds, and creeds. As it is made with my particular student in mind, it does primarily focus on Hispanic and African American populations and creators, but some information is included for translation to student bodies that are composed differently.

(Developed for Theater, grades 9-12; recommended for Theater, grades 9-12)

24.02.08 - Self-Evident and Self-Contradictory: Black Readings of the Declaration of Independence

by Matthew O. Schaffer

In this unit, designed for a Grade 10 Civics curriculum, students will analyze the Declaration of Independence through the lens of Black thinkers and intellectuals. Starting with an analysis of the influences to the drafting and writing of the Declaration, students will analyze how Black people living in America were influenced by and reacted to the United States’ war against Great Britain. Moving across time periods, students will consider how Black thinkers used the rhetoric of the Declaration across time periods, focusing on abolitionism, the Civil Rights movement, and contemporary fights for justice and equality. Intertwined throughout the course of the unit are critical observations on Black literacy, and how both free and enslaved people learned to read and used reading as a tool for liberation. Students will read thinkers like Lemuel Haynes, Frederick Douglass, Martin Luther King Jr., and Tracy K. Smith, to understand the Black reading and interpretation of this foundational document of American government.

(Developed for Civics, grade 10; recommended for Civics/U.S. Government and U.S. History, grades 8-12)

Poetry as Sound and Object

Introduction by Feisal Mohamed, Professor of English

This seminar seeks to broaden the avenues leading students to poetry, emphasizing connections to performance and the visual arts. It aims to have students of all ages experience poetry as a living art lending itself to creative engagement in the classroom, allowing even familiar and oft-taught poems to take on new dimensions. Inspired by trends in current poetry, by Black poets in particular, it explores contemporary work in ways focused on its use in the classroom. As a text anchoring these ongoing conversations, we turned repeatedly to Tyehimba Jess’s Pulitzer-Prize winning book of poems Olio (2016), a history in verse of unrecorded Black performance in the period between the Civil War and the First World War. Through this subject, Jess explores questions of enslavement and freedom, of the liberating power of art and its creation of new social relations, and of the triumph of Black performance in wresting aesthetic achievement from the teeth of anti-blackness. That the book has many visual and tactile components, and that portions have been performed and recorded, make it an excellent example of poetry that demands to be encountered as both sound and object.

In addition, the seminar visited the Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library on several occasions, availing ourselves especially of its peerless holdings on writers of the Harlem Renaissance. We viewed, among other things, early modern commonplace books; manuscript and early printed versions of the poems of John Donne; the first edition of the poems of Phillis Wheatley; a telegram from Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. to Langston Hughes inviting the poet to join the Selma to Montgomery march; original photographs of Jean Toomer, the author of Cane; and posters and newsprint publications of the Black Panther Party. All of these artifacts place poetry in broader personal and historical contexts, bringing to life the places, events, and poetic minds behind the poems we encounter on the page. We engaged in some hands-on printing, setting type and working the press in the basement of Jonathan Edwards College. We also considered such video poems as Claudia Rankine and John Lucas’ situation videos, and took a field trip to Governor’s Island for New York City’s Poetry Festival, which featured an array of readings and poetry-themed activities lending themselves to classroom use.

The curriculum units arising from the seminar reflect its core aim of making poetry available across grades. They also reflect broad cultural diversity, thanks to the Fellows’ wide-ranging interests and expertise. We begin with Elizabeth Isaac’s unit for students as young as third grade, which is centered on the Diné (Navajo) concept of Hózhó, or “beautyway.” A key concept in Diné culture, Hózhó refers to a self-cultivation allowing for attunement to beauty that also brings us into harmony with nature, family, and community. Isaac’s unit combines traditional Diné chants with contemporary Native American poetry, namely the work of Orlando White and Joy Harjo, the first Native American US Poet Laureate. Also lending itself to early grades is Sharon Ponder-Ballard’s unit, “Captain Underpants, Poetry Outside the Box.” The unit is centered on two main texts: Dav Pilkey’s graphic novel series Captain Underpants, and a Tyehimba Jess poem on Henry “Box” Brown. The former is a springboard to comic book poetry, with students interpreting, and creating, poetry in graphic form. The latter allows poetry to bring history to life, centered on the story of an enslaved man who shipped himself to freedom in a wooden crate. Ponder also increases student engagement with literary texts through such dramatic techniques as reader’s theater and improv.

Designed for students in fourth grade, but easily adaptable to higher grades, Damon Peterson’s unit takes students to the very roots of poetry through the writings of Enheduana and the Vedic poets. The earliest named poet, Enheduana was active in the Sumerian city-state of Ur until her death c.2279 BCE—by comparison, Homer, if he was an individual poet, is thought to have lived c. 850 BCE. This earliest of poets is also associated with the roots of written language, the Sumerian cuneiform that has come down to us on clay tablets. While those objects have transmitted poetry, so has sound. The unit also focuses on Vedic poetry, an oral tradition that has preserved poems for millennia with remarkable fidelity. Peterson challenges students to think far beyond the usual focus of elementary curricula on the US and on the past 300 years, allowing them to see the long and broad arc of human language and literature, and incorporates such activities as an “archeological dig” for clay tablets.

