Viewing entries tagged
Project Based Learning

Portfolio joins the Altitude Platform and the Learner-Centered Collaborative

Portfolio joins the Altitude Platform and the Learner-Centered Collaborative

As a school team we recognized a desire to utilize technology in a way that not only allowed us to stay organised and collaborative, but most importantly allowed - hopefully even insisted - students take increased ownership of their learning experiences. After an exhaustive search, we ultimately landed on the Altitude Platform.

David's DIY: How to Make your own Wall Sconce Lamp

David's DIY: How to Make your own Wall Sconce Lamp

I want to take you through the steps of a fun, woodworking project: the making of a simple wooden wall sconce. This is a lamp that hangs on the wall and provides soft, diffuse light from behind a sculptural shade. The shade is built from a wooden frame with translucent fabric or heavy paper stretched over the center. These lamps can be abstract or representational. Depending on the wattage of the bulb they can be a serious source of light or a nightlight.

Maker Fridays

Maker Fridays

At Portfolio every day is maker day. However, we are always searching for ways to provide our students with even more opportunities to learn and apply design and making skills. To expose them to a wide panorama of making possibilities – from woodworking and welding to cooking, sewing and robotics. That way, they can apply these skills to their everyday work, individual projects, and inquiry-based unit projects.

A little chat with David

A little chat with David

…my great-grandfather and my grandfather were both optical scientists, so there is a tradition in my family of being able to make anything.  My grandfather worked for Kodak, and he invented one of the first pacemakers. He and I spent many afternoons building things together!

The Innovative Schools Cooperative

The Innovative Schools Cooperative

It was great to see how other people are taking on the same challenge of re-inventing K-12. The schools represented in the group have a lot of different approaches and focuses: some are just Middle School, one has an inter-generational element, some are urban, some are suburban, one is designed for home-schoolers...But our similarities far outweigh our differences. And our hope is that in coming together, we can collect our individual voices and form a movement, creating a shared vision and thus enabling a bigger impact.

Why Project-Based Learning Serves Girls (and Boys) Well

Why Project-Based Learning Serves Girls (and Boys) Well

While the struggle of boys in traditional school models is made clearly evident to parents, that of girls is not nearly so visible.  For one thing, girls are socialized early to meet and exceed expectations of “good behavior”. Girls in traditional schools demonstrate daily the skills they have spent their preschool years mastering:  compliance and competence. Their early expertise in self-regulation (raising one’s hand before speaking, taking turns) comes at the expense of self-confidence, inhibits risk-taking for fear of failure, and undervalues pushing boundaries.   

How My Project-Based School Prepared Me for Columbia

How My Project-Based School Prepared Me for Columbia

"Amidst graduates from some of the best high schools around the world, I was struck by the intelligence that surrounded me. Yet, I felt better prepared for school and life at Columbia. While they had no problem taking notes in lectures or studying for exams, in seminars where deep learning happens at college and when relationships are formed with professors I found myself speaking up on the literature, proposing questions and interacting with texts while they worked to feel comfortable doing so."