
Student Immersion in Community and Industry
What we do that makes us unique!
Hands-on, Project Based, Experiential Learning
Weekly Field Trips
Experimental Aircraft Association (EAA)
Mosquito Hill Nature Center
Central Wisconsin Environmental Station (CWES)
School Forest
Waupaca Airport
Hartman Creek State Park
Packers Stadium
Extreme Air
Bubolz Nature Preserve
National Railroad Museum
Real-World Projects!
X-Wing Plane (Test and Improve Speed, Accuracy, and Distance)
Custom Radio (Construct a Fully-Functional Radio)
Aviation Circuitry (Build a Sensor for Air Speed and Pressure)
3-D Model City (To-Scale Future City for Mars Colony)
Sea-Perch Submarine (Fabricate a Vessel for Underwater Missions)
Hydroponics (Build a Floating Garden for Flood Relief)
Business site tours and partnerships
The Academy is working to meet the needs of a diverse population of students in the Weyauwega Fremont and surrounding communities.
Program Description
Fostering ingenuity by encouraging passionate, innovative, and creative learners using real-world, hands-on experiences through Project-Based Learning (PBL) and STEM.
Community/Business/Industry Partnerships
The Academy is looking to develop a stronger partnership with community businesses and industry. These partnerships will guide service projects and hands-on learning opportunities.
Guide service projects
Science is an ideal subject for young learners
Hands-on labs and experiments
Develop problem-solving skills that empower them to participate in an increasingly scientific and technological world
Local business and industry in the Weyauwega Fremont School District support a STEM school
Focus on aeronautics through community industry support
Differentiated PBL Model
Cater to a larger variety of learning profiles to increase student engagement and achievement
Intentionality and Reciprocity: Teachers concentrate on students’ understanding and guide the process of information gathering, knowledge development, and knowledge application.
Mediation of Meaning: Teachers interpret the impact of what students have accomplished.
Transcendence (Bridging): Applications to new, meaningful, real-world situations, help students evolve from passive recipients of information to confident, self-regulated learners.
Global Citizenship: In small rural areas of Wisconsin, such as the Weyauwega Fremont School District, students have little or no experience, personal or virtual, of the world outside the limited boundaries of their locale. The Academy will provide a form of civic learning that involves students’ active participation in projects that address global issues of social, political, economic, or environmental nature.
Curricular Model
Maximize enjoyment, engagement, learning, and productivity for 21st Century learning
Features autonomy, mastery, and purpose for everyone: administrators, teachers, staff, and students
Autonomy: A feeling of autonomy over task, time, team, and technique has a powerful effect on performance and attitude. Encouraging autonomy does not mean discouraging accountability, but having control over task, time, team, and technique as a pathway to learning.
Mastery: Autonomy requires engagement. Engagement produces mastery or becoming more proficient at something that matters. Solving higher-level questions and challenges requires an inquiring mind, the willingness to experiment, and the environment to allow one to do so.
Purpose: Purpose is the context for autonomy and mastery. We will infuse student learning and work with the desire to affect a greater and more enduring cause. Building upon the foundation of PBL inquiry with a STEM curricular focus, we give life to the STEM curricula through public (community) engagement.
College and Carrier Readiness
Prepare students with the skill set and workforce understanding needed to propel them into high school and beyond.
Partnerships with community business, industry, and Colleges
Emphasizing conceptual understanding over memorization of facts
Engagement in the practices of science and mathematics
Aligning with new standards in math and science
Ability to apply knowledge and skills within and across disciplines
Reduce Achievement Gaps
Address students who struggle in a traditional school setting
Innovative setting
Comprehensive approach
Exposure to new experiences
Community school approach
Technology and hands-on engagement
Clear goals
Guiding activities
Time for students to reflect
Sharing and applying knowledge
Culture of collaborations
Participation structures
Formative assessments that provide students with opportunities for revisions/growth
Multidimensional summative assessments
Critical Thinking
21st-century skill
Allowing and encouraging creativity and interest-based inquiry
Asking guiding questions and providing resources for independent research
Asking students to solve problems rather than giving them answers
Promoting collaborative learning to develop teamwork and self-discipline, and to improve social and interpersonal skills
Engaging, community-based, authentic problem-solving alternatives to the traditional classroom, which often overwhelms or bores educationally disadvantaged students
A variety of real-life experiences to jar their thinking and imagination
Expectations for academic success with the outcome of more-rewarding career tracks
Curricular diversity will provide a greater degree of personalization