Addressed to students in fifth grade, Ethelwolda Paat’s unit is centered on poetry and art of the Harlem Renaissance, exploring the work of Langston Hughes, Claude McKay, and Jacob Lawrence. Key texts include Hughes’s Black Misery, a lyrical depiction of the struggles of integration and his final book, and Claude McKay’s “America,” a sonnet reflecting the Jamaican-born poet’s conflicted view of the country to which he had moved. Especially through consideration of Lawrence’s art, students are introduced to the history of the Great Migration in engaging ways, notably by writing ekphrastic poetry on his Migration Series. As a teacher in the District of Columbia, Paat also incorporates opportunities for experiential learning at the National Museum of African American History and Culture and at The Phillips Collection.

Lauren Freeman’s unit for the fourth- and fifth-grade classrooms seeks to address the decline in reading and writing performance visible after the COVID pandemic. At the same time her unit advances social-emotional learning and seeks to create a space away from technology for the quiet work of contemplation of oneself and one’s environment. Incorporating poetry readings that introduce students to various poetic forms, from haiku, to limerick, to free verse, the unit emphasizes place-based learning and inquiry and includes such activities as peer discussion, journaling, and an end-of-unit poetry slam.  

Two units address middle-school students, those by Holly Bryk and Alyssa Lucadamo. Designed for a world language classroom, Bryk’s unit is focused on Calaveras Literarias, satirical poetic epitaphs, often of public figures, that can offer biting social commentary. The poems are often presented with artwork typical of celebrations of the Day of the Dead. Through these authentic Spanish-language texts, and through related readings, recordings, videos and class discussions, students advance their knowledge of poetic sound and form, of Mexican culture, and of the Spanish language. (During the seminar, Bryk and the other Fellows were able to view examples of nineteenth-century Calaverias Literarias held by the Beinecke Library, including the Mexican newspaper El Calavera, which has been digitized, https://collections.library.yale.edu/catalog/2043984.) Lucadamo’s unit for eighth grade is centered on videopoetry. Equipping students with tools for analyzing poetry and for analyzing film, the unit features video interpretations of canonical poems—Walt Whitman’s Song of Myself and Gwendolyn Brooks’s “We Real Cool”—alongside contemporary videopoems—Walidah Imarisha’s “Wade in the Water,” Claudia Rankine’s “Situation 7,” and Tess Gallagher’s “Choices.” Activities include analytical writing about videopoetry and a group assignment in which students create their own videopoem about a chosen cause, contributing to a yearlong service-learning project.

For her students in grades seven through twelve, Debra Jenkins offers a unit focused on the popular contemporary Black poet and hip hop artist Tupac Shakur. Teaching in a classroom in Hearne, Texas where nearly all students speak Spanish as their first language, Jenkins noticed that some still knew, and were fans of, Tupac’s music. In the unit this connection between teacher and students becomes a springboard to a broad range of creative activities developing reading and writing skills. These include lessons on traditional poetic forms, such as the sonnet, and more avant-garde ones, such as erasure and blackout poetry. In taking hip hop seriously as an art form, and one that amplifies marginalized voices, Jenkins opens a path to her own students’ self-expression and validation. The final unit arising from the seminar is Tara McKee’s, which is geared toward the high-school classroom. McKee notes that her students tend to come to poetry very reluctantly. But they are at an age where they are becoming more politically aware, and they do have a strong affinity for expressing themselves through performance, as attested by their uploading of videos to social media. Responsive to all of these givens, her unit focuses on poetry of witness, and two anchor texts in particular: Abel Meeropol’s “Strange Fruit,” a poem on lynching that he later set to music and which was famously performed by Billie Holiday; and Pablo Neruda’s “I’m Explaining a Few Things,” which bears witness to the assault on Guernica during the Spanish Civil War. Each of these affords an opportunity for connection to Social Studies lessons on a significant historical moment. The unit emphasizes traditional skills of close reading, and more social, collaborative engagement of poetic texts through dramatic performance, including a performance of original work transforming poetry of witness into protest.

The many ways in which these thoughtful and creative Fellows have found to incorporate poetry into various curricula is astonishing. While a curricular push toward “reading for information” has increasingly sidelined poetry in K-12 education, the units here gathered show just how much students are shortchanged by this trend. Paat’s observations on her experience as a teacher sum this up well: “I realized poetry is a powerful tool for teaching and learning because I have used it, and I am living proof of its power in students’ reading and writing. Over the years, I have found that it is one of the most effective methods for helping students understand language and express themselves through writing.” As readers of poetry, students become more alert to the nuances and musicality of language. As writers of poetry, as both Isaac and Freeman emphasize, students become more attuned to their feelings and gain confidence in expressing them, and become more contemplative observers of themselves and of their world. As Ponder, Jenkins, Lucadamo, and McKee’s units attest, poetry is not alienating; its versatility makes it a tool for meeting students where they live, in a world of comics, video, hip hop, and emerging political consciousness. And Peterson and Bryk show how it can be a used to bring world cultures to life in the classroom, whether those cultures are ancient or modern. All of these qualities seem especially necessary as schools struggle with the setbacks of the COVID pandemic, in terms of student reading, writing, and engagement.

