Stoneleigh-Burnham TOK 2017
Tuesday, July 19, 2016
What's Up With North?
Let's end our work this summer by rethinking our place on the planet. More exactly, we will examine the ways we subjectively orient ourselves, their bases, and their consequences. First, please read this short article. Next, contextualize it for yourself by considering a specific way that your perception of the orientation of the earth affects your understanding of countries, relationships, culture, etc. In your writing, examine the ways of knowing at work. Does your language reflect your conceptualization? Do you have emotional responses based on geographic orientation? Finally, pose and answer a knowledge question based on your musings. This is due Sunday 24 July and is your last TOK work for the summer. See you on campus.
Tuesday, July 12, 2016
Reading Lenses
This week, I want you to think about your reading. As we read, we add what we learn to all that has come before: what we've already read of the text, our knowledge of its contexts, and the wealth of knowledge that shapes us as knowers. Parts of this process are automatic, and we also have the ability to consciously shape the lens through which we read and understand. As you may have discussed in your English courses, critical theory offers different approaches to how we choose to understand and analyze a text. If you'd like, you can learn more about this from Professor Kristi Siegel's succinct and clear overview of approaches to literary criticism. For this week's post, I'd like you to consider your English summer reading book (or, if you didn't start reading that book as soon as June arrived, another book you're reading. You are reading a book, right?). First, examine the ways you naturally process what the text offers. What ways of knowing do you employ, and why? Next, consider another perspective--or lens--through which you might view the same text. How does this new perspective alter the ways of knowing at work? Finally, extract a knowledge question from your observations and analyses. Please post your response by the end of Sunday 17 July.
Tuesday, July 5, 2016
The Knowledge Just Keeps Adding Up
If mathematics is language that we use to describe our world, then we should not be surprised when it pops up in arenas other than the explicit study of math. Consider a time that ways of knowing you employ in your math studies came to bear in another realm. First, extract a knowledge question from the math moment, then explain how that math knowledge intersected with another area of your studies, and wrap it all together by applying the knowledge question to the other area of knowledge and answering the KQ. Consider why the answers may be different in the two different situations, and how different perspectives change the knowledge. Please post your response by the end of Sunday 10 July.
Here's a great old number to help you get in a mathy mood: The Magic Number
Here's a great old number to help you get in a mathy mood: The Magic Number
Tuesday, June 28, 2016
Looking Back On Looking Back
This week, consider your history with history. Identify a moment in which, to perform an analysis (perhaps academically, perhaps in order to make a decision on how to act, perhaps...), you have drawn on both your own personal experience and on your knowledge of history. Which ways of knowing do you employ in applying the lessons of these histories to a present quandary? To go a step further, how was your understanding of the historical event influenced by your perspective as a knower, and how did this contribute to your problem solving? I look forward to reading your perspectives on history by the end of the day on Sunday 3 July.
Wednesday, June 22, 2016
What Are You Watching?
Let's veer into the Arts this week. I'm curious about the intersections of your identity as a knower (particularly with regard to gender), language, and anything you've recently watched. Choose a movie, an episode of something, a video, etc. that you've seen and examine the ways language function in the video. How are your perceptions shaped, both by your gender and by the assumptions the creator of the video makes regarding expected audience. In other words, do you think you were the target audience for what you watched? Explain and explore your and their assumptions. Keep your analysis focused on the nature of the knowledge at work. Your writing is due by the end of Sunday 26 June.
Wednesday, June 15, 2016
With Great Science Comes Great Responsibility (and sometimes great goggles)
Ah, summer, when birds sing, breezes ripple the pool, and the gentle aroma of EEs wafts through the trees. As I plan your schedules for next year, my thoughts turn to the responsibilities that come with the knowledge and skills you develop. For your first post, please write about one moment in your science studies when you felt the burden (actual or potential) of the responsibility inherent to what you were doing and learning. Consider the bases for the ethical implications of that moment. What ways of knowing were at play? How did they interact? If there was an ethical decision to be made, on what grounds did you make it? This writing is due on Sunday 19 June by 11:59 EDT (no matter what time zone you are currently in). Enjoy, and wear your goggles.
Monday, December 7, 2015
Now Presenting: You
Following in the footsteps of our group work and modeling, I'd like you to begin crafting complete TOK presentations of your own. For Wednesday evening at 9:30, please post a real world situation and a knowledge question derived from the ways of knowing at play therein. We will evaluate these together in Thursday's class, then work on completing the framework of your presentation.
Friday, November 6, 2015
You Don't Know Like I Know
Continuing our examinations of the impacts of perspectives, please select and describe a moment of knowledge from one of your classes. Examine the ways your perspective as a knower shapes your knowledge, then compare that to a different knower's perspective on the same moment. Please share this by 9:30 Sunday evening.
Friday, October 30, 2015
What Do You Think?
Let's bring things a little closer to home. Please select, share, and explain a moment of knowledge from one of your other classes. That done, extract and share a first-order claim, a second-order claim, and a knowledge question. Remember, your second-order claim and your KQ may be very similar. Please couch your KQ in the language of TOK. This is due by 9:30pm Sunday 1 November.
Thursday, October 22, 2015
Mind the Gap
Follow the link to Gapminder from the list at the right. Choose a data set (in graph form) and, in a post below, write a first-order claim, a second-order claim, and a knowledge question, all based on the data visualization you've selected.
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