ARG, not Arrggghhhh!!
We have recently worked with a partner high school on a new gamified activity for heightening the effectiveness of peer rating of student’s academic argumentation, and helping students become more meta-cognitive about what makes their arguments more effective. The result is the Argument Rating Game (ARG).
Debating Self-Understanding in ‘Their Eyes Were Watching God’
Zora Neale Hurston’s 1937 masterwork Their Eyes Were Watching God was poorly received in its time. Famed African-American novelist Richard Wright dismissed the novel that year in the October issue of New Masses. “Hurston seems to have no desire whatever to move in the direction of serious fiction . . . . The sensory sweep of her novel carries no theme, no message, no thought.” Their Eyes was found wanting in relation on the sociological criteria of the Racial Uplift movement of the 1930s, but Hurston had her artistic gaze pointed as inwardly as it was immersed in the milieu of the intensely racialized encasing in which her characters lived and her sensibility came to be. Freedom, she wrote, is “something internal . . . . The man himself must make his own emancipation.” Reversing the charge that she turned away from the racist social forces and constructs, she called it “arrogance” to believe that “black lives are only defensive reactions to white actions.”
Argumentalizing “Quick & Easy” Curriculum
Not every meal we prepare (or eat) at home is elaborately planned, prepared, and presented. Sometimes we cook “quick & easy” meals, but even these we generally aspire to make nutritious, balanced, and appetizing, too. Similarly with our classrooms: though we strive to be planned, ready, and prepared every day, we are not always implementing finely wrought, meticulously developed curriculum. But we should make these lessons college-directed and academically nourishing, too. What follows is an example of just such a “quick & easy” piece of curriculum, argumentalized.
One of our partner high schools recently took students to see the wonderful production of A Christmas Carol at the Goodman Theater in Chicago. So I suggested an easy-prep argument-based seminar on the day after the trip (with possibly some de-brief and short writing for follow-up the next day).
Another Argument-Based Seminar in Action
Argument Assessment on Free Falling and Acceleration in Physics
We were recently at work with a partner high school’s science department, argumentalizing a unit in the school’s physics course. In the unit on force, mass, acceleration, we wanted students to complete a formative assessment activity after they studied Newton’s Second Law and viewed experiments on falling objects. The argument-based assessment came out like this.