Synopsis of the Curriculum Units

24.03.01 - Poetry Through Hózhó: The Beauty Way of Life

by Elizabeth Jayne Isaac

The intent of this unit is to help third- to eighth-grade Native American students enjoy reading and writing poetry that is connected to their own lives. The unit teaches students the importance of poetry through research-based strategies, and to comprehend the content of the poem and how it is connected to expression. Three objectives will be the focus of the unit in a span of 15 days. A Hózhó model, aligned with the beauty way of life, will be the focus to ensure students learn the important components of being Native American and are proud of who they are, as well as building motivation to accept and strive through the journey way of life. Three different poems written by Native American poets will be utilized to make the connection and are relevant to the culture of the learner. Students will connect themselves with the world around them, but most importantly, connect and accept themselves with who they are and their purpose in life. In addition, the unit aims to have students to become writers themselves and to express their feelings, whether positive or negative, in the most fun and exciting way.

(Developed for ELA and Writing, grade 3; recommended for ELA and Writing, grades K-12)

24.03.02 - Captain Underpants, Poetry Outside the Box

by Sharon Monique Ponder

In the Yale National Initiative seminar on “Poetry as Sound and Object,” Dr. Feisal Mohamed offered us “ways to reduce the threshold of intimidation when teaching poetry by focusing on poems as an experience of sound and as fascinating material objects with ties to the visual arts.”

What defines poetry even more than its form is how it sounds. The way a poem marches from line to line or how onomatopoeia for instance can bring its subject to life is what makes a piece poetic. Two main texts that will be utilized in this unit areHenry Box BrownandThe Adventures of Captain Underpants.

Currently in my performing arts classes my students come from Pre-kindergarten through eighth grades.  I aim to grasp students' attention and advance their wonder, curiosity and interest with hopes of reading and performing arts becoming a passion. Although I utilize a variety of traditional scripts my primary and intermediate students tend to gravitate more towards graphic novels, comic books and improvisation.  

Readers, Improv and poetic theater are an integrated approach for involving my students in reading, writing, listening and speaking activities. In this unit my students will share relevant and culturally reflective literature, read aloud, write scripts and poetry, perform with a purpose and work collaboratively.

(Developed for Performing Arts, grades PreK-8; recommended for Performing Arts, grades PreK-8)

24.03.03 - First Poets

by Damon Peterson

This unit curriculum is a close look at the world’s first poets. Therefore, this curriculum will focus on both the writing traditions of the Sumerians and the Vedic Aryans. With regard to the Sumerians, the curriculum will focus on the writings of Enheduanna. Enheduanna was a priestess who lived nearly 3000 years ago in ancient Sumer.  Ancient Sumer is also notable in the history of literacy as the Sumerian civilization developed the world’s first writing system, cuneiform. Therefore, this moment in history will provide students the significant opportunity to explore both the development of writing as well as the world’s first author and poet. Students will explore this tradition by looking closely at the history of the Sumerian civilization including how they developed the world’s first writing system. Next, students will explore another formative and early writing tradition.  This will be the Vedic Aryan tradition.  The Vedic Aryans were formative poets in their own regard.  For example, they have a long tradition of memorizing and reciting poetry by heart to pass it along from generation to generation.  Current scholarship has not arrived at a consensus as to the historical period of these early poets.  However, they are arguably relatively contemporary to the Sumerian tradition.  Moreover, the poems recorded by the Vedic Aryans now comprise the heart and soul of Hindu theology. Together, these two cultures and their corresponding poems provide students a window onto the earliest forms of literacy and poetry. Through these poems students will discover an ancient thread, a theme, that has run through poetry from then until now.  The unit will culminate in students writing their own poem, on a similar theme to those of the Sumerians and the Aryans, and students will celebrate and preserve their writing like the Sumerians and Aryans by dedicating the poems to stone (clay), heart, and mind.

(Developed for Social Studies/English Language Arts, grade 4; recommended for English Language Arts, Social Studies, and World History, secondary grades)

24.03.04 - The Harlem Renaissance in Sounds and Image

by Ethelwolda Paat

This unit is designed to immerse fifth-grade students in the world of Harlem Renaissance poetry. It offers a rare opportunity to study and dissect works by Langston Hughes, Claude McKay, and Jacob Lawrence, focusing on profound themes including identity, social justice, and cultural heritage. The unit is meticulously crafted to educate students about the impact of literature and art created in the early 1900s.

Students will delve deeply into the works of Langston Hughes, Claude McKay, and Jacob Lawrence, carefully analyzing literary devices and underlying meanings. They will engage in creative writing exercises, such as crafting narrative poetry, creating ekphrastic poetry, and erasure poems. They will also thoroughly research the lives, impacts of Harlem Renaissance poets, and present their findings to their peers.

The overarching ambition of this unit is to provide students with a profound understanding of how literature reflects society. Moreover, it aims to convincingly demonstrate that the themes of the Harlem Renaissance, such as identity, social justice, and cultural heritage, remain pertinent even in our contemporary society. By engaging students in the material and the learning process, this unit equips them with the tools to analyze and understand the world around them critically.

