Tag Archives: Antelope Valley Charter School

iLEAD Antelope Valley Culture: Project-Based Learning

Spend even just a few moments inquiring about iLEAD Antelope Valley’s approach to education, and one of the first things you’ll hear about is project-based learning, or PBL. It’s at the core of our approach to school and a proven asset to education.

So what is project-based learning? In PBL, learners actively explore real-world challenges to acquire deeper knowledge of the subject at hand. Research shows that learners increasingly retain and enjoy what they’re learning when PBL is done well.

This educational model helps students learn the valuable collaboration, academic, and problem-solving skills our global economy will demand from them. Through the PBL method, learners tackle engaging projects about real-world issues that require critical thought, inquiry, and synthesis, and culminate in regular Presentations of Learning (or POLs) to their peers, facilitators, community members, and parents.

The PBL model requires learners to research, collaborate, and carefully weigh information and evidence in a nuanced problem-solving environment. It teaches learners to accept feedback, create solutions, and present their findings in a high-performance context — preparing them for the rigors of the 21st-century economy and the challenges of a global world. 

PBL provides the following benefits:

  • PBL makes school more engaging: In PBL, students are active, not passive. Projects engage their hearts and minds and provide real-world relevance for learning.
  • PBL improves learning: At the completion of a project, learners understand content more deeply, remember what they learn, and retain it longer than is often the case with traditional instruction. Because of this, students who gain content knowledge with PBL are better able to apply to new situations what they know and can do.
  • PBL builds skills for college, career, and life: Learners are preparing for life in a world where success requires more than basic knowledge and skills. In a project, students learn how to take initiative and responsibility, build confidence, solve problems, work in teams, communicate ideas, and manage themselves more effectively.
  • PBL helps address standards: Common Core and other current education standards emphasize real-world application of knowledge and skills, as well as the development of success skills like critical thinking/problem-solving, collaboration, communication in a variety of media, and speaking and presentation skills. PBL helps learners effectively meet these goals.
  • PBL embraces technology: Kids enjoy using a variety of tech tools that are a perfect fit for PBL. With technology, facilitators and learners not only find resources and information they need; they also collaborate more effectively and connect with experts, partners, and audiences.
  • PBL makes teaching more enjoyable and rewarding: Projects allow facilitators to work closely with active, engaged learners doing high-quality, meaningful work. In many cases, facilitators rediscover the joy of learning alongside kids.
  • PBL connects kids and schools with communities and the real world: Through PBL, learners have opportunities to solve real problems and address actual issues, and as such they learn more about interacting with adults and organizations, are exposed to workplaces, and can identify and develop career interests.

In short, project-based learning is at the core of the iLEAD Antelope Valley model because we believe it is at the heart of how kids learn best. Time and again, we’ve seen how PBL helps learners develop academic skills, build leadership skills and character, and lay the foundation for promising careers.

Upcoming Events

Click here for the academic calendar.

  • March 30: Zoom Fun Craft Day, 4 PM. Check ParentSquare for the link to join.
  • April 1: iSUPPORT Meeting, 5:30 PM
  • April 5-12: Spring Break – No School

Remaining Fridays when Cohort A attends classes 9:00 AM-12:30 PM:

  • April 16
  • June 4

Prospective families, would you like to learn more about iLEAD AV? Sign up for a virtual info session!     iLEAD Antelope Valley info session flyer

See what our families are saying about iLEAD Antelope Valley!

Support iLEAD Antelope Valley with Box Tops & Amazon Smile!

Did you know you can help iLEAD Antelope Valley and provide additional resources by just doing the things you’re already doing every day?

We call this “passive fundraising.” You can support us through Box Tops for Education and Amazon Smille! See below for details to make sure your purchases make a difference!

Box Tops

Amazon Smile

  • Shop on smile.amazon.com
  • Under the search bar on Amazon Smile’s site, it will say “Supporting.” This is where you’ll choose “Ilead California Charters 1”
  • Start shopping on smile.amazon.com so that Amazon will donate a portion of the purchase price to iLEAD AV
  • If you purchase under the regular amazon.com, those purchases will not be donated to the school. It has to be through smile.amazon.com

Upcoming Events

Click here for the academic calendar.

  • March 25: ELAC Meeting, 4-5 PM. Check ParentSquare for the link to join.
  • March 30: Zoom Fun Craft Day, 4 PM. Check ParentSquare for the link to join.
  • April 1: iSUPPORT Meeting, 5:30 PM
  • April 5-12: Spring Break – No School

Remaining Fridays when Cohort A attends classes 9:00 AM-12:30 PM:

  • April 16
  • June 4

Prospective families, would you like to learn more about iLEAD AV? Sign up for a virtual info session!     iLEAD Antelope Valley info session flyer

Support iLEAD Antelope Valley with Box Tops & Amazon Smile!

Did you know you can help iLEAD Antelope Valley and provide additional resources by just doing the things you’re already doing every day?

We call this “passive fundraising.” You can support us through Box Tops for Education and Amazon Smille! See below for details to make sure your purchases make a difference!

