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Eleventh Grade STEM Curriculum

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🚀 Quantum Pioneers and Architects of AGI: Advanced Research and Ethics.

An annual plan of 8 missions for eleventh grade, focusing on quantum computing, synthetic biology, and the ethics of superintelligence.

Main Objective of the Plan

To prepare eleventh grade students for cutting-edge research by giving them the tools to model quantum systems, design synthetic life, and lead the ethical debate on Artificial General Intelligence (AGI).

STEM Disciplines and Skills

Science: Synthetic biology (BioBricks), genetics (genetic circuits), cell biology.
Technology: CAD software for SynBio (Tinkercad for Bio, Benchling), databases (iGEM Registry).
Engineering: Bioengineering, design of «bio-robots» (Xenobots - conceptual), tissue engineering.
Mathematics: Boolean logic (AND/OR/NOT genetic circuits), modeling of biological systems.


Critical Thinking: What is the difference between «editing» life (CRISPR) and «creating» life (SynBio)?
Collaboration: Design a team «genetic circuit» for a new function (e.g., arsenic-detecting bacteria).

Hands-on activities

  • Design of «BioBrick» (Simulated): Use Benchling (free) to design a simple plasmid (a genetic circuit) by combining «BioBricks» (Promoter + RBS + Gene + Terminator) from the iGEM database.
  • Simulation of Xenobots: Analyze the paper and videos of the «Xenobots». Conceptually design a «bio-robot» for a task (e.g. «cleaning microplastics»).
  • Discussion: «Dual Use» in SynBio: Discuss the risks of synthetic biology - how do we prevent it from being used to create pathogens or biological weapons?
Hybrid/Remote Adaptation (Benchling): Benchling is a cloud platform perfect for students to design and share their genetic circuits from home.
Benchling (web), iGEM Registry, articles (Xenobots), Tinkercad (conceptual).

Formative Evaluation

  • Genetic circuit design in Benchling.
  • Xenobot« design proposal.
  • Argumentative essay on the regulation of «dual use».

Integration of Ethical Values

Ethics of «Creating Life»: Discuss the philosophical and moral implications of creating organisms from scratch.
Biosafety: The responsibility to «contain» synthetic organisms so that they do not escape into the ecosystem.

STEM Disciplines and Skills

Science: Systems ecology, population genetics, biotechnology (cloning, CRISPR).
Technology: Ecosystem modeling software (NetLogo), genomic databases.
Engineering: Ecosystem engineering, rewilding, geoengineering (advanced).
Mathematics: Population modeling (predator-prey), population viability analysis (MVP).


Systemic Thinking: What would happen if we reintroduce the Woolly Mammoth (or a proxy) into Siberia? What are the cascading effects?
Data Literacy: Analyze the genetic viability of an endangered species.

Hands-on activities

  • Rewilding simulation (NetLogo): Use the «Wolf Sheep Predation» model of NetLogo. Modify parameters (grass growth, reproduction rate) to simulate rewilding and see if the ecosystem collapses or stabilizes.
  • De-extinction« panel: Each group defends a candidate for «de-extinction» (Mammoth, Dodo, Bucardo). Argue «why» (ecological role) and «how» (technology).
  • Ecological Intervention Design: Design an engineering intervention for a local ecosystem (e.g. artificial reef, wildlife corridor) and analyze its impact.
Hybrid/Remote Adaptation (NetLogo): NetLogo (web) is ideal for experimenting with ecosystem models on an individual basis and sharing the results.
NetLogo (web), Colossal Biosciences (research), IUCN Red List.

Formative Evaluation

  • NetLogo lab report (ecosystem stability analysis).
  • Presentation/defense of the candidate for «de-extinction».
  • Ecological intervention design proposal.

Integration of Ethical Values

Playing God: Do we have the wisdom to manage an ecosystem?
Resource Allocation: Is it better to spend money on saving existing species or reviving extinct ones?
Animal Welfare: Is it ethical to create a mammoth that will live in a zoo without a herd?

STEM Disciplines and Skills

Science: Data science (long tail distributions), complex systems science.
Technology: Agent-based modeling software (NetLogo, Mesa - Python).
Engineering: Financial engineering (design of «anti-fragile» portfolios).
Mathematics: Statistics (non-normal, power law), chaos theory (conceptual), Monte Carlo simulation.


Critical Thinking: Why do financial models (based on Gaussian bell) fail to predict «Black Swans» (rare and shocking events)?
Planning: Design a system (financial or personal) that benefits from disorder (Antifragility).

