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Interestingly, both settings point to already alternative approaches to typical
classroom
settings, with the layout of the concept of box lessons underlining the
fact that individual student engagement is supported by two teachers,
an open set-
ting and significant space. The concept of box lessons will be elaborated on further
in Box
11.1
.
Concept of Box Lessons
The concept was introduced to the school more than 10 years
ago by an enlightened
school head. The topics in the boxes even include chemical experiments, and can be
related
to animals, geography, social sciences, etc. The boxes
enable the students to
self-explore at their own speed. They choose a topic and do different exercises of
varying complexity that can be found in the boxes. They learn autonomously and in
the end present to the rest of the group what they have learned. The
focus is on lis-
tening to each other and on what the students have learned by themselves. Each
student and their learning become the center of attention. The students sometimes
also need to leave the room in order to setup ropes that help them understand how
far planets are away from the sun. Box lessons provide a safe, ordered environment
which students can leave of their own free will. Collaboration
with universities and
the involvement of teacher trainees has led to long-standing collaborations and
more than 100 boxes kindly generated by teacher trainees.
Box lessons tick several boxes of the UDL approach to providing rich learning
environments: there are many different materials and different modes of how a topic
can be approached and explored (see research question 2). The individual and active
role that students assume in the specific setting can also
be interpreted in UDL terms
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