top of page

The Hexagon Project

The mission of the Hexagon Project is to spread the meaning of interdependence through school- and community-created artwork.

Image by CHUTTERSNAP

"Independence used to be the ticket for liberty. But today, security and freedom, whether it’s in the Arab Spring, whether it’s in Iraq or whether it’s right here in the United States, means working cooperatively and interdependently with others."

Benjamin Barber

Visit the hexagon project website to learn all about it!

Project #1
 

We will compare the concepts of independence and interdependence by exploring our history, current events, and ourselves. 

Project #1

Options:

Use the declaration of independence in part or whole;

Explore the concept of interdependence.

Click HERE to see a gallery of student work.

As a background for illustration. Cut large or small pieces to arrange in the background. Use marker, pen, paint, or colored pencils to illustrate a message about interdependence.

Use parts or pieces to represent OBJECTS in collage about explanation or understanding of interdependence.

Show how language in the declaration of independence can be re-interpreted in our current times and how it supports interdependence.

Show how language in the declaration of independence can be re-interpreted to promote interdependence.

Use parts or pieces of the declaration of independence to represent IDEAS in your explanation or understanding of interdependence.

Use parts of the declaration of independence to create a black-out poem about interdependence.

1. After exploring the materials on the Hexagon Project website, take a look at your copy of the declaration of independence.

​

2. Brainstorm ideas regarding the concepts and language.

Think about these questions:

How can you make a translation from independence to interdependence?

Is there a correlation between independence and interdependence?

How does interdependence strengthen diversity, equity, or technology?

​

3. Choose an option from the hexagons above. Use your sketchbook to develop ideas and practice  different techniques before committing to a final product. 

​

4. When you have a clear understanding or message and a plan to convey it with visual imagery, use the hexagon template as your format. Gather materials from the classroom as necessary.

​

Project #2
 

We will create a mural of hexagons to be installed in public commons for Indigenous Peoples' Day, in collaboration with county schools.

IMG_8204.HEIC

After exploring creation stories, maps, and relationships, create a hexagon that addresses your ideas of connection between places and people.

For Teachers:

1. After exploring the materials on the offical Hexagon Project website, take a look at the lesson framework. Consider the five threads of the Standard Model for Indigenous Learning: Place, Storytelling, Intergenerations Interaction, Experience, and Interconnectedness. The framework offers many paths towards project implementation and can be adapted for relevance and need.

​

2. Equip students with tools and time. Arts integration provides a window for students to find understanding, but the making is the final step in a longer process.

​

​

Click the red hexagon to access a shared image gallery

Project #2

Land Acknowledgement 

Southern Berkshire Regional School District

​

It is with gratitude and humility that we acknowledge that we are learning, speaking, and gathering on the ancestral homelands of the Muhheaconneok or Mohican people, who are the indigenous peoples of this land. Despite tremendous hardship in being forced from here, today their community resides in Wisconsin and is known as the Stockbridge-Munsee Community. 

​

We honor their ancestors by acknowledging their contributions, generosity, and sacrifices, and continuously aim to better understand and integrate their history into school curricula. We acknowledge the lens through which curriculum has been created is biased, and our district is making a sincere effort to create balance. We created a Professional Learning Community (PLC) that focuses on culturally responsive pedagogy and practices and offers continuous professional development to teachers for learning and understanding. Within the PLC, the topics discussed fall into a “justice continuum,” where injustice is at one end and encompasses oppression, racism, ableism, sexism, etc., and social justice is at the other end, with empowerment, activism, and agencies of change. 

​

We acknowledge that the place names of our rivers, towns, roads, and landmarks have significant meaning to the Stockbridge Munsee Community. Our district includes lessons about Mohican culture from time immemorial to present day, historical leaders and sachems, and language, so these places are not named in vain, but known, understood, and respected. These lessons are carried out from Kindergarten through 12th grade in both classroom and community contexts. We draw our understanding from the Mohican People curriculum, written by members of the Stockbridge Munsee Community, as well as their website, Mohican.com.

​

We understand that our privilege has allowed us to live and learn here as a result of broken promises, unfair negotiations, and racist mindsets. Our goal is to make reparations for the unjust actions of the past, by building partnerships with the children of the Stockbridge Munsee Community. Through mutual school exchanges, we can create common learning goals and experiences. Our district supports teachers’ initiatives to forge these partnerships as well as collaborate with local experts to strengthen curriculum, and share learning with our local community.

​

We show respect to the Mohican descendents by engaging with their living culture, which has endured the repercussions of the westward diaspora. Our student-led club, the Social Justice League, addresses the need for awareness, visibility, and advocacy. They utilize resources of local cultural organizations and create public events that support the Stockbridge Munsee Community in solidarity.

​

The Southern Berkshire Regional School District has made and will continue to make progress regarding restorative justice practices in education. We commit to building connections, understandings, and partnerships to provide a more inclusive and equitable space for all.

redriver.png
manytrailsgardensigns.tif

Website created by Stephanie Graham, 2021

bottom of page