Bellevue teacher prepares students for zombie apocalypse By Gabriel Spitzer So, when the zombie apocalypse comes, where will you flee? Should you hunker down on a remote island or blend into the urban landscape? Will the undead funnel onto bridges and viaducts? Do they like low ground or high ground? So many questions … now don’t you wish you’d paid more attention in geography class? "Zombies" in the news As a Florida television station put it (Florida being ground-zero for the “zombie outbreak”): First came Miami – the case of a naked man eating most of another man's face … then Texas … then Maryland … then New Jersey … And, online sites like The Daily Beast had some fun with the story. That site made a map of the “zombie-like attack” with this story: 11 Signs of the Zombie Apocalypse. Of course, a zombie apocalypse is a made-for-Twitter story and has bloomed there. And, the "outbreak" of zombie news fits right into a Bellevue middle school teacher's curriculum plans. David Hunter figured out that a zombie attack would favor the geographically well-informed, so he is creating a geography course for his 6th graders centered on this scenario, which he calls “Zombie-Based Learning.” He created a Kickstarter campaign to fund it, hoping to raise about $5,000. At the campaign’s close today, he had raked in $11,886 in contributions. He says the idea came from a satirical “alternative history” map he was playing around with in class, which ostensibly recorded the Pittsburgh “Living Dead Outbreaks and Attacks” of 1875. Hunter plans to use the money he’s raised to create illustrations, develop a narrative and exercises, downloads, and research the curriculum’s effectiveness. A typical lesson might begin with an installment of an ongoing story, in the vein of a role playing game, and then leap off to exercises. Students will have to predict how the zombie outbreak is spreading, where safe havens are likely to be located, where choke points for supplies might crop up, and so on. CDC playing along ... Hunter hopes to construct the book like a graphic novel, and says he’s in talks with the Centers for Disease Control about writing the foreword. Over the years the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has released a couple of tongue-in-cheek "zombie warnings," which really are just disaster-preparedness stunts. Then, the agency made it official: Zombies don't exist... Real teaching, real survival And Hunter says this is not just a gimmick. It will be rooted in rigorous learning standards for geography. And on the off chance that the scenario doesn’t “stay fictional,” Hunter’s 6th graders are going to have the edge in our post-apocalyptic wasteland. So kids, use those brains before they get eaten. http://www.kplu.org/post/bellevue-teacher-prepares-students-zombie-apocalypse Below is Hunter's video about the zombie-based curriculum: [yt=Zombie-Based Learning for Educators]lT9ueMrPmPk&[/yt]
I think anything that can engage kids into wanting to learn is a great thing. Hopefully, some kids won't be scared of the premise though.