Chapter 9: Ninth-Grade Student Voices in a Social Action Project: “They Went for Us, They Cared”
-
Published:2010
Shira Eve Epstein, 2010. "Ninth-Grade Student Voices in a Social Action Project: “They Went for Us, They Cared”", Listening to and Learning from Students: Possibilities for Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum, Brian D. Schultz
Download citation file:
In the spring of 2006, a class of ninth graders worked with facilitators of a community-based organization to plan and run a safe-sex health fair in their urban high school, The Leadership Academy.1 The social action project was based around the students’ questions and concerns, and the youth had the opportunity to feel that their voices mattered. I explore this form of student involvement with the aim of providing a vision for how teachers can share authority with their students and create relevant learning opportunities. The chapter begins with a broad discussion of student voice in curriculum and the merit of social action projects. I then detail various curricular events and student responses to the social action project in The Leadership Academy, concluding with recommendations for educators.
