Archive | October, 2013

2014 Seminar Program and Open House

31 Oct

The Teachers Institute of Philadelphia is pleased to announce our seminars for the 2014 program year:

The Biology of Food

Scott Poethig, Patricia M. Williams Professor of Biology

Native American Voices: The People – Here and Now

Lucy Fowler Williams, Associate Curator and Senior Keeper of American Collections at the Penn Museum

Robotics for Everyone!

Jorge Santiago Aviles, Associate Professor of Electrical and Systems Engineering

Teaching the Holocaust: Bearing Witness     

Al Filreis, Kelly Family Professor of English; Director, Center for Programs in Contemporary Writing; Faculty Director, Kelly Writers House

(Please see below for seminar descriptions.)

Prospective 2014 TIP Fellows are invited to attend this year’s Open House event, which will be held on Tuesday, December 3rd from 4:30 to 6pm in Silverstein Forum located in Penn’s Stiteler Hall (208 S. 37th Street). Seminar Leaders will introduce their respective topics.

TIP seminars are open to K-12 teachers in West and Southwest Philadelphia public schools, with the exception of STEM seminars, which are open to teachers in public schools across the city. Beginning on November 12th, consult your school’s TIP Teacher Representative to obtain an application or access one on TIP’s website. Applications are due on Friday, December 13th by 5pm. Seminars begin on Tuesday, January 14th and run through May 6th. Enrollment is limited. For more information, call 215-746-6176 or email teachersinstitute@sas.upenn.edu.

Seminar descriptions

The Biology of Food

led by Scott Poethig, Professor of Biology

Tuesdays, 4:30-6:30pm

Species require only two things to survive over time—food and sex—and for some species, sex is optional. This seminar will examine major topics in biology through the lens of food, with a particular emphasis on the ways in which humans modify, and have been modified by, the organisms we eat.  Topics will include the chemistry, cell biology, and physiology of plants and animals, human nutrition, and the origin of domesticated plants and animals, focusing on the ways in which domesticated organisms have been genetically modified by humans. We will also examine agricultural systems from an ecological perspective, and consider the place of agriculture in the global economy.

Lectures and discussions will be supplemented with class demonstrations, and teachers who have developed particularly effective labs/demonstrations related to food will be encouraged to present these to the class.  Classroom educators from many grade levels will find the topics applicable to their teaching of science.

Native American Voices: The People – Here and Now

led by Lucy Fowler Williams, Associate Curator and Senior Keeper of American Collections at the Penn Museum

Wednesdays, 4:30-6:30pm

This seminar will be taught at the Penn Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, and is inspired by the new exhibition Native American Voices: The People – Here and Now which will open at Penn Museum on March 1, 2014. The exhibition introduces contemporary Native American leaders and concerns in Indian Country today, against the backdrop of Penn Museum’s remarkable Native American collections. The course will ask the following questions: What is the status of Native Americans in our country today? What issues are of concern in Indian country now? And, who are some of the current leaders? Topics to be explored include Native American sovereignty, language preservation, the importance of sacred places, the significance of ongoing commemorations and celebrations, and economic and health initiatives. Teachers will have the opportunity to explore a variety of tribes and topics and to become familiar with Native American material culture through hands on experience. Teachers can create their own curriculum in relation to, or independent of, the five year exhibition.

Robotics for Everyone!

led by Jorge Santiago-Aviles, Associate Professor of Electrical and Systems Engineering

Tuesdays, 4:30-6:30pm

Participating teachers will be able to take back to their students some basic principles that illustrate what is a robot, what they can do, and how to put together a simple robot. Robots provide the teachers a wonderful context for the study/learning of physics, chemistry, math, computer science, and engineering/technology (all the STEM disciplines). Also, elementary schools are increasingly involved with junior LEGO league robotics competitions. The seminar is therefore appropriate for elementary, middle, and high school teachers of science.

This seminar will focus on the principles and practice of robotics. It will be in the form of a series of weekly workshops (hands-on) in Penn’s School of Engineering and Applied Science (SEAS) Electrical Engineering facilities. Experienced robotics instructors are welcome, but no previous knowledge of robotics or electronics is required. All of the exercises will be self-contained. Necessary hardware and equipment will be furnished.

The workshop participants will learn fundamental aspects of: systems and system dynamics; feedback and control strategies; sensors, actuators and signal conditioning; interfacing hardware to computers/controllers; simple computer programming and coding.

Teaching the Holocaust: Bearing Witness

led by Al Filreis, Professor of English

Tuesdays, 5-7pm

This course is about how people tell stories about trauma and traumatic experience – and how survivors of genocide deal with the responsibility they feel to speak for those who died.  Our approach to these large issues is through the Holocaust, and we will discuss the enormous difficulties faced by those who felt the urgent need to describe their own or others’ experiences during the genocide of the European Jews, 1933-1945. We will explore the complex options they have faced as narrators, witnesses, allegorists, memoirists, scholars, teachers, writers and image-makers. Some linguistically (or visually) face the difficulty head on; most evade, avoid, repress, stutter or go silent, and agonize. Part of the purpose of the course is for us to learn how to sympathize with the struggle of those in the latter group. This is not a history course, although the vicissitudes of historiography will be a frequent topic of conversation.

We will read books by survivors, watch video-recorded testimony of survivors telling their compelling stories, and watch films seeking to represent the genocide.

Some of the books we will read can be used by teachers in middle- and high-school classes, and some of the materials have been carefully and selectively adapted for elementary grades. How a curriculum unit can be developed around issues of genocide, racial hatred, survivor guilt, guilty bystanding, and the individual human response to trauma will be a focus of the course as well.

Materials to be read/viewed: Aharon Appelfeld, The Story of a Life (memoir; selections); Schindler’s List (film); Video testimonies of Holocaust survivors (from the Yale archive); Heinrich Boll, “Across the Bridge” (short story); Selection of poems by Paul Celan; The Diary of Anne Frank; Primo Levi, Survival in Auschwitz (selection of 2 chapters); Rob Fitterman, Holocaust Museum; Elie Wiesel, Night.

2013 Curriculum Units Now Available in TIP’s Archive

16 Oct

Curriculum units created by the 2013 Fellows have been added to TIP’s archive. Forty-one teachers completed the program this year, which consisted of From Slavery to Civil Rights (Steven Hahn), Modern and Contemporary American Poetry (Al Filreis), Painless Statistics for Teachers and for Teaching (Ross Koppel), and Understanding The Process of Science and the Evaluation of Evidence (Ingrid Waldron). TIP Fellows develop curriculum units for their students based on seminar content, guidance from Seminar Leaders, discussion with fellow participants, and independent research. Congratulations and thanks to our TIP teachers for their excellent work!