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About the Chicago Curriculum
The early and lower school Chicago Curriculum emphasizes “Parts of a City”, which include people, the environment, infrastructure, and spaces. The theme for the middle and upper school Chicago Curriculum is “Purposes and Complexities of a City,” or exploring the impact of interactions between groups, the impact of infrastructure and politics on economics, the environment, and our intellectual and cultural history.
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The Chicago Curriculum Outline
The Chicago Curriculum is grounded on a foundation of six core topics that spiral in complexity and depth throughout a student’s experience at GEMS World Academy Chicago.
Core Topics
- Physical
- Land and waterways
- Natural resources
- Human
- Migration
- Immigration
- Neighborhood formation
- Demographic trends, historic and contemporary
- Transportation: rail, road, air, and water
- Water system
- Sewerage system
- Power grid
- Housing and public housing policy
- Public education
Examples of the Chicago Curriculum
The curriculum is comprised of Chicago inspired authors, speakers, and field studies. Some examples include:
- A lower school study of our unique relationship with Lake Michigan the Jardine Water Purification Plant and Stickney Reclamation Plant.
- A lower school study of human migration patterns and their manifestation in Chicago, understanding the development of neighborhoods and their different cultural institutions.
- A middle school study of gerrymandering, data collection, and neighborhood identity with a focus on Chicago’s West Side in the 1960s.
- An upper school collaboration with students of OLT High School and Latinos Progresando on the Youth Voter Guide Project.
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