Author: Tracy Rosen

  • Who are teachers?

    “Today’s topic…self-construction”

    KRS-One **audio from 1vibe.net, April 22, 2008

    7 months ago (though I just discovered it) Clay Burrell wrote On Leaving Teaching to Become a Teacher:

    More and more I wonder: is school a good place for teachers who want to make a difference in the lives of their students, and to the future of the world? Is there a way to leave the daily farce of gradebooks, attendance sheets, tests, corporate and statist curriculum, homework assignments, grade-licking college careerist ā€œstudentsā€ (and parents), fear of parents and administrators, and fear of inconvenient socio-political truths – and at the same time, to make a far more meaningful impact on the lives of the young?

    Iā€™m thinking yes. Iā€™m thinking, moreover, obviously. Iā€™m not sure how much longer I want to work for schools. Iā€™d so much rather teach.

    Coinciding with that discovery was 2 others:

    • this video, reminding me of KRS-One’s moniker ‘The Teacher’.Ā  (originally found here)
    • Jeff Wasserman‘s article from 1999, From Klezmer to Clerks, where he wrote:

      Everyone has a story, every individual and every culture.

      Tell yours.

      Tell it in words or in sounds or in images or squishy things to touch. Tell it to yourself, or tell it to others. Be creative and unafraid. You know what to do.

    But really, there are no coincidences.

    My mission as a teacher has to do with teasing out the stories, with helping people find their stories – the most positive ones they can.

    Like Clay, I don’t think that teaching is relegated to the classroom. In fact most real content that affects peoples lives is not found in the classroom, it’s found in the experiences that make up each of our stories.

    Example: KRS-One is truly a teacher. He inspires to create a positive story.

    “Today’s topic – self-construction”

    “… This is an opportunity for you to rise to your highest self. There it is.”

    I’m not going to tell you his story, watch the video up top, and you’ll get an idea of where those quotes come from.

    The point here, is that teachers are found all over.

    So why do I choose to teach in the classroom?

    Classroom teaching is a unique opportunity to help young people choose their direction and write their stories. It’s like living is research, and the classroom is the lab where we get to make sense of all that cool data.

    My job has so much more to do with helping kids organize the information that comes at them (the stories of the world) in a way that makes sense for them, then it does with teaching them the stories of the world, and so much more than it does with “…gradebooks, attendance sheets, tests, corporate and statist curriculum, homework assignments, grade-licking college careerist ā€œstudentsā€ (and parents), fear of parents and administrators, and fear of inconvenient socio-political truths…”

    Yeah, there’s some paperwork and politics. I keep my mind focused on student need and my core values of relationship and hope for the future, and the paperwork and politics don’t seem as important. Everything falls into place.

    Cause this is what I am supposed to be doing.
    It’s the best way I know to rise to my highest self, and to help others do the same.

    That’s why I teach.

  • I unlocked the key to Mysql and Php :)

    Saved by Now and Here on Flickr
    Image: Hallelujah by David Farrant found on flickr

    If you are reading this you must have landed here in the few minutes I am using to test my creation of a new database on the new server. kinda scary playing with mysql and php but I think I did it!

    about to publish…the real test…

    (This shoutout goes to ME!)

  • ShoutOut! To Kevin and his tri-voice/one person poem

    It was written a little while ago, but I only discovered it this morning – this magical poem by Kevin of Kevin’s Meandering Mind.

    Listen to it here:
    The Creator: A poem for three voices and one person (April 2007)

    And go read it here.

    Song for the Creator by Frederick McDonald
    Song for the Creator by Frederick McDonald. Image from imagiNATION where you can purchase this beautiful image as a card.

  • Wordling away :)

    Here’s a fun site to create instant tag clouds based on 3 different sets of criteria:

    • text you type in
    • url of a site with a feed
    • del.icio.us user name

    Here is one I created with this blog’s url:

    I see a few possibilities for this:

      • Seeing frequently used words in websites or various texts, written by or for students
      • Vocabulary words – a teacher could create a visual data mine for frequently misspelled or correctly spelled words to post in class
      • For fun because there is nothing wrong with doing things for fun :)

      I would like to see it embeddable…for now it seems to only be able to pop a tiny image into my blog (as you can (barely) see above.

      I discovered Wordle via TechnoSeeds. Thanks :)

    • An Essential Question for EdTech

      Integration

      Integration by me: I realized this painting was ‘done’ when I had integrated colours from the daffodil’s cup into the petals.

      Recently I wrote a post on digital literacy within the wider context of literacy and, in writing, touched on what I realize is central to my own teaching:

      an essential question for educators today is how do we integrate literacies in our students? and in ourselves?

      It is not enough – it really, really isn’t – to advocate for technology in the classroom because it looks good and because others say it is important. A reflective school leader – administrator, teacher, support staff, consultant – will start digging deeper for essential questions around student learning in relation to the use of technology, as well as apply those questions to their own learning.

      I use technology in my teaching because literacy is the central focus for me at all times. ā€œLiteracy is about being able to make sense of the world we live inā€ (Dennis Harter, in comment to my post) and my deepest desire as a teacher is that I help students to begin to achieve this, that I give them the tools with which they can make sense of their/our world.

      I use a mashup of communication tools in my teaching, from word processing, to podcasting, to text readers, to visual editors, to blogging, to wikis, to debate, to improv, to (perhaps the most important) simple conversation. I do this because each of these tools can help different students make sense of the vast amount of information that is available to them in different ways. This is essential because each of my students need the opportunity to discover the tools that work best for them and I recognize that these are not necessarily the tools that work best for me.

      If I did not use technology in my teaching I would be going against all that I stand for as a teacher.

      That being said, if I return to my essential question from above, I need to stress that using tech to improve literacy is only part of the picture, part of the system. Literacy is a complex system made up of many and diverse components.

      I am moving more toward thinking about how my job is really to assist students in integrating their literate selves. In doing so, I need to recognize and honour the role(s) played by different technologies in their learning and in my own. That is essential for me.

      (this post was inspired by this one)