Humanitas is an interdisciplinary approach to creating curriculum and delivering instruction. Teachers from different subject areas, for instance, English, science, art, and social studies, create lesson plans that address a common theme or idea. The advantage to this type of instruction is that students can directly apply learning from one class to other classes, which means they learn more deeply in all of their classes. Humanitas units culminate in an interdisciplinary essay, which gives students an opportunity to share what they have learned in all of their connected classes. Interdisciplinary essays prepare students for college by building their capacity to become strong analytical writers.

9th Grade Team:
English – Alison Conant
Biology – Patricia Solomon

10th Grade Team:
English – Melanie Lightbourn-Rowe
Social Studies (World History) – Shadia Ghoneim

11th Grade Team:
English – Ken Brown
Social Studies (U.S. History) – Diana Shar

Humanitas Themes

9th Grade Themes

Year-Long Theme: Balance

Unit I Theme: Need vs. Greed: The Life and Death Consequences of the Tragedy of the Commons

Unit 2 Theme: The Body is a Battlefield: At War with Ourselves and Each Other

Unit 3 Theme: I Gotta Be Me: The Narrative, Ethical, and Biological Implications of Altering Essence and Identity

Unit 4 Theme: Man in the Mirror: In the Face of Injustice Who Will You Become?

 

10th Grade Team

Year-Long Theme: Civilization: A Perpetual State of Progress and Decay

Unit I Theme: Evolution of Moral Codes: Emerging from Abdication to Self-Determination

Unit 2 Theme: Technological Progress: The Root of Human Suffering

Unit 3 Theme: Democracy: Liberation from Tyranny and Global Dominance

Unit 4 Theme: Anti-Globalization: Blocking 500 Years of Imperialism

Unit 5 Theme: Nationalism: Defining Identity and Safeguarding Culture

Unit 6 Theme: The Drive for Power: The Profit and Toll of Global Conflict

 

11th Grade Team

Year-Long Theme: Resilience and Self-Determination: Forging a Place in the World

Unit I Theme: Identity: Acts of Self-Creation

Unit 2 Theme: Identities in Conflict: When Worlds Collide

Unit 3 Theme: Resilience and Self-Determination

Unit 4 Theme: Creating a Future Identity

The following is an example of a Humanitas essay prompt. In the 11th grade class, the student analyzed the novel Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck. The students have been studying the Great Depression and New Deal Programs in their United Stated History class. Students synthesized their learning to complete this essay.

Hook: “In every land there are always at work forces that drive men apart and forces that draw men together. In our personal ambitions we are individualists. But in our seeking for economic and political progress as a nation, we all go up, or else we all go down, as one people.” Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Second Inaugural Address

Premise: In a well organized essay, explain how collaborative solutions attempted to end the Great Depression and could have lead George and Lennie to achieve their dreams in Of Mice and Men. (Consider how personal ambition may have contributed to the problem in the first place).

Map: First, talk about and provide evidence for how personal ambition may have led to the Great Depression. Then, advocate and justify two New Deal Programs that may have supported people like Lennie and George. Finally, analyze one opposing argument to the New Deal and explain how that argument would have affected George and Lennie.

Assertion: Conclude your essay with an assertion about whether or not New Deal Programs benefit people like George and Lennie.

Start typing and press Enter to search