Archive for the ‘education’


A New Year

I have started a new year of web design classes at school.  This semester I am teaching three levels (Web1, Web2, Web3).  We have also added a new online grading program (GradeQuick) which has taken some getting used to after using Teacherease.

 I have noticed that I have some serious writers this year.  A majority of my students have gotten right into blogging and they are writing a ton of entries.  I have to be careful that I don’d spend all day reading them.  560 entries in the first week!

 And yet, much is up in the air.  I read about other teachers making their plans.  But I have to wait.  I know where I want to go, I just haven’t decided how to get there yet.  I know that thinkquest is on the horizon, and Lulu, and probably making Google mash-ups.  How and when that will fit–we shall see.

Warlick

David Warlick gave the opening address to our school system today.  It was the same presentation that I saw at CECA last year about how to redfine literacy.  Seeing it for the second time was interesting because of David’s idea of conversations.  I have been reading so much since that presentation 10 months ago and following his blog.  I know the “backstory” about his information which changed how I processed the presentation the second time.  Already two conversations were started with me about learning more about these topics as I walked back to SHS.  Should be fun.

I need to work hard to systematically introduce a lot of these tools.  I am definately using Lulu this year and need to work on del.icio.us and aggregators with the kids.  Lots to do…

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Warlick Approaches…

David Warlick is heading to Connecticut to give our opening address next Tuesday.  I heard David last Fall as I began teaching these new classes and he certainly pushed me in a certain direction.  The blogging we started in our classes was very productive from a quantity standpoint (16,000 entries!!). 

 That is a huge amount of data and assessment for a teacher to absorb.  But I really think I had a deep understanding of each of my students because of this writing (and best of all–its still there for sharing, not in the dumpster like paper assessments!).  As I approach the new year I am becoming more and more focused on my “UBD” concepts and I truly have little idea of the “what” that I will be teaching as things are coming out so fast (Lulu? Weebly? Zoho?).  I know exposure to these tools is a huge void I need to fill and through that exposure I hope to foster inquiry, debate, and awareness of the world.

As a music teacher the best skill I developed was making connections with experts.  These tools I use in my new field of web design enable to me to connect with people I have never met.  David and I communicate by email/blog/wiki on a fairly regular basis (mainly for him to fix bugs that my kids create in the classblogmeister), but I would really value 15-20 minutes of discussion with him.  I find it interesting that while the quantity (like our 16,000 entries) have greatly increased we still need to improve the quality.  That’s the task for this year.

 I can’t wait to hear the reaction of our staff.  Should be interesting….

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Communication

This evolution of correspondence may make the memo even more important. If the idea/thought has crossed the barrier from email to real paper it may carry more weight. We know that the volume of information we create now is astounding. Any system can get bogged down in paper, thought, data, complaints, invoices, emails, etc… As I think about this process I wondered if a system’s most important task as it strives for efficiency is to come to consensus on how stakeholders will communicate. How will ideas be labeled “important” or “please read carefully” or “I really care about this” or “just an idea…”?

Learning

Learning is a change of behavior through experience.  The three main categories of learning theory (behaviorism, cognitive, connectivism) have different assumptions about the process of learning.  Each theory has implications for school leaders, however connectivism has the most implications for the digital age.

Learning Theory

There are three major categories of learning theory.  Behaviorism makes three assumptions about learning.  First, observable behavior is more important than understanding internal workings of the mind.  Second, behavior is changed by specific stimuli and responses.  Third, learning occurs through behavior change.  Cognitive theory focuses on the internal workings of the mind.  Learning is a series of inputs that are managed and coded into different parts of the brain.  Knowledge is viewed as specific paths towards coding and recalling information in the subjects mind.  Connectivism theory believes learning occurs in a network of social interactions between individuals and organizations or institutions.  Knowledge is held by the group and the individual learns to tap into the network when needed.  Access to knowledge is more important than the knowledge held by the individual (“Hello, Google!”).

Implications for School Leaders

Learning theory has a direct impact on the vision a school leader has.  Many students and educators believe learning is not occurring unless the teacher is talking and the student is quiet.  A paper and pencil test is the only way to truly assess learning.  Curriculum must be proscriptive and consistent across classrooms.