Hands-on activities

  • Simulation of «Wealth» (NetLogo): Use a simple «Agent-Based Economy» model. Demonstrate how simple exchange rules can lead to a power-law distribution (inequality).
  • Monte Carlo Simulation (Spreadsheets): Simulate the return of a portfolio using RAND functions in Google Sheets. See the wide range of possible outcomes.
  • Debate: Fragile or Robust? Analyze a system (e.g. electrical system, internet, the school itself). Is it robust (withstand shocks), fragile (fail) or anti-fragile (improve)? Propose a redesign.
Hybrid/Remote Adaptation (Monte Carlo): The simulation in Google Sheets is perfectly collaborative or individual in remote.
NetLogo (web), Google Sheets, Python (Mesa, Colab), books (Taleb).

Formative Evaluation

  • NetLogo simulation analysis (wealth distribution).
  • Functional Monte Carlo spreadsheet (with analysis).
  • System analysis (fragile/robust/antifragile).

Integration of Ethical Values

Systemic Equity: If economic systems naturally tend to inequality (power law), what ethical intervention (taxation, RBU) is necessary?
Moral Hazard: Is it ethical for banks to be «fragile» and take risks, knowing that they will be bailed out?

STEM Disciplines and Skills

Science: Quantum physics (superposition, entanglement, decoherence), quantum algorithms (Shor, Grover - conceptual).
Technology: Programming (IBM Quantum Composer, Qiskit - basic), quantum simulators.
Engineering: Quantum hardware engineering (qubits, cryogenics - conceptual), cybersecurity.
Mathematics: Linear algebra (vectors, matrices), complex numbers (basic).


Critical Thinking: What problems can a quantum computer solve that a classical one cannot?
Creativity: Explain a qubit (in superposition) using an analogy (spinning coin).

Hands-on activities

  • Quantum Programming (IBM Composer): Use the «IBM Quantum Composer» (drag and drop graphical interface) to build a simple quantum circuit (e.g. a Hadamard gate to create superposition, or a CNOT for entanglement).
  • Simulation of Grover's Algorithm: Use a simple simulator to understand how Grover's algorithm can «find» an item in a cluttered database faster than a classical search.
  • Discussion: Post-Quantum Cryptography (PQC): Investigate how Shor's (quantum) algorithm will break current cryptography (RSA). Discuss the urgency of migrating to «Post-Quantum Cryptography».
Hybrid/Remote Adaptation (IBM Composer): It is a free web platform. Students can build their circuits and share snapshots of their results.
IBM Quantum Composer (web), Qiskit (Python/Colab), algorithm simulators (web).

Formative Evaluation

  • Functional quantum circuit in IBM Composer (with explanation).
  • Explanation of Grover's algorithm (comparative).
  • Argumentative essay on the urgency of PQC.

Integration of Ethical Values

Quantum Arms Race: Which nation will break cryptography first? What are the risks to global security?
Access and Equity: Who will have access to this technology and will it create a «quantum divide»?

STEM Disciplines and Skills

Science: Biology (swarming behavior: ants, bees), complex systems (emergence).
Technology: Programming (Python, NetLogo), multi-agent simulation.
Engineering: Robotics (design of simple and cheap robots), swarm algorithms (e.g. particle cluster optimization).
Mathematics: Statistics (task distribution), network modeling.


Critical (Systemic) Thinking: How can very simple local rules (e.g. «avoid the neighbor», «follow the one in front») lead to complex global behavior (a swarm)?
Collaboration: Program a «swarm» where each student is an «agent» following rules.

Hands-on activities

  • Swarm Simulation (NetLogo): Use NetLogo models (e.g. «Ants», «Flocking») to experiment with local rules and see how the global behavior of the swarm changes.
  • «Enjambre Humano» (Unplugged): Students act as «robots» on the playground. Each must follow 3 simple rules (e.g., «stay 1m away from others», «move toward the group average»). See if they «flock».
  • Design of «SwarmBots»: Design (conceptual or with simple robots such as mBots) a swarm for a task: e.g. «search for survivors» in a disaster, «clean up a spill».
Hybrid/Remote Adaptation (NetLogo): Perfect activity for NetLogo (web). Students can record videos of their simulations and analyze the emerging behavior.
NetLogo (web), Python (Colab, Mesa), videos (KiloBots, Festo).

Formative Evaluation

  • NetLogo lab report (rules vs. emergency).
  • Analysis of the «human swarm».
  • SwarmBot« mission design proposal.

Integration of Ethical Values

Emerging Consciousness: If a swarm becomes sufficiently complex, could it be «conscious»? How would we know?
Swarm Weapons: The ethics of autonomous «swarm drones» in warfare.

STEM Disciplines and Skills

Science: Cognitive science, philosophy (theory of mind), data science (AI scaling).
Technology: AI (LLMs, Agent models), AI Safety.
Engineering: Software engineering (interpretable AI, «black boxes»).
Mathematics: Logic (value formalization), game theory (AI vs. AI).