(Developed for Reading and Social Studies, grade 5; recommended for Arts and Drama, grade 5)

24.03.05 - Do You Hear What I Hear? Can You See What I See? Poetry Explored

by Lauren Hughes Freeman

With the ever-changing landscape of education, it is important to remember that physical brick and mortar structures are not the sole location for learning.  Learning happens on many levels and within the individual themself.  This unit will focus on the intrinsic value of learning with a journey outside of the classroom.  Using their surroundings, community, culture and nature, students will explore poetry and its varying forms.  To be clear, while poetry is not a new concept, the pedagogical pathway to guide students in their learning, practice and presentation of the topic will be.  Through implementation of Place-Based Learning as well as Inquiry, children in grades four and five will search within themselves through question, exploration and the construction of knowledge through experience.  In an effort to break away from the injection of knowledge through the mundane use of technology and teacher-led classroom styling, the students will forge their own way with contemplative observation, peer discussion and experience.  They will retain their findings and reinforce their studies through writing, journaling and sharing.  The culminating activities and events of this eight-week experience include readings of their own works of poetry, a visiting poet, and the publishing of their own collaborative book of poems.

(Developed for ELA, grades 4-5; recommended for ELA, grades 3-5)

24.03.06 - Sight, Sound, and Satire: Exploring Calaveras Literarias

by Holly S. Bryk

In this multimodal unit designed for a World Language class, I will focus on providing my Spanish students with an engaging and enriching learning experience in which they will explore the captivating world of Calavera Literarias. Rooted in Mexican tradition, these poetic epitaphs humorously depict death while offering poignant social commentary. Over a span of four weeks, my students will investigate the origins and cultural significance of Calaveras Literarias through readings, videos, and class discussions and examine prominent themes, including death, satire, and social commentary. They will analyze the linguistic and poetic devices used in Calaveras Literarias to create rhythm, rhyme, and satire. My students will explore sound in poetry while listening to recorded performances of Calaveras Literarias and they will identify key auditory elements that enhance their impact on the poetry. They will employ visual interpretation by studying visual representations of Calaveras Literarias in artwork and illustrations. This unit will culminate with a writing workshop in which my students will craft their very own Calaveras Literarias. By exploring the sight, sound, and satire of Calaveras Literarias, my students will engage in a rich interdisciplinary study that enhances their understanding of the Spanish language and of Mexican culture.

(Developed for Spanish II, grade 8; recommended for Spanish I, grades 7-9, and Spanish II, grades 8-10)

24.03.07 - Empowering Student Voice through Poetry and Multimedia

by Alyssa Lucadamo

This unit is designed for 8th-grade students receiving gifted services in Delaware’s P.S. duPont Middle School. Over the course of the school year, students select a cause they feel passionately about and conduct research into it, with the aim of pursuing an independent project to make a difference in that cause. This unit weaves instruction on videopoetry into that project. By exposing students to a variety of types of poetry and the techniques video poets use to convey their messages to their audiences, this unit empowers students to use videopoetry as a tool to raise awareness for their chosen causes. Over the course of the unit, students will learn the academic vocabulary associated with the analysis of poetry and film. They will closely read both traditional and multimedia “texts” representing canonical poems like Walt Whitman’s Song of Myself and Gwendolyn Brooks’s “We Real Cool,” as well as more contemporary selections such as Walidah Imarisha’s “Wade in the Water”, Claudia Rankine’s “Situation 7”, and “Choices” by Tess Gallagher. They will analyze one of the video poems in writing. The unit culminates with students working in collaborative groups to create their own videopoems to express a message about their chosen causes.

(Developed for Gifted English/Language Arts, grade 8; recommended for English, grades 8-9)

24.03.08 - Tupac the Poet and Lyricist: The State of Texas vs. Emergent Bilinguals

by Debra Denise Jenkins

After ten years of teaching, I have found myself in a position where none of my students look like me or share my culture, race, or heritage. I teach in the community I grew up in, where I graduated from. I am a product of this community, so giving back is more than just teaching to me. For me, it is personal, very personal. I want to see my students win in school and life. I don’t make the rules of life, but as their teacher, I can give them the metaphorical game to succeed in whatever endeavor they choose. Even after noticing the apparent difference, we appreciate hip-hop music, specifically a particular hip-hop artist, Tupac Shakur. When I realized this, the one question I asked myself was, how is it that my Honduran student doesn’t speak any English at all but knows about Tupac? The second question I asked myself is, how can I capitalize on this and use it to my advantage when teaching? The curriculum unit I intend to write will answer both questions. I cannot ignore the fact that my students are embarrassed to speak in their native language or feel less than others because of it. After speaking with Feisal, he surmised that the shame could stem from their native language, which could be interpreted as the language of the poor. Tupac was poor and often rapped about his financial constraints. If he could take his circumstances and use his words to identify himself as a rapper, poet, and lyricist, why can my students not do the same?