      Is there another way?  Is the way children learn evolving faster than they how they are taught?  Many educational leaders believe that the “digital natives” may be leaving traditional school systems behind.  A district in the U.K. just abolished their traditional schools and opened up Learning Centers.  At these learning centers students are given tasks to perform or goals to achieve.  Resources are provided, teacher guidance can be utilized, yet the students are expected to form their own networks to find the knowledge and gain the skills needed to move up in level.  Very much like the video games students are used to.  Leaders in this school have applied connectivism theory to the structure of their school.

Curriculum in a school like this is constantly evolving.  A connectivist leader believes learning is “about the pipe, not what is in the pipe”.  These leaders view traditional content (the 50 state capitals, memorizing the periodic table, etc…) as less important than the social skills and problem solving skills needed to gain and retrieve knowledge.  Assessments in this school are performance based, allowing individual growth models to develop.

Standards for school leaders require a school leader to encourage a research based approach to school leadership.  By fostering a climate of inquiry, developing a network of support, and providing access to resources an instructional leader can approach the ideals of connectivism.  Through this connection a leader can then incorporate the best aspects of all learning theories as a vision for school leadership is implemented.

Gaming

I heard about the Redistricting Game on NPR this morning and have spent a few hours checking it out.  Very well done!  Schools spend so much money on textbooks and I hope they start directing some of that money towards things like this.

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Summer

I am taking two courses this summer: Curriculum and Learning Theory.  This will complete my courses for my administrative certificate.  Next year is my internship year.

 I have been reading a lot about change this week from Scott McLeod.  I also wonder how much change is possible in today’s climate.  As I reflect on the courses I take I realize that while the content might change year to year the delivery is almost the same as it has been for decades (paper-discussion-exam-group work).  Administrators and teachers are rarely given the opportunity to learn in an interactive-global-visual manner.  Is it impossible to think that our major universities could not develop collaborative projects for administrative students that connect students on a global stage, much like the horizon project?

A few years back our state added a technology portfolio to the requirements for the administrative certificate.  It is basic stuff (insert chart into email, etc..) but it is OLD stuff.  No blogs, podcasts, wikis.  Much of its content is largely irrelevant today (list-serves?).  Can a large bureaucracy adapt to change?  Can a school? 

If I teach web design next year I have a good idea of my objectives.  But I have almost no idea what my tools will be.  Tools are coming out so fast.  The need to be fluent in google maps, weebly, wiki technology, and basic programming seems to be growing.  How do I set up an environment where the newest technology has an opportunity to flourish and be tested?

So, as Scott says, is the knowledge of change possibly the most important skill in the modern educational environment?

Internet

I think most internet use policies in schools have this phrase “the use of the internet is a privilege, not a right”.  Students can lose internet privileges.  I am sure there are students who lose or damage books.  I don’t think that they lose their reading privileges.

I haven’t quite been able to get my head around this.  I know these policies were written in a time when internet use was less relevant.  But still….

Are there more modern policies out there that people could share?

Whats Next?

I wonder what the average “hooked-in” rate is in most schools.  I think 80% of the teachers are hooked in to the internet 80% of the day.  Often that is a computer in the background where they check email every 30-40 minutes, do attendance, look up a student question, etc…

What is the percentage for students?  Maybe 20% of students hooked in 20% of the time?  Would teachers go crazy if they were only allowed to use a computer once a week or so?

Tech Fair

We have been preparing for the year end Tech Fair at our school.  As this is my first year at SHS I really have no idea what to expect.  I do know that the Board of Education members visit along with some parents.  I do know how to perform, however.  So we are pulling out all the stops.  Instead of signs pointing the way we reserved three laptops that will play student created Flash movies saying “Go this way!”.

We don’t have web server space at our school, a situation that proved difficult at the beginning of the year has largely become irrelevant.  This weekend I read about internet start-ups in NewsWeek.  So on Friday we tried out weebly.  Weebly offers a seriously easy WYSIWYG editor and its free.  It looks like any professionally created page.

 This obviously has huge implications for curriculum.  You can now blog, publish (Lulu), and have your own website. My students just took a year of web design so they were able to start their pages very fast.  But I think any third grader could do this.

Check out our pages as they develop.  The assignment for the tech fair is listed there as well.

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