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Recent Designs

Blueprint of the Memories Mansion

Grade Level:

Initial ideas

My 11th grade ELA students will engage in a PBL where students will connect the idea of home with elements of their personality, character, past, future aspirations, etc. Use this writing project as an inspiration. This writing activity, inspired by the theme of exploring one's roots and the song "The House That Built Me," encourages students to reflect on the places, people, and events that shaped their identities. By combining a visual, creative blueprint with a reflective narrative, students map out their personal history and the "foundations" of their character. Activity Overview: Blueprint of the House That Built You Goal: To help students explore their past, identify key formative memories, and create a narrative or poem about their origin story. Target Grade Level: 4th Grade - High School (adaptable for younger with "dream home" focus, older with memoir focus). Prep Time: Minimal (paper, pencils, optional crayons/markers). Materials: Graph paper (for blueprint), writing paper, or the printable "The House That Built Me" resources. Phase 1: Brainstorming & Reflection (The "Foundation") Introduce the Theme: Listen to "The House That Built Me" by Miranda Lambert or read the lyrics. Discuss how a physical home can hold memories and shape who we are. Guided Prompts: What is the first thing you remember about your childhood home? Which room holds the most important memory? What specific, small details (e.g., a creaky floorboard, a smell, a tree) make you feel safe or happy? What experiences or people (teachers, friends, family) helped "build" you in this place? Brainstorm List: Students make a list of 5–10 memories, objects, or people associated with their formative home/places. Phase 2: Drawing the Blueprint (The "Structure") Drafting the Layout: On graph paper, students draw the floor plan of their "house" (or a specific room, or a neighborhood/significant place). Symbolic Design: Instead of just bedrooms, students label rooms based on memory: The Living Room of Lessons The Kitchen of Comfort The Backyard of Bravery Adding Details: Students add specific items to their blueprint that are linked to their memories (e.g., a bicycle, a specific book, a pet). Phase 3: The Writing Activity (The "Interior Design") Students select one of the following formats to write about their, "House That Built Them": Option A: Narrative Memoir (The Guided Tour): Students write a descriptive, first-person narrative, guiding the reader through their blueprint, explaining the significance of each room and the memories it holds. Option B: "I Am" Poem: Students create a poem taking the perspective of their house, using the prompt, "I am the house that..." focusing on the, memories and lessons the house gave them. Option C: Descriptive Essay: Students focus on one specific, pivotal event that happened in that house that changed their perspective. Phase 4: Sharing & Display Gallery Walk: Display the blueprints and writings on a bulletin board titled "The Houses That Built Us." Oral Sharing: Students present their visual to the class, allowing classmates to learn about one another's backgrounds. Middle/High School: Emphasize the "unexpected truths" and complex emotions of returning to their past, focusing on deeper, more critical reflection. It should incorporate all of the texts of the unit that they're working on. Each text should have an element that appears in the final product. There needs to be time built in for students to read and analyze the texts.

Survive & Thrive: Project Power-Up!

Grade Level:

Initial ideas

Survival guide for high school and project based learning

Planetary Parade: Crafting Cosmic Creations!

Grade Level:

Initial ideas

Organize a solar system model project. Students will research planets and create a scale model, integrating art, science, and math skills.

Time Tactics: Crafting Your Career Compass!

Grade Level:

Initial ideas

Time management, scheduling, due dates, calendars, emails, Who am I - where do I come from - where do I want to go - what drives me - personality tests Team building - who am I working with - what do they bring to the table - how do I interact with those people Portfolio construction - reference letters, resume, job application,

Branding Blitz: Math Meets Modern Makeover!