(Developed for Emergent Bilinguals and ESL, grades 7-12; recommended for Emergent Bilinguals and ESL, grades K-6)

24.03.09 - Transforming Poetry of Witness to Performance of Protest

by Tara Cristin McKee

There are five things I know for certain as a high school English teacher: 1. My students are social creatures. 2. My students are always, ALWAYS filming themselves, uploading content to TikTok and Instagram. 3. My students are also opening their eyes to the injustices of our world and in history. 4. My students are rebellious and yearn for independence. 5. My students hate, no, LOATHE poetry. With this knowledge, I created a curriculum unit that is not only going to appeal to their rebellious, performative, inquisitive, social tendencies, but also turn fact number 5 on its head, by showing them how they can use poetry as a means to rebel and raise awareness. This will be a two-week long unit using Abel Meeropol’s “Strange Fruit” and Pablo Neruda’s “I’m Explaining a Few Things” as anchor texts for poetry of witness. Once students learn about the genre, they will analyze, watch, and conduct dramatic performances of these poems. Focusing on the poetry of witness, which brings in historical and social injustices, students will work together to turn these pieces into dramatic performances, while still doing the classic close reading, determining author’s purpose, and recognizing the function of literary devices.

(Developed for AP Language and Composition, grade 11; recommended for English II, grade 10; English III and AP Language and Composition, grade 11; and AP Literature and Composition, grade 12)

Energy: Past, Present, and Future

Introduction by Gary W. Brudvig, Benjamin Silliman Professor of Chemistry

With concerns about the impact on the environment of our current use of fossil fuels and our national energy security, energy is in the news on a daily basis. Many students are familiar with some of the issues relating to energy use, but they may not know much about the science related to energy. The aim for this seminar was to discuss the science related to the history, current sources and potential future sources of energy. We can learn much about sustainable energy use by studying natural processes. Nature has solved the renewable energy problem through the process of photosynthesis that is carried out by green plants. Plants are amazing chemical factories and provide a working example of renewable solar energy conversion, but this is often not appreciated. By understanding how plants carry out the processes of solar energy utilization, we can obtain some answers to the question of how we can harvest solar energy by using processes of artificial photosynthesis.

My own interest in science stems from my hands-on experiences as a child. Therefore, many demonstrations were included in this seminar – at least one demonstration, and frequently 2-3, in each seminar meeting. These demonstrations were chosen so that they could actively involve the students and at the same time illustrate the scientific principles related to energy.

We began the seminar by reading and discussing “The Silliman Report” written in 1855 by Professor Benjamin Silliman, Jr. from Yale University. The report describes a series of pioneering experiments on the properties and uses of petroleum that led to the drilling of the first oil well in Titusville, Pennsylvania and the start of the petroleum age. The books by David Walker entitled “Energy, Plants and Man” and by David J. C. MacKay entitled “Sustainable Energy – without the hot air” were used as the technical resources for the seminar. We also read “The 100% Solution” by Solomon Goldstein-Rose, a fascinating but not highly technical plan for how the world could achieve a carbon-neutral energy economy by 2050. After discussing “The Silliman Report”, the seminar focused on energy, light and photosynthesis, with a discussion of how plants use light to convert carbon dioxide and water into sugar and oxygen gas. This included discussions on the nature of light and the fundamental steps by which light is absorbed by plants and converted into chemical energy. Demonstrations of the colors in light using diffractions glasses aided these discussions. A connection was made between natural photosynthesis and the excess production of biomass that has been buried to form the “fossil fuels” that provide most of our current energy. Next, we delved into various forms of energy, including hydroelectric, biofuels, wind, geothermal, solar and nuclear. A highlight of the seminar was the production of biodiesel fuel from cooking oil that culminated in the combustion of biodiesel fuel in an oil furnace burner. The seminar also included a discussion of energy use in the future that included progress in development of systems for artificial photosynthesis, solar and wind energy, batteries, and fuel cells.

The curriculum units developed from this seminar are suitable for elementary to middle school to high school students. In all of the units, the science content is integrated with language arts, mathematics and social studies to provide a balanced program that meets the literacy requirements of the school system. The Fellows have prepared extensive lists of materials that can be used in the classroom or as resources. These materials include

books that the students can read, textbooks that the teachers can use, demonstration sourcebooks, suppliers of equipment, and many addresses of sites on the world wide web. The Fellows have developed units around a theme or activity related to energy, including units on solar energy, wind energy, sustainability, agricultural energy, mechanical drive systems, and historical events in energy. Several of the units include themes of historical, current and future energy uses and comparisons of current sources of energy based on fossil fuels with the renewable energy sources. Information on the responsible use of current sources of energy to lower our carbon footprint, as well as the impact of our energy use on the planet Earth, is also provided in many of the curriculum units. The units include a number of excellent activities that will engage the students’ interest and teach them about energy sciences.

I would encourage all teachers of elementary through high school students to review these curriculum units. These materials provide a valuable resource for incorporating topics of science and society related to “Energy: Past, Present, and Future” into the classroom.

