Thursday, May 26, 2016

Presentation Unit

The following is a project I assign my 12th grade English classes. I teach large classes of about 40 students each, and take advantage of if it by assigning this big, complex project called "The Perfect Country Project". The basic idea is that my classes take some debate topics we use in class to poll people outside of school in Bangkok. They get into specialized teams, collect the polls, analyze the information, and give a PowerPoint presentation at the end of the term.

Below is the project in detail. I couldn't figure out how to upload a file to this blog, so I just copy and pasted it. It's quite long and complex. A rubric is included. After the details of the assignment, a link to my screencast can be found below.


The Perfect Country Project
Teacher: Aj. Glenn Verasco
Classes: 48, 49, 58, 59, 80, 81, 125, 126, 143, 222, 223, 224
Due Dates: Progress Report: July 8th
Presentations: The last day of class before finals

Objective: For the next few weeks, we will be discussing the dichotomy of “Tradition vs. Progress”. We will do some reading in Pathways, and debate and discuss various topics as a class. Unfortunately, our class demographic is not particularly diverse (we’re all Thai 12th graders [except for me!]). The purpose of this project is to get a more varied and worldly view of these topics. Your assignment is to poll about 800 people as a class so we can get an idea of what the average person thinks. You will not only look at the grand totals of the poll results, but will also find differences and similarities between the sexes, age groups, and many nationalities. You will be working as a team, and must all do your part to make this project happen.

Evaluation:
Category/Score
5.5
4.125
2.75
1.375
Content
Full of quality information
Some very good content
Not enough information and seems flawed
Not at all educational and most likely inaccurate
Analysis/
Comprehension
Brilliantly critiqued and evaluated; you really get it!
Some thoughtful criticism and mostly understood
A few decent points, but could use some more thought
Not well thought out or comprehended
Organization
Absolutely ready to be presented and flawlessly delivered
Given plenty of thought ahead of time with little confusion
Should have been better prepared, but a decent outcome
Not ready to be presented and disappointing
Aesthetics
Includes photos of procedure; a pleasure to view
Nice looking and clear; includes photos
Not particularly nice to look at, but not bad
Unclear, dull, and lazily done
Value: 30 points (4 points for the progress report, 22 points for the final project, 2 points for self-evaluation, 2 points for evaluation from the management team)

Teams and Responsibilities:
*** EVERY STUDENT IS RESPONSIBLE FOR COLLECTING 10 POLLS FROM THAI NATIONALS AND 10 POLLS FROM FOREIGNERS***

Management Team (3-5 students):
-          Oversee the entire project
-          Attend Q&A meeting in room 262 with Aj. Glenn (Wednesday, June 1st)
-          Create a checklist to use for completing each part of the project
-          Keep track of which students are in which groups
-          Make sure all students have taken care of their responsibilities efficiently
-          Hand in progress report the week before midterms (this covers your class’s formative 1 score)
-          Evaluate each student at the completion of the project

Poll Team (4-6 students):
-          Create 10 poll statements (suggested themes provided by Aj. Glenn)
-          Translate poll statements into Thai (or English if you wrote them in Thai first)
-          Translate “Mission Statement” from English to Thai
-          Have poll statements approved by Aj. Glenn (June 17th at the latest)
-          Predict how different demographics will vote on each topic (must be done before polls are collected)

Design Team (6-10 students):
-          Design and create anonymous poll sheet
o    Must include:
§  Poll statements
§  Age
§  Gender
§  Nationality
§  Mission Statement (can be on a separate sheet of paper)
-          Use collected data to create a PowerPoint presentation (graphs, charts, tables, photos, etc…)
-          Help Presentation Team prepare for presentation
-          Collect photographs of entire process

Data Team (8-12 students):
-          Collect completed polls from all classmates (20 per classmate)
-          Organize collected data based on the following criteria
o    Grand totals
o    Thai vs. Foreign grand totals
o    Male vs. Female grand totals
o    Thai Male vs. Thai Female totals
o    Foreign Male vs. Foreign Female totals
o    Age group grand totals
o    Thai age groups
o    Foreign age groups
-          Deliver data to the design team

Analysis Team (5-7 students):
-          Thoroughly answer analysis questions (provided by Aj. Glenn)
-          Find other notable trends and results within data
-          Explain findings to presentation team

Presentation Team (4-6 students):
-          Answer questions about the process of completing the project (provided by Aj. Glenn)
-          Present project results to class at the end of the semester (it should be as long as one class period)

Mission Statement and Poll Statements
The following is the mission statement for our project. You can let English speakers read this as I have written it before they participate, and must translate it into Thai for Thai speakers.

