Learning Curve

straightening the curve


IP Showtime: Attend Live or Virtually

A year’s work, a team’s countless hours, a group’s research, monumental collaboration, an individual’s presentations on film footage and live on stage. It’s showtime for 23 students, and no matter how you spell it, IP is a multimedia educational in-house field trip worth taking. Join us on Wednesday, May 27, 2009 at Salisbury High School’s auditorium, or if you cannot attend in person, you can participate virtually in real time by joining our backchannels on Ustream.tv. You can attend by clicking this link, and you can participate in a chat format as well.

If you are new to the Integrated Project, this year’s venue, which explores factual and counterfactual history, asks and answers this essential question: What if there was no news? What’s news? So, why not join us as students rewrite the history of an era as it was, and as it might have been. All times are ET.

8:51-9:51 An Era on Air: 1920-1933Brandon Aversano, Chloe Frick, Olga Karounos, Erin Lobach, Dennis Peterson, Meagan Walsh

9:55-11:00 Uncovering CoverupsNadia Daher, Hayley Joseph, Laudi El-Kareh, Kelsey Molseed, Andrew Samy

12:23-1:30 Generation XPeter Cialkowski, Skye McCarty, My Phan, Fatema Rajmohammed, Hannah Rucker, Courtney Weiss
1:34-2:40
9-11: Broadcasting Terror
Matt Eherts, Sarah Gracely, Joshua Gregory, William Kennington III, Brandon Lansing, Shannon Safi.

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March Madness

March Madness, aka the countdown to Integrated Project presentations in May, adds more than the usual stress to the AP US History and Honors English 11 students. At Assignment 6 due March 11 and only 2 assignments remaining until the work is a wrap, the pressure is on. In spite of everything, these truly gifted students managed in three days to showcase a commercial promoting their teams’ presentations, a culmination of year-long interdisciplinary research packaged in stage and film format.

My Phan, whose artistic talent and organizational ability is legend at SHS, designed, oversaw, and assembled the Administration Building’s showcase. But in fairness to all concerned, this extra credit activity was a team venture; these students are aces at collaboration. At the end of the month, the advertising moves to the high school, where interest in the forthcoming presentation runs high.

This year, the presentation venue will be different–an interactive documentary, with presentations on stage as well as in video segments. Although nothing has been finalized, we anticipate running one day of team presentations. We hope that you will join us in May, either in real or virtual time, to see What If There Was No News? What’s News?







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The Me Generation

Cross-posted on Changing Connections and RJS SHS

Try as I would, I was never able to upload any of the IP presentation videos. I did, however, succeed in uploading Jade Letlow and Sam Heddlesten’s independent research project, The Me Generation–1970-1979: How Could Establishment and Anti-Establishment Exist? Here it is.


The Me Decade from RJ Stangherlin on Vimeo.




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