Synopsis of the Curriculum Units

24.04.01 - Powering Our Community: An Analysis of Washington D.C.’s Renewable Energy Plan

by Sean Crumley

This curricular unit investigates the sustainable energy plan for Washington, D.C. Like many areas, D.C. currently has a plan to make the city a very sustainable city that “balance[s] the environmental, economic, and social needs of the District of Columbia today as well as the needs of the next generation”. This involves increasing the energy that is sourced from clean and renewable resources. Students will learn about solar energy, wind energy, and biogas to understand how the city plans to transition to a green and sustainable city. Students will learn the physics behind these types of energy production, as well as the potential problems with each type. After that, students will analyze the current plan for D.C. and determine if the plan should adjust the goals to better serve their community. This curricular unit is designed for 11th grade students with below-grade level math skills in a neighborhood high school.

(Developed for Physics, grade 11, and Robotics, grades 10-12; recommended for Physics, Environmental Science, and Earth Science, grades 9-12)

24.04.02 - Brainpower: Using Math and Science to Understand Five Moments in Energy History

by Chloe Glynn

An important practice in environmental science is observing the world and asking, “How did this get here?” and “Why does it do that?” For ninth graders today, these questions could be asked of things like plants and cell phones, diesel buses and electric cars. Although seemingly very different, everything in our environment comes from a relationship between matter and energy. How do plants and cell phones get enough energy to function? How does an engine turn fuel into movement, and what is different about a chemical or electrical power source? My aim for this unit is to show that the science and mathematics of energy can be life-changing and world-changing powers. This will be accomplished by presenting five moments in energy history that changed the history of life on Earth and supporting students to research and recreate those moments through hands-on demonstrations.

(Developed for Environmental Science, grade 9; recommended for Physical Science, grades 6-8)

24.04.03 - Powering A Sustainable Future – The Role for Agriculture

by Anna Herman

Powering A Sustainable Future – The Role for Agriculture will explore the many ways that the agriculture, food and natural resources sectors can play a role in required shifts in energy use, renewable energy production, reduction of greenhouse gas emissions and increased carbon sequestration.  High school students can explore the food system’s role in creating energy, emitting and sequestering greenhouse gasses, and alternatives to business as usual.  Students will grow energy (food) to develop agro-ecology and regenerative farming skills and practice. Students will explore the circular economy of food systems using food waste to make energy, and energy to cook food they grow.  Students will make and use clean energy and analyze the sustainability implications and impacts of these and other renewable energy practices.

(Developed for Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources CTE, grade 12; recommended for Environmental Science, Social Studies, and General Science, grades 9-12)

24.04.04 - The Future of Renewable Energy and Solar Electric Innovations

by Jana Jimison

Solar power has a lot of potential for growth because it is an efficient renewable energy source and is better for the environment than conventional power. This unit is designed for middle school students and is intended to get students interested in thinking about the future of renewable energy and creative ways we can collect solar power and use it in our everyday lives. Humans use a lot of energy and most of that energy is created using fossil fuels. It is predicted that the number one problem humanity will face in the next 50 years is an energy crisis. This problem will require advancements in renewable energy technologies and a shift to green energy production. Scientists and engineers are already innovating ways of producing green energy and storing energy produced from renewable sources. This unit includes a hands-on activity using solar cells. Students will build a solar powered car using a toy kit and then race the solar powered cars outside.

(Developed for Gifted and Talented, grades 6-8; recommended for Science and Language Arts, grades 6-8)

24.04.05 - The Pros and Cons of Energy: An Investigation of Energy Sources and Human Impact

by Cheri Manning

The curriculum unit titled, The Pros and Cons of Energy: An Investigation of Energy Sources and Human Impact engages students in research about the pros and cons of energy sources.  Our current energy crisis will need to be solved using a combination of renewable energy sources.  We are experiencing the effects of climate change due to an increase in carbon dioxide in the atmosphere from burning fossil fuels.  A change is needed.  What will the future of human energy consumption look like?

This unit will use a home energy assessment to measure students’ current energy impact on the environment.  Next, students will work in groups to create a research project explaining the benefits and drawbacks of each energy type.  The energy types investigated are fossil fuels, solar, wind, hydroelectric, geothermal, biomass, and nuclear.  Additionally, students will participate in hands-on experiences to demonstrate how renewable energy can be used to meet our energy needs.  This unit covers NGSS standard MS-ESS3-5 and Virginia Standards of Science ENV. 7 and 8.

(Developed for Environmental Science and Earth Science, grade 8; recommended for Environmental Science, grade 8)

24.04.06 - Using Dr. Seuss to Teach about Environmental Conservation

by Daphne Meyer

The curriculum unit I created in the Energy: Past, Present, and Future seminar is for my first-grade students. In this unit, students will be learning about environmental conservation through the lens of Dr. Seuss’s, The Lorax. In the story, the main character opens a factory and begins to cut down trees and release pollutants in the surrounding community. This has impacts on the local wildlife causing them to relocate. When the last tree is cut down the Onceler is left to reckon with the harm he has caused the environment. This is an entry point for students to learn more about the natural world. The main topics students will learn in the unit are the human impact on the environment, deforestation, photosynthesis, water pollution, air quality, the greenhouse effect, and climate change, which all connect back to the story. This unit is project based. There are three main experiments tied to the story: sprouting seeds in a garden glove, cleaning an oil spill, and modeling the greenhouse effect. Students will work in groups to participate in each experiment. To conclude the unit, students will create a visual of their choice to showcase how they plan to help the environment.

