Ease on Down the Road

By

published
August 25, 2023
A tilted postcard image features a vibrant neon sign with palm trees and clouds against a night sky, evoking the spirit to Ease on Down the Road. Below the sign, part of a white vehicle is visible. The blue background adds a contrasting frame to the postcard.

Media

published
August 25, 2023

appears in

Using research and writing skills in Humanities, scaling in Math, circuitry in Science, and Engineering in Makers, the seventh grade students at HTMMA partnered with different non-profits around San Diego to help spread their messages to the community. Students explored the history of parades and non-fiction texts about parades, scaled blueprints of their float ideas, circuited their lights, and built their parade float. The students partnered with The Animal Pad, The Rescue Dog, Fishes and Loaves, and the OB Women’s Club to build parade floats that were exhibited in the 2018 Ocean Beach Holiday Parade.

Teacher Reflection

Encouraging creativity, being proactive in the community, spreading positivity, and interdisciplinary learning, the students did so much more than build a float. Given leadership positions and smaller subgroups, students collaborated with their peers, used so many tools to build, researched floats and materials, and took on roles pertaining to their passions. In this project, they practiced so many soft and hard skills that resulted in them being a collective and powerful voice. When given a real client and an authentic audience the students were powerful and unstoppable. Students built the float for their non-profit not because they had to but because they wanted to spread an important message to their community.

-Mimi Tran

Student Reflection

I think that it has helped me connect with my peers and classmates by learning to know them better. I got to work with people I don’t normally hang out with and created something amazing. Something that was hard was scaling to size the model to the actual size, painting multiple layers of paint for the backdrop, and deciding on how different scrap wood could be used to create the size of the backdrop. We had to screw beams to the backdrop as well. I learned how to carefully use resources that I was given and to problem solve with my peers. 

-Jaden Gonzales

TITLE

Ease on Down the Road

written by

Media

published

August 25, 2023

appears in

tags

share this

Ease on Down the Road

By

A tilted postcard image features a vibrant neon sign with palm trees and clouds against a night sky, evoking the spirit to Ease on Down the Road. Below the sign, part of a white vehicle is visible. The blue background adds a contrasting frame to the postcard.

Using research and writing skills in Humanities, scaling in Math, circuitry in Science, and Engineering in Makers, the seventh grade students at HTMMA partnered with different non-profits around San Diego to help spread their messages to the community. Students explored the history of parades and non-fiction texts about parades, scaled blueprints of their float ideas, circuited their lights, and built their parade float. The students partnered with The Animal Pad, The Rescue Dog, Fishes and Loaves, and the OB Women’s Club to build parade floats that were exhibited in the 2018 Ocean Beach Holiday Parade.

Teacher Reflection

Encouraging creativity, being proactive in the community, spreading positivity, and interdisciplinary learning, the students did so much more than build a float. Given leadership positions and smaller subgroups, students collaborated with their peers, used so many tools to build, researched floats and materials, and took on roles pertaining to their passions. In this project, they practiced so many soft and hard skills that resulted in them being a collective and powerful voice. When given a real client and an authentic audience the students were powerful and unstoppable. Students built the float for their non-profit not because they had to but because they wanted to spread an important message to their community.

-Mimi Tran

Student Reflection

I think that it has helped me connect with my peers and classmates by learning to know them better. I got to work with people I don’t normally hang out with and created something amazing. Something that was hard was scaling to size the model to the actual size, painting multiple layers of paint for the backdrop, and deciding on how different scrap wood could be used to create the size of the backdrop. We had to screw beams to the backdrop as well. I learned how to carefully use resources that I was given and to problem solve with my peers. 

-Jaden Gonzales

A woman with curly hair holds a yellow and red flag, smiling. Text reads: Center for Love & Justice. Join our Open Call 2025 for Partnerships in the Face of Injustice! A Get Started button sits below, inviting action. The border and accents blend vibrant orange and green tones.

More Project Cards

Skip to content