Digital Literacy: Differentiate between «narrow» AI (ANI), «general» AI (AGI) and «superintelligent» AI (ASI).
Critical Thinking: Analyze the «Alignment Problem» - how do we tell an IGA what we «really» want?

Hands-on activities

  • Experiment: «Clip Maximizer» (Unplugged): Simulate a simple AI with a goal (e.g. «make paper clips»). Discuss how, if it becomes super-intelligent, it could logically convert all resources (including humans) into paper clips.
  • Black Box Audit (Conceptual): Discuss how we would audit an AI that makes decisions (e.g. medical, legal) if we cannot understand «why» (Interpretability).
  • Debate: Accelerate or Pause? Investigate and discuss the «e/acc» (effective accelerationism) vs. «decel» (deceleration/pause) positions in AGI research.
Hybrid/Remote Adaptation (Debate): Use Kialo for a structured, asynchronous debate on «Accelerate vs. Pause», allowing students to research and add arguments.
Kialo (web), articles (Wait But Why, Nick Bostrom), Google Gemini.

Formative Evaluation

  • Reflective writing on the «Clip Maximizer» and alignment.
  • Proposal of an AI «audit» method.
  • Argumentative essay (Accelerate vs. Pause).

Integration of Ethical Values

Existential Risk (x-Risk): Discuss AI as a possible «Big Filter» and our responsibility to the long-term future (Longtermism).
Human Values: How do we «encode» morality, compassion and human values in an AI?

STEM Disciplines and Skills

Science: Physics (propulsion (ion, EmDrive, solar sails), astrophysics, exoplanetology).
Technology: Simulators (Kerbal Space Program - advanced), data analysis (SETI@home - concept).
Engineering: Aerospace engineering (interstellar mission design - conceptual).
Mathematics: Drake equation, special relativity (time dilation - conceptual).


Creativity: Propose a novel solution to the Fermi Paradox.
Critical (Systemic) Thinking: Analyze the variables of the Drake Equation. What is the «bottleneck» variable?

Hands-on activities

  • Calculation of the Drake Equation: In groups, investigate and assign values (optimistic and pessimistic) to each variable of the Drake Equation. Calculate and compare the results.
  • Interstellar Mission Design (Conceptual): Design a mission to Proxima Centauri. Choose a propulsion type (e.g. «laser sail», «fusion») and calculate the travel time.
  • Debate: Solutions to the Fermi Paradox: Each group defends a solution (e.g. «Zoo Hypothesis», «The Great Filter», «We are alone», «We can't see them»).
Hybrid/Remote Adaptation (Drake Equation): Use a collaborative spreadsheet (Google Sheets) for each group to enter their variables and automatically calculate the results.
Kerbal Space Program, Google Sheets, NASA Exoplanet Archive, Stellarium (web).

Formative Evaluation

  • Drake Equation spreadsheet (with justification of variables).
  • Interstellar mission proposal.
  • Argumentative essay on the Fermi Paradox.

Integration of Ethical Values

METI« protocol (Messaging ET): Should we actively send messages into space, or is it better to «listen» (SETI) and remain silent?
Intellectual Humility: Accept the limits of our knowledge about the universe.

STEM Disciplines and Skills

Science: Advanced research methodology (experimental design, rigorous statistical analysis).
Technology: Programming (original software development), version control (Git/GitHub).
Engineering: Prototyping (hardware/software), technical writing (patent documentation).
Mathematics: Statistical analysis (hypothesis testing), predictive modeling.


Collaboration: «Peer review» of other teams' work prior to presentation.
Critical (Systemic) Thinking: Produce an original work (a paper or a prototype) that provides new knowledge or a novel solution.

Hands-on activities

  • Track 1 (Research): «Publication in ArXiv»: Conduct a complete original research (based on a previous unit), write a technical paper in LaTeX format and publish it on ArXiv (or a similar scholarly server).
  • Track 2 (Engineering): «Patent Application»: Develop a novel invention or software, perform a «prior art search» (Google Patents) and draft a provisional patent application (PPA).
  • 11th Grade Research Symposium: Present and defend the paper or patent before a panel of judges (teachers, professionals, alumni) in conference format.
Hybrid/Remote Adaptation (Research): Use Overleaf (collaborative LaTeX in the cloud) to write the paper and GitHub for the code. Presentations are made by videoconference.
Overleaf (LaTeX), GitHub, Google Colab, Google Patents, ArXiv.org.

Formative Evaluation

  • Quality and originality of the ArXiv paper (rubric).
  • Quality and feasibility of the patent application (heading).
  • Oral defense at the symposium.

Integration of Ethical Values

Academic Integrity and Authorship: Who goes first in the paper? What constitutes an intellectual contribution?
«Publish or Perish: Discuss the pressure in academia to publish.
Intellectual Property: The debate between «patenting» (protecting) and «publishing» (sharing) knowledge.

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