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Initial ideas

1. Context & Constraints Grade Level: Mixed Middle School (Grades 6, 7, and 8). Subject: Math Enrichment / Business Problem Solving. Time Block: 30 minutes daily (5 days per week). Duration: 3 weeks (15 sessions total). Facilitator: This unit will be facilitated by a non-math specialist teacher. The lesson plans must emphasize guided inquiry, facilitation scripts, and student collaboration, requiring minimal direct math instruction from the teacher. 2. The Unit Challenge & Essential Questions The Unit Hook: Students act as a "Brand Audit Agency." They select one iconic but "boring" or "outdated" brand (e.g., a standard yellow pencil, a plain stapler, a classic board game, or a local library). Their mission is to use mathematical reasoning, business logic, and Gemini image generation to completely rebrand and remarket it for a specific, modern target audience. Essential Question 1: How can we use precise mathematical descriptors (scale, symmetry, geometry, materials) to communicate a creative business idea to an AI generator and an audience? Essential Question 2: How do we use data (percentages, market analysis, budget allocation) to prove that a re-design is a viable and necessary business decision? 3. Primary Learning Objectives By the end of this unit, students will be able to: Objective A (Math/Logic): Analyze a product's current design and apply mathematical concepts (e.g., improving materials for durability, changing scale for accessibility, or optimizing geometry) to create a new iteration. Objective B (Technology/Problem Solving): Execute the "Prompt Engineering Loop"—using Gemini to generate a prototype, identifying logical or visual errors, and refining the prompt language iteratively until the product aligns with business specs. Objective C (Data/Strategic Reasoning): Create and interpret simple data visualizations (e.g., Bar Graph, Venn Diagram, or Percent-Based Budget Allocation) to support a strategic business case. 4. The 3-Week Cycle (Desired Output from Inkwire) Please generate 15 detailed 30-minute lesson plans structured into this specific 3-week loop: Week 1 (Theory & Pivot): Activity: Brand Deconstruction, Audit, and selecting the "One Big Math Change" (e.g., a new material, optimized geometry, or integrated technology). Focus: Critical thinking and strategic selection. Week 2 (Technology & Prototype): Activity: "Prompt Engineering" in Gemini. Students write descriptive, mathematical prompts focusing on texture, scale, and function. They must complete at least 3 iterations of their prototype image. Focus: Precise language and iterative problem solving. Week 3 (Data & Pitch): Activity: Data Visualization (Venn Diagram comparing features, simple bar graph for pricing), Percentage-Based Marketing Budget Allocation (e.g., "$1,000 budget: 50% Social Media, 30% Packaging, 20% Influencer"), and Final Annotations to the Gemini image. Focus: Statistical reasoning, communication, and financial literacy. 5. Special Requests for the Non-Math Facilitator For every lesson, please include: A 5-minute "Launch Script" (What the teacher should say to start the session). 3 specific "Probing Questions" (Questions the teacher can ask groups to deepen their thinking without giving the answers). A clear "Deliverable" for the daily Strategy Log. Ensure that the "Data visualization" (Week 3) uses basic, mixed-grade accessible concepts (percentages/graphs) rather than complex algebra.

Read-a-Rama: A Book Adventure!

Grade Level:

Initial ideas

I want to implement a PBL for my 2nd grade students to encourage the love for reading at an early age. I want to team up with the Mt Washington library and help promote their 1,000 books before kindergarten club. I want my students to work with pre school age kids in learning their interest in what they read. I want my students to be able to research book of their interest, read them and do book reviews on the books. I want them to present books or book reviews that young kids can see at the library that will encourage them to read.

SEL Safari: Journey to Friendship & Focus

Grade Level:

Initial ideas

12-week, SEL lessons for level 6 learners that have hands-on, high relevancy content (being a good friend, respectful communicating, self-esteem, work focus, organization). Each lesson can only be 20 minutes

Revolutionary Reads: Chains & Change!

Grade Level:

Initial ideas

American Revolution; reading the book Chains by Laurie Halse Anderson; cross-curricular connections; reading standards for historical fiction and comprehension

Design your own project

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What if there was a tool to help us take our wild project ideas and create a scope and sequence? There is! Inkwire and the Professional Learning team at High Tech High’s Graduate School of Education designed an AI-assisted curriculum planning tool.

Powered by High Tech High's Kaleidoscope framework for project-based learning (PBL) design, this AI assistant helps educators – and learners! – integrate standards and curriculum requirements into a cycle of PBL Essentials.

The AI-assisted Kaleidoscope tool is co-designed by Inkwire & the High Tech High Graduate School of Education Professional Learning Team. The "Design for Deeper Learning Kaleidoscope" framework is copyright by the High Tech High Graduate School of Education.