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Approaching
Walden
1998
Curriculum Units
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A B
C D E F G H I J
K L M N O P Q R
S Q T U V W X Y Z |
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Katherine H. Adams, North Quincy High School --
English
Acrobat (*.pdf)
Web-published (*.html)
Embedding Thoreau in a Writing Curriculum
This
curriculum was developed by Katherine Hayes Adams, an English
teacher at North Quincy High School in Quincy, Massachusetts, a city
of 100,000 adjacent to Boston. Most students who take
the course in which this curriculum is used will enroll on a
four-year college following high school graduation. |
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Susie Carlisle, Souhegan High School, Ashburnham
-- English
Acrobat (*.pdf)
Web-published (*.html)
The Nature Seminar
A senior-level interdisciplinary course from
Souhegan High, a member of of the Coalition of Essential
Schools. The unit aims to reinforce the students’
understanding of the importance of social, cultural, and historical
mapping of a particular area within their community. |
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Michael Crim, Leonardtown High School, California,
MD
English
Acrobat (*.pdf)
Web-published (*.html)
The Constant Laboratory at Myrtle Point,
Maryland
For
a full school year, 30 students, all seniors, will study, survey,
and catalogue the eco-system of Myrtle Point on the Patuxent River
in St. Mary’s County, Maryland.
Their studies will include intensive reading, writing,
research, and experimentation under the guidance of a team of three
teachers. By the end of
the school year, this group will have produced a Kalendar based upon Henry David Thoreau’s naturalist world view. |
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Beverly Hart, Flanagan High School, Wenona, IL --
English
Acrobat (*.pdf)
Web-published (*.html)
Thoreau: The Man of Many Hats
American Literature, Grade 11. Students explore Henry David Thoreau from several
different perspectives: surveyor, naturalist, teacher, social
critic, writer/poet, environmentalist |
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Stacy Kaplan and Michelle
Lang, Holbrook Jr./Sr.
High School, Cambridge Biology, English
Acrobat
(*.pdf) Web-published (*.html)
Perceptions of Nature: Science
and Literature at Grove Lake
Unit intended for Biology II and English 11
College Level classes. About half a term (5 weeks) in
duration. The overall
goal in this unit is to help students become aware of their
environment, perceive how generations of writers have addressed the
relationship between self and nature, and realize that science
phenomena are continual, ever-present facets of life. |
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Jim Ko, Belmont High School -- Biology
Acrobat
(*.pdf) Web-published (*.html)
Thoreau’s Autumnal Tints and
Observing Nature in High School Biology
As the observation of nature is on the surface
easily accessible, it is the focus of much of primary school science
education. Because of this and the heavy time constraints of
attempting to develop a meaningful framework for students in
molecular and cellular biology, nature observation is sadly a
peripheral part of most college prep high school biology curricula.
It is less readily apparent but equally true that it would take a
great amount of time, and more importantly energy and
thoughtfulness, to develop a meaningful framework for deep nature
observation. |
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Karen Martin, Plymouth North High School -- English
Acrobat (*.pdf)
Web-published (*.html)
And Gladness of Heart: By Nature Gratified
The
centerpiece of this unit is a parallel study of Henry David
Thoreau's Walden and Henry Beston’s The Outermost House.
By examining the works of these two writers, this curriculum
encourages students towards their own original relationship with
nature, helps build in them keener observational skills, stimulates
them to record – through journalizing – what they see, hear,
feel and intuit. |
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Charles Sposato, Framingham High School -- English
Acrobat (*.pdf)
Web-published (*.html)
Holes in the Fabric of Framingham
My project will be to read and analyze an
edited version of the essay "Life Without Principle", the
complete essay "On Civil Disobedience", sections of
"Walking", "Slavery In Massachusetts" and
selected sections of Walden, i.e. Economy, Where I lived and What I
lived For, Higher Laws, and Conclusion. Emerson’s essay on Thoreau
will be edited and shared as well as Alcott’s journal entries
concerning HDT’s death. Each work will be accompanied with
vocabulary sheets, synopsis of work, and questions to be answered. |
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Kathy Wilson, Lowell High School --
Biology/Environmental Science
Acrobat (*.pdf)
Web-published (*.html)
Design a Walk
The
purpose of this assignment is to encourage the students to make a
personal connection between their own walking experience and their
freshman science course, as well as, to promote an appreciation for
the world around them. Lowell High School is a large urban
high school with a diverse student population. This assignment is
flexible and could be adjusted according to the students involved.
The emphasis could be placed on the scientific data, the sensitivity
to nature, or the personal reflection encountered when performing
the tasks involved with this assignment.
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