Dear Friend,
Our class has been discussing and debating what policies a “perfect country” would have. As a class, we agree on certain topics, but disagree on others. Now, we want to find out what policies other people think would make a perfect country.
We would greatly appreciate your anonymous participation in our study, and promise to invite you for an all-expenses-paid trip to our perfect country once it has been founded!
Thanks for your help! J
-The Perfect Country Project Team (Triam Udom Suksa School)

Making the Poll Statements (Poll team)
Your poll questions should be in the form of a statement. This is called a “Likert Scale”.

Chocolate ice cream is the best kind of ice cream in the world.

___ Totally Agree  ___ Agree   ___ No Opinion ___ Disagree  ___ Totally Disagree

Our poll questions will be a bit more serious than chocolate ice cream. Here are five sample questions for your poll (you may use one of these for your poll if you would like).

1.      It should be legal for committed homosexual couples to adopt children.
2.      Wages should be negotiated by employers and employees without government interference.
3.      All able male citizens should be required to serve in the military for at least two years.
4.      Taxes should be high so the government can provide social welfare like education, healthcare, food, and housing for the less fortunate.
5.      Abortion should be illegal except in cases of rape or a threat to the mother’s health.

Remember, your polls should be controversial (meaning people will disagree with each other about them). If you use a statement like “murder should be illegal”, everyone will choose the same answer, and we will learn nothing. Try to think about “Tradition and Progress” when making your poll questions. Here are some themes you can think about when creating polls:


-          Taxes
-          Economics
-          The Environment
-          Gay Marriage
-          Abortion
-          The Death Penalty
-          Immigration
-          Military
-          Citizenship
-          Form of Government
-          Freedom of Religion
-          Freedom of Speech
-          Education
-          Prostitution
-          Voting
-          Trade
-          Foreign Policy
-          Healthcare
-          Etc…


***A perfect poll will have 5 statements from a traditional (Conservative) point of view, and 5 statements from a progressive (Liberal) point of view.***

Designing the poll (Design team)
The way you design your poll is up to you. But here are a few requirements, and a few suggestions.

Requirements
1.      It must include all ten statements and space to fill out the poll.
2.      It must include a space for the participants to write their age, gender, and nationality.
3.      The “Mission Statement” must be viewable for participants.
4.      Since the polls are anonymous, the poll must not ask for participants’ names.

Suggestions
1.      Try to use as little paper as possible for environmental and monetary reasons.
2.      Use recycled paper.
3.      Keep the “Mission Statement” separate from the polls, and have it displayed on a clipboard to save paper.

Questions (for Presentation Team and Analysis Team)
Presentation Team
1.      Please explain the process you used to complete this project.
2.      Where did you find people to participate in the poll?
3.      What did you think would be the most difficult part of completing the project?
4.      What turned out to be the most difficult challenge you faced?
5.      What did you enjoy about completing this project?
6.      What did you learn from participating in this project?

Analysis Team
Expectations (to be answered before data is collected)
1.      Of the ten statements, which do you think come from the most extremely traditional and extremely progressive points of view?
2.      Which demographics do you predict will vote the most progressively, and which will be the most traditional?
3.      What are some other predictions you have for how the polls will turn out?
4.      Do you think the project will be successful? Why or why not?

Basic Results
1.      Which statement had the highest overall approval rating?
2.      Which statement had the lowest overall approval rating?
3.      Which statement was the most controversial? (had the most people voting “totally agree” and “totally disagree”)
4.      Which demographics voted most similarly?
5.      Which demographics voted most differently?
6.      On which statements did men and women disagree the most?
7.      On which statements did Thais and foreigners disagree the most?
8.      On which statements did different age groups disagree the most?

Critical Thinking
1.      Please explain what you think the purpose of this project was.
2.      By your definitions, which demographic voted the most traditionally, and which voted the most progressively?
3.      Why do you think certain demographics voted in certain ways?
a.       Thais
b.      Foreigners
c.       Males
d.      Females
e.       Different Age Groups
f.       Etc…
4.      Which results were the most surprising and why?
5.      Critique the project and its results: Is doing a project like this useful? Why? What are the project’s flaws?
6.      How seriously should we take the results of the polls?


BEST OF LUCK!!! J



Click here to see my screencast!

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