North Carolina Graduation Project


 

“Take on an issue – a complex problem, a deep inequity, and become a specialist on it. If you make it the focus of your career, that would be phenomenal."

    Bill Gates, Harvard University, June 2007  

 

 

    Training Modules 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

    NC Social Studies Standard Course of Study 

 

 


     Introduction

 

Many North Carolina schools have implemented the North Carolina Graduation Project or some version of a senior project as a prerequisite for graduation.  Many social studies educators have played an active role in the development and implementation of senior projects using service learning as a major component of fulfilling the project requirements.  Whether a culmination of a unit, course, or the high school experience, project based learning when properly planned and implemented provides enduring life lessons for students.   

 

According to the North Carolina Graduation Project Implementation Guide, "high quality experiences that meet North Carolina's best practices for service-learning makes a project meaningful and effective".  The implemenation guide further states that such projects allow students to (1) meet a recognized need in the community, (2) achieve an enduring understanding of state standards and curricular objectives, (3) reflect on their experience, (4) develop responsibility as an effective citizen, (5) establish community partnerships that normally wouldn't exist, and (6) establish planning and organizational, as well as, research and writing skills. 

 


 Essential Questions--North Carolina Graduation Project

 

 


    Resource Links--North Carolina Graduation Project

 

 


 

 A View of Projects

 

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  North Carolina Service Learning Social Network

 

The NC Service Learning Social Network is designed to be an online collaborative professional learning community (PLC) for integration of service learning in the social studies.  Through forum questioning, blogs, and online shared resources, the social studies section at the Department of Public Instruction hopes that social networking makes service learning a more accessible, manageable, and integral part of the North Carolina social studies classroom. 


  Professional Development--North Carolina Graduation Project (Available Spring 2011)