(Developed for Science, grade 1; recommended for Science and ELA, grades K-2)

24.04.07 - Energy: Virginia’s Past, Present, and Future Will Blow You Away!

by Valerie J. Schwarz

The curriculum unit explores how Virginia has used its resources to meet its energy needs and how these energy resources have molded Virginia through the years. For hundreds of years, railroads have hauled coal from southwest Virginia across the state to the port on the coast. For centuries, coal has provided cheap energy, but now the world is paying the price for the damage fossil fuel use has caused. The curriculum unit titled Energy: Virginia’s Past, Present, and Future Will Blow You Away! looks to the future and focuses on wind energy as a renewable energy source that can help our planet survive. Through hands-on demonstrations and projects, students will explore what causes wind, the power of wind, and the design principles of wind turbines. Students will create a model of a turbine including how artificial reefs along the base of wind turbines increase biodiversity in marine ecosystems. The unit is designed for fourth and fifth grade students, but it could be adapted for middle school science.

(Developed for Science and Social Studies, grade 4; recommended for Science, grades 4-5, and Social Studies, grade 4)

24.04.08 - Force to Energy: Increased Efficiency through Intelligent Design

by Donavan Spotz

It is easy to make connections to new technologies like renewable energy and how to reduce our carbon footprint for students. Options for clean energy all have moving parts except solar.  In physical science, we teach types of forces and how they are a manifestation of energy at work. This unit gives us the opportunity to examine the efficiency within a system when conveying energy from one side to the other using both equations and physical experimentation.

Teaching physical force and Newton's Laws, perhaps by employing a Newton's Cradle as a demonstration of the law of conservation of energy, we expose our students to the physical phenomenon creating a moment of wonder. This unit teaches the students in my Oklahoma 8th grade physical science classes about the application of force through a system as energy. Students will start with levers and pulleys, moving through the advances in technology and how they are utilized. We are demonstrating there is science at work all around them. This also opens the opportunity to explore how power can be lost within a system and possible remedies to mitigate that power loss.

(Developed for Advanced MYP Science 3, grade 8; recommended for Science, grade 8, and Physical Science, grade 9)

Evolutionary Medicine

Introduction by Paul E. Turner, Rachel Carson Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

Introduction coming soon!

Synopsis of the Curriculum Units

24.05.01 - Evolutionary Medicine: Navajo Nation Kids Learn the History of Evo Med

by Priscilla Black

During the pandemic, our native people resorted to natural remedies. Traditional herbalists and practitioners of traditional ceremonies turned to plants near Navajo Nation springs, mesas, and mountains. The herbalists and practitioners knew specific plants that were believed to counteract SARS CoV-2 and the COVID disease. A plant called sage familiar to many households near and around the Navajo Nation is not domesticated like the modern sage we cook with in the kitchen.  The native plant sage is used to treat various health problems such as the common cold, sprained muscles, broken bones, and respiratory issues. By explanation, Native American Indians knew of viruses and pathogens before Europeans crossed the Atlantic Ocean, and they used local plants known for medication against illnesses. In my unit, I would tie-in medical practices of Native American Indians in history, which could be compared to how more recent understanding of pathogen evolution is perceived in evolutionary medicine that seeks to better understand the health problems in humans through knowledge of evolutionary biology over time.  There are similarities and differences, but they have in common the notion of solving human illnesses and it is important to appreciate the history of how medicinal plants helped the Native American Indians address health problems.

(Developed for Science-Life Science, ELA-Reading Informational Text, and History- Earth Science, grade 6; recommended for Earth Science, grades 6 and 8)

24.05.02 - Staying Healthy in Kindergarten

by Carol P. Boynton

In this three-week unit, young students become aware of disease pathogens. Two books will anchor the initial learning: Germs vs. Soapby Didi Dragon, a fun and funny picture book about the benefits of proper handwashing; and, Germs Are Not For Sharing, by Elizabeth Verdick.This book is a short course for kids on what germs are, what they do, and why it's so important to cover them up, block them from spreading, and wash them down the drain. The students will investigate the benefits (or not) of products like Purell, learn that viruses and bacteria cannot be seen until magnified under a microscope, and discover that there are many strategies for helping ourselves and each other avoid “sharing germs.”

(Developed for Science, grade K; recommended for Science, grades K-2)

24.05.03 - Evolution

by Aaron Cruz

The idea of my unit is to remodel and advance the traditional style of the evolution unit in most high school classrooms. I have issues with my students being engaged in material that initially do not have any connections to themselves. Additionally, I wanted to make the overall unit interesting to myself where I can use my experience and knowledge on microbiology. Using a case study involving antibiotic resistant bacteria as my anchoring phenomena, I have designed a unit to involve evolution context in the biomedical field. My purpose is making sure that my students understand and learn what could potentially be a problem for them in the future, and start talking about possible solutions to solve it. Starting the unit with the basics of evolution, while presenting the case study in parts, teaching note taking and research strategies for the 5 weeks of the unit, the unit should get my students more engaged with the topic of evolution with a personal relevance. Thus having them learn about evolutionary medicine.

