Analyze that: Kenai students puzzle over vexing global issues

KENAI — While some students worry about math tests or an upcoming sporting competition, a handful at Aurora Borealis Charter School and Kenai Central High School are puzzling over some of the most vexing current global issues.

The kids belong to teams coached by Julie Ball, a teacher at Aurora Borealis who handles the curriculum there that implements Future Problem Solving Program International, a program started in 1974 to help students develop critical and creative thinking and to get them thinking about the future. What was once an after-school program has been implemented as curriculum for fifth- through eighth-grade students at Aurora Borealis for the last three years, Ball said.

“Due to the new Alaska state standards, we were trying to implement more of the Language Arts curriculum and this was one way to meet some of those standards,” she told the Peninsula Clarion.

This year, a sixth-grade team from Aurora Borealis and a ninth-grade team from Kenai Central High School, where the program material is not mandatory curriculum, will travel to the program’s 2016 International Conference June 1-5 at Michigan State University in East Lansing, Michigan.

All fifth- through eighth-graders at Aurora Borealis must complete the state-qualifying problem, Ball said. From there, a few teams advance to the state level and only three from the entire state go on to the international conference. The only age group Ball is not bringing to the competition is the “adult” category for students in grades 10-12.

Both teams will compete in a category called Global Issues Problem Solving, where groups of four are given a “future scene” and two hours to use a six-step creative problem solving process to write an action plan down in a packet. They have no idea what the future scene, or problem, is before the competition. During a practice session, members from both teams went over the pros and cons for solar energy, transmission lines and potentially untapped energy sources.

Kenai Central team members Dominik Efta, Nimi Pollock and Vitalia Strait said preparing for the competition is all about studying and building up research and vocabulary. The students have also been fundraising to help pay for the trip.

“Anything pertaining to renewable energy, even if it’s not specifically in the future scene, a lot of times we can still use it in solutions,” Pollock said.

“Because then it shows research, and you get extra points for that,” Strait added.

The Kenai Central team made it to the international competition last year as well, but had four team members at the time. This year, their fourth member will not be able to attend the conference.

“These three are going to have to do what a team normally does with four people,” Ball said.

More than 2,000 people will attend this year, Ball said. The members said they will just have to focus more to get the job done.

“We work pretty well as a team,” Pollock said. “I mean we’ve had this team since, like, seventh grade.”

The Aurora Borealis team, made up of members Shelbie Naylor, Bailey Epperheimer, Melita Efta and Chloee Swanson, is both nervous and excited to attend the conference in Michigan. The team took first at the state level for both its action plan packet and the presentation teams are required to do. The presentation scores do not affect whether a team’s packet will advance, Ball said.

“It’s not only being able to write, it’s being able to present yourself in public,” she said.

Members of the sixth-grade team have enjoyed learning about innovative technologies and working together.

“When someone gives me a problem, I feel like it’s (more fun) to work as a team to try and solve the problem,” Epperheimer said. “It excites me, kind of, to work as a team.”

The packet-writing portion of the competition can pose some challenges, the students said.

“Trying to get the research and vocabulary into your packet is kind of rough,” Pollock said. “You have ideas but you’re like, ‘How can I incorporate this?’”

“Or even just wording the idea, because there’s limited space,” Strait added.

Proper spelling isn’t the main thing students need to focus on, Ball said, but evaluators need to be able to understand the ideas in the action plan.

“It really teaches good technical writing, because you need to be precise,” she said

Since the program was implemented into the Aurora Borealis curriculum, Ball said she has noticed a difference in the students she’s been teaching.

“When I first started coaching it throughout the entire school, there were a lot of kids that were going, ‘This is too hard,’” she said.

Ball described one student who went home and told his parents that he no longer liked her class. His parents were confused because the student usually loved her teaching, she said.

“And he said, ‘Because she makes us think too much,’” Ball said. “And now that same student loves future problem solving. So it is an intense level of thinking and it’s a hard level of reading.”

More in News

(Juneau Empire file photo)
Aurora forecast for the week of April 15

These forecasts are courtesy of the University of Alaska Fairbanks’ Geophysical Institute… Continue reading

(Michael Penn / Juneau Empire file photo)
Police calls for Wednesday, April 17, 2024

This report contains public information from law enforcement and public safety agencies.

Newly elected tribal leaders are sworn in during the Central Council of the Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska’s 89th annual Tribal Assembly on Thursday at Elizabeth Peratrovich Hall. (Photo courtesy of the Central Council of the Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska)
New council leaders, citizen of year, emerging leader elected at 89th Tribal Assembly

Tlingit and Haida President Chalyee Éesh Richard Peterson elected unopposed to sixth two-year term.

A waterfront view of Marine Parking Garage with the windows of the Juneau Public Library visible on the top floor. “Welcome” signs in several languages greet ships on the dock pilings below. (Laurie Craig / For the Juneau Empire)
The story of the Marine Parking Garage: Saved by the library

After surviving lawsuit by Gold Rush-era persona, building is a modern landmark of art and function.

A troller plies the waters of Sitka Sound in 2023. (Photo by Max Graham)
Alaska Senate proposes $7.5 million aid package for struggling fish processors

The Alaska Senate has proposed a new aid package for the state’s… Continue reading

Current facilities operated by the private nonprofit Gastineau Human Services Corp. include a halfway house for just-released prisoners, a residential substance abuse treatment program and a 20-bed transitional living facility. (Gastineau Human Services Corp. photo)
Proposed 51-unit low-income, long-term housing project for people in recovery gets big boost from Assembly

Members vote 6-2 to declare intent to provide $2M in budget to help secure $9.5M more for project.

Members of the Alaska House of Representatives watch as votes are tallied on House Bill 50, the carbon storage legislation, on Wednesday. (James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)
Alaska House, seeking to boost oil and gas business, approves carbon storage bill

Story votes yes, Hannan votes no as governor-backed HB 50 sent to the state Senate for further work.

(Michael Penn / Juneau Empire file photo)
Police calls for Tuesday, April 16, 2024

This report contains public information from law enforcement and public safety agencies.

Most Read