DFS Data Murals Project: What Stories Can We Tell From Data?

During the 2014-2015 school year, Detroit Future Schools completed two “data mural” projects in Detroit schools, supported by the Bay and Paul Foundations, the Knight Arts Challenge and the Michigan Council for Arts & Cultural Affairs.

A data mural is public art that engages community members in a dialogue about data-driven representations and misrepresentations of their community. We worked with two of our anchor schools – The James and Grace Lee Boggs School and Tri County Educational Center – to create the data murals over the course of six months.

Our goal was to conduct research with each classroom about their school communities and convey our findings through public art. Each classroom was paired with a Detroit Future Schools teaching artist who helped them express their research through compelling visual language and graphics.

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The Boggs School: How to be a Boggs School Student?

At The James and Grace Lee Boggs School, teaching artist Alicia López Castañeda worked with the 2nd and 3rd grade students of the “Painted Turtles” classroom and their teacher Liz Kirk to develop a mural based on the question, “How to be a Boggs School Student?” inspired by the classroom’s “how-to” writing unit. The mural would also serve as a kind of “how-to” text to pass on to future Boggs School students.

The students brainstormed around this question through creative writing activities that considered: Who are we? Where do we come from? What do we know how to do?” They used digital audio recorders to interview each other and from the answers they developed their own “data set” around the theme of how to be a Boggs School student. They displayed this data in the form of a map, then clustered the information into three major themes of identity, literacy, and friendship.

Alex B. Hill, a local graphic designer and infographic maker led the students through a drawing exercise in which they translated the information they wanted to convey into a visual language of faces, letters, and flowers. Muralist Phil Simpson compiled the students’ original drawings into a final design that conveyed the story that they wanted to tell.

The project’s learning community expanded beyond the classroom to include the school and its surrounding community. At the end-of-the-year block party, students participated in a skill-share at which they created and shared “how-to” texts or manuals that taught hands-on skills such as how to knit, how to do backflips, and more. The data mural ended up becoming a community project as family and friends helped finish the painting. These school-community interactions strengthened and reinforced the Boggs School’s commitment to place-based education.

By placing the students at the center of the curriculum it shook up the normal dynamics of a classroom. In the skill-share the teacher-student dynamic shifted as students became teachers, and teachers moved out of their traditional roles as the sole distributors of information. Instead everyone became an authority of their own knowledge. Learn more about the process of making the mural here.

The DFS Data Murals project cultivated essential character skills in the students, such as collaboration, empathy and grit – three of the “DFS 11 Essential Skills.” When asked to define these skills during an end-of-program interview, one third grade student answered, “collaboration is when kids do it together and they include everyone. Empathy is when – let’s say Raphael is sad – I would come over to Raphael and I would know how he felt because I’ve been sad before and I know how it feels to be sad. Grit is when someone wants to give up, and they don’t give up.”

Tri County Educational Center: How Do Schools Measure Success?

Tri-County Educational Center (TCEC) is an alternative school for Metro Detroit, serving young people who have either dropped out or been expelled from other school districts. Detroit Future Schools program director Nate Mullen worked with graphic design students in the 9th through 12th grades, along teachers Adelaide Fabiilli and Brooke Leiberman to create their data mural.

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They used drawing, painting, graphic design, student-led research, and mosaic art to explore the question “Can Design Save the World?” The students brainstormed problems in their community that they wanted to address through graphic design and determined to focus their research on the obstacles that prevent students from graduating from high school. Starting with the question “How do schools measure success?” They researched standardized testing, interviewed their school principal, and surveyed fellow students. Through a process of mosaic design, the mural evolved to become a graphic representation of the students’ many different ideas of success. Learn more about the process of making the mural here.

In describing the mural, one student wrote, “the mural represents that there are multiple ways of deeming yourself successful. The most intricate message is the brain, which shows knowledge in a book beside it. This explains that knowledge is very important when becoming successful.”

The Data Murals project gave us the opportunity to create captivating public art that merges the talents of artists with the stories of communities and the leadership of young people. The murals also helped spark conversation within the broader community through their unveiling at end-of-the-year events including the TCEC Spring Festival and the Boggs School community block party.