Box Tops

Amazon Smile

  • Shop on smile.amazon.com
  • Under the search bar on Amazon Smile’s site, it will say “Supporting.” This is where you’ll choose “Ilead California Charters 1”
  • Start shopping on smile.amazon.com so that Amazon will donate a portion of the purchase price to iLEAD AV
  • If you purchase under the regular amazon.com, those purchases will not be donated to the school. It has to be through smile.amazon.com

Upcoming Events

Click here for the academic calendar.

  • March 19: “Among Us” Game Day, K-3rd grade at 2 PM, 4th-8th grade at 2:45 PM
  • March 19, 25-26: Learner-Led Conferences
  • March 24: Zoom Fun Craft Day, 4 PM
  • March 25: ELAC Meeting, 4-5 PM. Check ParentSquare for the link to join.
  • April 1: iSUPPORT Meeting, 5:30 PM

Remaining Fridays when Cohort A attends classes 9:00 AM-12:30 PM:

  • April 16
  • June 4

Prospective families, would you like to learn more about iLEAD AV? Sign up for a virtual info session!     iLEAD Antelope Valley info session flyer

Support iLEAD Antelope Valley with Box Tops & Amazon Smile!

Did you know you can help iLEAD Antelope Valley and provide additional resources by just doing the things you’re already doing every day?

We call this “passive fundraising.” You can support us through Box Tops for Education and Amazon Smille! See below for details to make sure your purchases make a difference!

Box Tops

Amazon Smile

  • Shop on smile.amazon.com
  • Under the search bar on Amazon Smile’s site, it will say “Supporting.” This is where you’ll choose “Ilead California Charters 1”
  • Start shopping on smile.amazon.com so that Amazon will donate a portion of the purchase price to iLEAD AV
  • If you purchase under the regular amazon.com, those purchases will not be donated to the school. It has to be through smile.amazon.com

Women’s History Month Call to Action for iLEAD Antelope Valley 5th-6th Graders

By Michael Niehoff
Education Content Coordinator, iLEAD Schools

Today is International Women’s Day, a global celebration of the social, economic, cultural and political achievements of women. It has also come to represent an international call to action to accelerate gender parity and women’s equality.

At iLEAD Antelope Valley, Dr. Shayna Markwongark’s 5th and 6th graders are heeding that call to action. According to Markwongark, learners are currently embarking on a women’s history project. They have to first identify a key woman in history, learn her story and then connect that story to their own lives and community. Their driving question is “How can we use the activism of women throughout history to influence or change our community today?”

“This is all about research and then activism,” Markwongark said. “Its purpose is to connect this information to their world and their futures.”

The project has two key components once teams of learners have identified their famous woman, done the research and learned the key aspects of her story. First, Markwongark said, students will work in teams to produce a three-to-five-minute podcast that tells both the women’s story and then showcases how it can connect to the learners’ school lives and communities.

The second major public product, according to Markwongark, will be a series of written proposals that the teams prepare for iLEAD Antelope Valley Director Dawn Roberson. This proposal will represent the students’ recommendations to iLEAD about continuing to empower women and raise awareness within the iLEAD community.

This correlation of history and activism is at the heart of this project, according to Markwongark. She said learning the history and even connecting it to the learners’ lives is important, but what’s more important is how this information is used going forward.

“This is about inspiration first, then action second,” Markwongark said. “It’s great to be inspired and full of hope, but what matters is how we individually contribute to improving the world.”

For Markwongark, the goal is to empower learners to learn the stories of others and then take action. “I’m going to continually ask them what they can do going forward — this year, this summer, next year and beyond,” she said.

School Director Dawn Roberson is excited about the facilitation and learning associated with a project aligned with global goals of empowering women to advocate for their rights as human beings. Roberson appreciates the depth of this project, which allows learners to see the complex world in which they live from a more empowered position.

“Even in a nation like ours, we see the need to continue to advocate for equal pay, equal rights and equal opportunities for women and for all,” Roberson said. “These 5th and 6th graders will have a better understanding of their role supporting all the women in their lives and advocacy on behalf of others.”

Although this project is just getting underway, Markwongark has high expectations for learner outcomes. In addition to the historical knowledge and content, there is a social-emotional component, along with some very important skills that Markwongark anticipates learners will experience. One of her goals is that after reflecting on the obstacles, challenges and successes of women in history, learners will have epiphanies about what they can do with their lives.

“My learners already have great qualities, but I am going to see a lot more empowered young men and women,” Markwongark said. “It doesn’t have to be global. It can be in their own communities and even their own families. It might be even just working with their brother or sister to be more sensitive, aware or inspired.”

High-quality project-based learning make way for learners to have a voice and agency, according to Markwongark.

“Hopefully, they become the disseminators of this information about what equality looks like,” she said. “Who knows? Maybe some of these learners will come up with ideas that iLEAD decides to implement. That’s the power of PBL.”

For more details and background on this project, see The Project Design Guide and the Project Information Flipbook.