New Learning MOOC’s Updates

PROJECT BASED INTERDISCIPLINARY CURRICULUM

In some schools, students work on a semester-long project (e.g., designing a sustainable community garden). This integrates science (soil, plants, ecosystems), math (measurement, budgeting), language (report writing, presentations), and social studies (community engagement, environmental policy).

Dynamics of Learning

Synthesis

Students weave together knowledge from multiple subjects, making connections across disciplines.

Learning is not siloed into “science class” or “math class” but blended into a holistic practice.

Example: applying both math and environmental science to calculate water usage and plant needs.

Reflexivity

Learners reflect on their process, choices, and the broader impact of their work.

Example: students journaling about how their decisions affect sustainability or community values.

Teachers also model reflexivity by asking meta-questions: “Why do we choose this method? What assumptions are we making?”

Mimesis (if added)

Students might imitate professional roles—scientists, urban planners, or policy-makers.

This mimetic practice allows them to learn by stepping into “real-world identities” before they can fully inhabit them as adults.