NYC's EPIC High Schools Pursue 'Look' for Competency-Based Learning

An initiative in New York City to improve the college and career preparedness of young black and Latino men is redesigning physical spaces of three high schools to support a new educational model that incorporates competency mastery and design thinking, among other aspects.

EPIC High Schools, which opened in fall 2014, has been working with Kurani, an architecture firm, to develop a campus prototype that could work in eight city locations. The results provide designs for 17 classrooms and a number of common spaces and amenities.

The designs resulted from a six-month planning process that included workshops with the schools' founders to understand their vision, walking tours of the neighborhoods where they'll be serving students, completing socio-economic and demographic research, and engaging with a broad group of stakeholders: students, teachers and community members. Among the "co-creation" processes followed were live curriculum experiments in different learning environments.
EPIC High Schools, which opened in fall 2014, has been working with Danish Kurani Studio, an architecture firm, to develop a campus prototype that could work in eight city locations.

"The resulting design is a culturally-relevant campus environment equipped with exploration labs, meditation space, a build barn and a trust forest," said Danish Kurani, lead architect in a blog post about the project. "This is no pie-in-the-sky design. The concept takes into consideration very realistic challenges that many New York City schools face: sharing a campus with multiple other schools, accommodating hundreds of students on a single floor, updating derelict and outdated facilities, and creatively manipulating the [28-foot by 28-foot] structural grid. Our design demonstrates how to navigate these endemic challenges while shaping an environment tailored to the specific needs of school users, curriculum and [the] EPIC Schools model."

EPIC is currently in the process of raising funds to convert the 1960s facilities they were provided by the city to the new campus prototype.

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • Neon blue security locks with a single red highlight

    With AI, Cybersecurity Focus Shifts from Finding Flaws to Fixing Them

    For decades, one of cybersecurity's biggest challenges has been finding vulnerabilities before attackers do. A growing number of security professionals now say artificial intelligence is changing that equation, shifting the focus from discovering flaws to fixing them quickly enough to prevent exploitation.

  • group of smiling teachers

    NAAIC Expands AI Workforce Development Efforts to High Schools

    The National Applied AI Consortium, a National Science Foundation-funded initiative led by Miami Dade College, Houston City College, and Maricopa Community Colleges focused on artificial intelligence education and workforce development, is expanding its mission into high schools.

  • digital lock

    CoSN: Cybersecurity and Data Privacy Remain Top AI Concerns in Education

    A leading concern for education technology leaders across the United States is the potential for AI to enable new forms of cyber attacks, according to the latest State of Ed Tech report from CoSN.

  • artificial intelligence on laptop

    OpenAI Plans to Combine AI Products into Desktop 'Superapp'

    OpenAI is reportedly developing a desktop application that would incorporate several of its emerging AI products into a single platform, according to reports, marking the latest step in the company's effort to transform ChatGPT from a standalone chatbot into a broader productivity and automation environment.