Year 4, Mini Lesson 2.4 – Showcase and Celebration
Semester Learning Goal
Students will investigate community needs, reflect on personal values, and apply design thinking to develop a values-aligned project idea. Through research, collaboration, and iteration, they will explore what it means to do Good Work as a good person, good worker, and good citizen.
Lesson Goal
Students will present their Capstone Projects to peers, educators, and/or community members. This lesson celebrates their year-long journey.
Assessment
Observe presentation clarity, audience engagement, and evidence of reflection and alignment.
Resources
Presentation or display materials representing each student’s capstone project
Optional: certificates of completion
Total Time
Discrentionary
Instructions
1. Opener: Setting the Tone for Celebration
Welcome students to the final showcase. Explain:
“Today is a celebration of your Capstone journey. You began this work by defining a meaningful problem, prototyping a solution, and building a foundation for action. You then took what you created and implemented real-world action.”
Briefly review logistics and expectations:
Be kind, curious, and celebratory toward your peers
Speak clearly and reflect on your why as well as your what
Listen with the same respect you hope to receive
2. Poster Presentations
POP UP - This is one way to allow students to share their capstone experiences. You may wish to run the final presentations in a different format, which is completely up to you as the teacher!
Set up a classroom, conference room, or hallway for poster presentations, where students stand next to their display, project board, digital device, or prototype.
Divide the class in half: one half presents while the other half peruses the room as audience members.
Halfway through the time you have allotted, each half should switch roles.
-
Depending on the size of your class, and if time allows, you might consider including a Peer Spotlights activity.
After each half of the class has a chance to present, gather the full class.
Invite volunteers to “spotlight” a peer project they admired.
Use prompts such as:
Whose project really inspired you—and why?
What was something you learned from someone else’s project?
What values did you see expressed across multiple projects?
Encourage celebration, connection, and recognition of each other’s contributions.
3. Closing: Good Work in Action Ceremony or Acknowledgment
End the session by acknowledging the collective effort and growth of the class.
You may offer:
Certificates of completion or personalized notes
A few words recognizing the courage it takes to do values-driven work
An invitation to reflect on how they will keep practicing the 3 Es of Good Work in the next chapter of their lives
Optional Enrichment – Gratitude Note:
Write a quick thank-you to someone who helped you along the way (classmate, teacher, interviewee, family member). This is a small act of Good Work that strengthens the community.