(Developed for Biology, grades 9-12; recommended for Biology, grades 9-12)

24.05.04 - Exponential Functions in Evolutionary Disease

by Kristina Kirby

This goal of the unit “Exponential Functions in Evolutionary Disease” is for students to (1) identify instances of exponential growth or decay in graphs, tables and word problems; (2) translate tables and word problems depicting exponential functions into equations; and (3) comprehend and convey the conceivable importance of exponential data represented graphically. Student learning in this unit will greatly rely on the initial pattern of spread and vaccination in the COVID-19 pandemic to illustrate exponential growth and decay, respectively. This unit follows the Herbartian instructional model, which consists of four phases: the Preparation phase (in which the teacher brings prior knowledge to the forefront of the students’ learning experience), the Presentation phase (which focuses on connecting prior learnings to new learnings), the Generalization phase (during which the teacher clarifies and facilitates development of students’ conceptual understanding), and the Application phase (in which students demonstrate their newfound comprehension through application of concepts to new contexts).

Key Words: Exponential functions, exponential growth, exponential decay, COVID-19, Herbartian instructional model

(Developed for Math I, grade 9; recommended for Algebra I and Math I, grades 8-9)

24.05.05 - Using Proportions to Compare Medicine Doses in Adults and Children

by Yavet Respes

Clinical trials are needed to make new medications, devices, and diagnostic tools available. Historically, participants in clinical trials have come from a homogeneous group, and there is a recognized need for increased diversity and representation in these clinical research studies. The evolution of clinical trials towards more inclusive and diverse participant pools is critical. The absence of diversity in clinical trials makes it difficult for clinicians and researchers to know which medications and devices are safe and effective for specific populations. This evolutionary shift in clinical trial practices aims to enhance the generalizability and applicability of research findings to a broader range of individuals.

This unit is designed to teach students how to calculate medicine doses for adults and infants using ratios and proportions. Through a series of lessons, students will build background knowledge, practice dosage calculations, and apply their learning to real-world scenarios. The unit concludes with a summative assessment that tests students' ability to accurately solve dosage problems.

My students are often the caretakers of themselves and their younger siblings. They are often responsible for determining how much over-the-counter (OTC) and prescription medications to give themselves and their younger siblings. By the end of the unit, I hope students see the importance of following dosing guidelines for themselves and their younger siblings.

(Developed for Math, grade 7; recommended for Math, grade 7)

24.05.06 - Using Algebra to Explore Population Genetics in Lactose Tolerance

by Jose Ulises Reveles Ramirez

High school students often need help to see the practical applications of algebra to become engaged and motivated. To bridge this gap, the proposed unit "Using Algebra to Explore Population Genetics in Lactose Tolerance" takes a unique approach. This interdisciplinary unit focuses on the genetic trait of lactose tolerance to demonstrate practical algebra applications in biology. The unit covers fundamental concepts such as mutation, selection, genetic variation, allele frequency, genetic drift, and linear selection models, using mathematical models to illustrate the spread of lactose tolerance in human populations. By integrating these concepts, the unit enhances students' understanding of algebra and biology, preparing them for standardized assessments and fostering critical thinking and problem-solving skills.

The unit employs various teaching strategies structured over several weeks, including inquiry-based learning, building thinking classrooms, three reads, collaborative learning, and real-world applications. Students engage in activities such as calculating allele frequencies and creating graphs to understand genetic frequencies based on selection coefficients, mutation factors, and critical points of genetic drift. Assessments include quizzes and reflection essays. The unit provides a comprehensive list of references, offering a solid foundation for the unit's content and additional resources for further exploration. This approach aims to inspire students by showing the importance of mathematics in scientific research and real-world problem-solving, encouraging them to pursue further studies or careers in STEM fields.

(Developed for Algebra II- B1, B2, and B3, grades 9-12; recommended for Algebra II, grades 9-12)

24.05.07 - Evolutionary Medicine: Pathogen (COVID-19, Influenza) and the Navajo People

by Jolene Rose Smith

Covid19 has tragically hit many families globally. The pandemic hit families lacking basic needs for daily living like running water and electricity. These basic needs help fight the COVID-19 sickness that hits native families on the reservations. The Navajo Reservation had assistance with supplies of Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) and preventative procedures. SARS-CoV-2 and the Influenza viruses were viral pandemics that devastated many populations globally.

A timeline with dates of viral episodes becoming prominent as an epidemic or a pandemic is elaborated to emphasize the historical impact of human devastation. The mutation rate of how the viruses change rapidly had medical scientists baffled and scrambling for current viral vaccines to meet the population's needs.

My unit is an in-depth analysis of the two viruses and how they impacted the Navajo people. It is ideal for fifth and sixth-grade students in the biological and physical sciences, with the Navajo culture and language portion of reading, writing, listening, and speaking. Students will conduct an inquiry into how germs grow to complete an experiment using a petri dish with a solution.

(Developed for Science and Social Studies, grade 5; recommended for Science, grade 6)