I think I have hit the first road block, and I am not sure
how I will manage it just yet. I realized today that if I want the students to do
a good job with the United States and Israeli Law, I am going to have to give
them more time in class to do it. My original design was to split my 70 minute
period roughly 50/20 Gemara/everything else, but while the students are
learning the Gemara and the Rishonim nicely they are not moving fast enough on
the other side to produce quality work in the time frame I want to spend on
this unit. In fact, when I switch to the 20, I have some groups who ask if they
can review the Gemara to make sure they can read it properly.
(Don’t think they are abnormal for opting to do Gemara review
instead of individual research. I have each student create an MP3 recording of themselves
reading the Gemara, which I grade for reading/translation/comprehension. To
make sure they aren’t reading Artscroll on the recording I require a signed
note from a parent or another student in my class that they witnessed the
recording from a clean Gemara. I do this because my first rule of PBL was no
examinations, but I need to assess skills somehow.)
The way I see it I have three options: First, allow lesser
quality work than I initially hoped to receive. I really don’t like this option
but it might be the easiest. Second, take more time from Gemara learning for the
State law research. I am torn about this option: on the one hand it is very
hard for me to give more time from learning Torah to study general studies, but
on the other hand this research should cause them to enjoy the and remember the
Torah learning more. Third, spend longer on this sugya than I originally planned.
This option gets more complicated with the Yomim Noraim break that I don’t want
interrupting a sugya.
I have not figured it out yet, but this is the first hiccup.
Any thoughts out there?