 

Apply Now for the Rida Institute (August 19-21) in Detroit

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Calling all educators! Detroit Future Schools is now accepting applications for the Rida Institute, a three day training and curriculum planning retreat taking place August 19-21 in Detroit. The Institute will introduce teachers to the “Rida Framework” one of Detroit Future School’s central tools for humanizing schooling.

Apply here for the 2015 Rida Institute. 

The Rida Framework is the primary planning and evaluation tool that DFS uses to humanize schooling, inspired by the educational theories of Paolo Freire, Jeff Duncan-Andrade, and James and Grace Lee Boggs.

Freire, a Brazillian educator and theorist, believed that cycles of critical reflection and action were key to any transformative learning process. From this approach, users of the Rida Framework articulate practices (action) that will result in desired/outlined outcomes within their classrooms, which they will document and evaluate via pre-determined metrics (reflection).

Learn more about the Rida Framework here.

At the Rida Institute participants will:

+ Unpack the Rida Framework through small group workshops, activities, role playing games, writing exercises, hands-on training and more. + Develop a clear purpose and principles of education within the specific contexts of their communities. + Plan skills and curriculum they need to actualize that purpose in their classrooms. + Establish the metrics they will use to measure learning and growth. + Explore DFS best practices for nurturing student agency and leadership within the classroom. + Receive an updated edition of the “DFS Guide to Transformative Education,” with step-by-step exercises for planning a humanizing curriculum.

Beyond the three day institute, participants will also have the opportunity to build community with their peers through ongoing lesson planning workshops, study groups, an annual DFS network gathering, and additional facilitated meetups throughout the year.

The deadline to apply for the 2015 Rida Institute is August 12th. Apply here.

The cost to attend as an individual is $150. The cost to attend as a representative of an institution is $500. Lunch and dinner is provided throughout the three days of the Institute. Scholarships are available - please indicate your need for a scholarship in the application form.

Participant Reflections from the 2014 Rida Institute

"This is the best, most honest and reflective professional development I've ever attended. We were all deeply engaged in the work, because the leaders made this content so engaging. I became a teacher 20 years ago and so wish I had this kind of opportunity in my first years of teaching like other participants. Regardless, it has transformed how and what I will do with the remainder of my career. – Marcia Russell K-12 Educator/Consultant

"I had to dig deep and stretched out of my comfort zone (and continue to) in order to define my purpose and principles, something we take for granted, but is a definite missing piece to the profession of teaching. I will definitely take this tool and encourage my cohorts and colleagues to examine for themselves." – Susan Matous, teacher and administrator (Blanche Kelso Bruce Academy)

Read a recap from the first Rida Institute held in 2014 here. Apply before the deadline of August 12th! Please email nate@alliedmedia.org with any questions.

“Our Schools, Our Voice” – Watch a video about how schools open and close in Detroit by 482 Forward and Detroit Future Schools

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In Detroit over 283 public schools have been closed since 2000, causing ongoing instability and chaos in the schooling landscape of the city. Much of this is due to the process behind opening and closing schools in the city. There are 12 “authorizers” or different bodies who have the sole authority to open or close schools and these authorizers are not directly accountable to Detroit residents. This results in inequities regarding the number of schools in each neighborhood and the populations those schools are serving.

Political will in Detroit is ramping up to address some of these issues around Detroit schools (see recommendations from the Coalition for the Future of Detroit Schoolchildren). If residents are to have a voice in shaping our school system, it is vital that we are having conversations about how our public school system works.

Detroit Future Schools collaborated with the citywide education organizing network 482 Forward, videographer Imad Hassan, and music producer Ben Christensen to create a video for community members that responds to the question: “Who gets to open and close schools in Detroit?”

Our schools, Our voice from Four Eight Two Forward on Vimeo.

Who gets to open or close our schools? How and whether our schools share resources has a huge impact on the work we do in the classroom. We made this video because we wanted to participate in the conversation about education in Detroit and bring awareness to the complex issues facing our school system.

 As Detroit Future Schools continue to work towards our goal of humanizing schooling in Detroit, we are expanding our work beyond the classroom to gain an understanding of the larger challenges and political context shaping our classrooms. We look forward to continuing to partner with 482 Forward to inspire conversations and community organizing around education justice in Detroit.