
Cultural Exchange
¿De qué trata este proyecto?
Students engage in connection & empathy activities focused on Math subject Urdu subject islamiat subject.
- Edad de los estudiantes
- 13-15 años
- Duración del proyecto
- 2 semanas
- Mes de inicio
- Julio 2026
- Idioma
- Inglés
Este proyecto contribuye a los siguientes objetivos globales
Este proyecto promueve y protege estos derechos de los niños
Objetivos de aprendizaje
Students will be able to identify and describe key mathematical, Urdu, and Islamiat concepts from their own cultural context and explain how these concepts are understood differently across various global cultures through collaborative class discussions and research.
Students will be able to apply critical thinking and emotional intelligence to analyze and compare mathematical problem-solving approaches, Urdu language expressions, and Islamiat principles from different cultures, demonstrating empathy by interpreting how diverse perspectives shape understanding of these concepts within their own classroom community.
Cronograma del proyecto
Step 1
Students review the project goals and timeline together, exploring how they will explore mathematical, Urdu, and Islamiat concepts through cultural lenses
Teacher presents Activity 1, explaining how students will connect with international peers to discover different perspectives on math, language, and faith
Students discuss in pairs how diversity in thinking and culture can enrich their understanding of these subjects, then share one insight with the class
Step 2
Each student contributes to a class digital presentation or video (2-3 minutes total) introducing themselves, their community, and initial thoughts on how math, language, and faith shape daily life
Students post their class presentation on the Class2Class Board for partner classes to view
Students watch partner class videos and write down 3 questions or observations about how the other culture approaches math, Urdu, or Islamiat
Facilitate a live or asynchronous Q&A session where students ask their international peers questions and respond to questions about their own cultural perspectives
Teams use the group chat feature to exchange initial impressions and build connections with partner classroom members
Step 3
Launch the activity by asking students: 'How do mathematical thinking, language expression, and spiritual values differ across cultures?'
Students brainstorm individually on paper or digital notes, listing questions that connect local and global perspectives on math, Urdu, and Islamiat
Using Padlet or Mentimeter, students propose their driving questions and vote on the most compelling ones that invite comparison and reflection
Guide students to refine the top 3 questions collaboratively, ensuring each question is clear, open-ended, and invites intercultural dialogue
Post the final class driving question on the Board so partner classes can see the question guiding your project
Step 4
Students prepare interview questions about how family or community members understand and use mathematics, Urdu language, and Islamiat principles in daily life (examples: 'How do you use math in your work?' 'What Urdu words are important to your family?' 'How does faith guide your decisions?')
Students conduct interviews with family members or community contacts, recording responses through audio, written notes, or photos
Each student or small group organizes their findings into a mini-presentation using Google Slides, a collage, or a brief written report highlighting key insights and stories
Students practice presenting their findings in small groups, using the group chat to share drafts and receive peer feedback on clarity and cultural representation
Teams finalize their mini-presentations and post them to the Board for documentation before sharing with international partners
Step 5
Partner classes share their local research mini-presentations via the Board or asynchronous video exchange, with each student or group explaining their findings
Students read or watch international peers' presentations and post 2-3 observations, questions, or reflections on similarities and differences in how cultures approach math, language, and faith
Facilitate guided discussion prompts such as: 'What surprised you about how other students use math?' 'How is Urdu language valued differently?' 'What common spiritual values did you notice?'
International teams use Google Docs, Padlet, or Canva to collaboratively build a shared digital product (mural, infographic, or short video) that integrates mathematical concepts, Urdu expressions, and Islamiat principles from both cultures
Teams highlight connections and celebrate diversity in their co-created artifacts, using the group chat to coordinate roles and share progress updates
Step 6
Students prepare talking points explaining their collaborative products and the intercultural insights they discovered (e.g., 'We found that both cultures value mathematical problem-solving but approach it differently')
Organize a local exhibition or presentation event where students display and explain their co-created artifacts to the school community, families, or other classes
Each student or team presents their cultural synthesis product, demonstrating how mathematical, Urdu, and Islamiat concepts are understood across cultures
Students share one key learning about global connections and how the project changed their perspective on diversity
Post photos and highlights from the Cultural Exchange Fair on the Board to celebrate achievements with partner classes
Step 7
Facilitate a guided reflection discussion using questions: 'What did you learn about your international peers?' 'What surprised you about other cultures?' 'How did this project change your understanding of math, language, or faith?'
Students share their reflections in small groups, then volunteers share key insights with the whole class
Each student completes a simple self-assessment rubric (1-3 scale) evaluating their own collaboration, communication, and respect for diverse perspectives
Students write a brief reflection note on the Board responding to: 'One thing I will remember about this cultural exchange is...'
Teacher facilitates a closing circle where students celebrate their learning and discuss how they can continue building global connections