Author: Tracy Rosen

  • Conversations in edublogging


    Image: Conversation by thehighschoolchick made available on flickr with a creative commons license.

    Lately I have been voraciously reading and learning from different edubloggers. I am seeing my passion for authentic learning for our kids (and myself!) reflected in their posts. Here are just a few of the posts that have turned my crank in the past few days:

    Connected Curriculum – Relevant Reality on Durff’s Blog

    Getting Lucky and Making Change on Thinking Allowed

    School Administrators are Gatekeepers on Back by the Bell

    The Rules of Engagement on Notes from the Ridge

    Curriculum 2.0 on MEDagogy

    Failing Schools Pass Students
    on TeacherJay

    Important Questions about School Leader Preparation on LeaderTalk

    And I’m going to include this one, which is one of mine, because I’m enjoying the conversation that is happening in the comments.

    How does Technology fit with Learning? on Leading from the Heart

    Thanks to all you edubloggers who help to keep my mind working and my passion strong around teaching and learning.

    My wish is that the conversations continue!

    Powered by ScribeFire.

  • Getting to know us bloggers :)

    Kevin has ‘tagged’ me in this blogger ice breaker ;)

    I like the idea of getting to know the people in my blogger community as people and not just bloggers.

    Copied straight from Kevin who, in turn, blatantly and defiantly ‘ripped’ straight from Graham’s post:

    Kevin has tagged me so here goes. Cut and paste and insert my
    facts. I like [Graham’s] alteration to Rule 3 – so the same applies
    here. (I won’t leave a comment informing of the tag. If you’re one of
    the lucky 8, you can read it here or in your choice of aggregator.)
    First, the Rules:

    1. Post these rules before you give your facts
    2. List 8 random facts about yourself
    3. At the end of your post, choose (tag) 8 people and list their names, linking to them
    4. Leave a comment on their blog, letting them know they’ve been tagged

    Eight facts about Tracy Rosen

    1. When I was 5 my family moved to New York City and I changed my name to Harmonica Goldfish. Some people still call me that.
    2. I am a bit of a school junky – I have a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in Art History and Painting from Concordia University in Montreal, a Bachelor of Education in Elementary Education from McGill University in Montreal, and a Master of Arts degree in Human Systems Intervention from Concordia.
    3. I recently got a new bike and I love it so much it is in my living room :)
    4. I will eat food that is still (technically) alive but please don’t give me any green peppers.
    5. I lived in Ichon and Seoul, South Korea for 2 separate years and in Beijing, China for 6 months.
    6. I have been studying kung fu (sil lum hung gar) for the past 15 years and started when I was 24…do the math if you like :)
    7. I recently became an aunt to twins. Unfortunately they live in San Francisco while I live in Montreal.
    8. I like to listen to very random types of music in the same sitting (Eric B. and Rakim followed by Neil Young followed by Gotan Project followed by Matisyahu followed by Amir Diab) and dance and sing to them all as if no one is watching

    Here are my 8 … tag! You’re it!

    1. Keren Fyman
    2. Scott McLeod
    3. Barbara
    4. Dennis Harter
    5. Marg O’Connell
    6. Topher
    7. Joey
    8. Allison Rosen

    Powered by ScribeFire.

  • Understanding the machine

    Image: machine-free by jrtcollector-Sassy Bella Melange, made available by a creative commons license on flickr

    All teachers need to get on to letting students create bigger and better things with them — whether the teacher understands the machine or not. Topher

    Now THERE is the rub. The past few years in education has marked a transition from teacher controlled environments to student-centered ones where teachers need to give up the traditional sense of authority and control for an increased sense of learning and authenticity in the classroom.

    Project-based learning and learning that uses technology is scary for a teacher who doesn’t know about it. Traditionally, a teacher had all the answers. That is no longer true. Case in point – I taught the History of Quebec and Canada for the first time only about 4 years ago. I taught the course because 18 students had been targeted as needing resource support in order to have a chance at passing. I was the high school’s resource coordinator at the time and, as a joke, suggested I teach the course if so many students were going to need resource…and so I did. I hadn’t really thought about that History course in the 20 years since I had taken it (and passed with a glorious 54…). I was determined that the same thing would not happen to the students in my charge.

    So, even though I did not really ‘understand the machine’ I agreed to teach these students. I taught them how to learn using various technologies, from print to digital, with history as the context. It was certainly challenging – imagine the task of making the history of Quebec and Canada come alive to a majority Native (Mohawk from Kanahwake) classroom. Not to mention that my students had been identified as struggling ones. The secret to their success – 16 of the 18 passed that course on the first try, the provincial average is much lower than that – was that I saw through the material to the kids. I identified their needs, their learning styles, their interests and I spent the year frantically finding technologies that would meet all of those things, that would meet these kids.

    In order to do that I had to give up a certain sense of control, actually no. I did not give up control. I shifted it. Rather than being a holder of knowledge, I became a manager of learning. In fact, I had to be more on top of things to allow this to happen. I needed to create rubrics with clearly identified goals that all of my students were expected to meet. I needed to…well, you all probably know the many layers of things I needed to do, the point is that in order for this kind of a thing to work the role of the teacher needs to change and change can be very scary.

    Dennis wrote, in a recent comment,

    Justin and I are working on putting together some curricular attempts to answer those questions that you ask. An embedded tech curriculum based on thinking and collaborating and analyzing and creating and making decisions that can work alongside (and perhaps someday over) a curriculum based on knowledge content.

    My wish for this project – which I think is central to where education needs to go – is that as much thought and care – if not more – is put into teacher support.

    We need to support teachers as they go through these transitions, to support teachers as they teach in ambiguous times, to shift the emphasis from teaching history to kids to teaching kids how to learn history or math or geography or whatever. I’m not sure if we can really do that whether the teacher understands the machine or not my life would have been made MUCH easier if I hadn’t had to re-teach myself history that year, but I think that if we can teach teachers how and where to go for help in understanding the machine then we are doing a fabulous job.

    When I ask a teacher what they teach, the answer is usually a subject. I want that answer to shift from a subject to the subjects who are the most important of all – the students.

    technorati tags: , , , , ,

  • how does technology fit with learning?

    Image: Puzzle by edithbruck made available through a creative commons license on flickr.

    ” It is our goal in developing an integrated curriculum to ensure that the way students learn with technology agrees with the way they live with technology.”

    I love this goal – written by Dennis and cited by his colleague Justin.

    It marks a shift away from seeing technology as an extra layer to education, as something nice to know and separate from the ‘real business’ of learning (teaching) in schools.

    Justin asks these important questions:

    So what technology skills do students NEED to know?

    You ask 10 educators this question and they will give out 10 different answers.
    Terms like Power Point,Word, Dream Weaver, Web Search often appear in them.

    Should they not be replaced with with words like: Communicate, Write, Evaluate, and Think?

    That last bit heard me yell a resounding YES! at my computer screen. How does technology fit into education? It is embedded. I can no longer see it as a layer, to slip on or off of my curriculum as the mood stirs me. Kids live with technology. They experience much of their world through it. If I expect my students to succeed I need to teach with this in mind.

    Kids know how to use powerpoint. But do they know when? They know how to search for something on the web. But do they know how to analyze and synthesize their results? They know how to make web pages, but do they know how to create something pertinent and readable?

    And when they don’t know these basic technological skills, I show them to them in about 5 minutes (or better yet, I get a peer to show it to them) so that we can get on to the bigger business of communicating, writing, evaluating, and thinking.

    Kudos to Justin and Dennis for elaborating their goals and asking these pertinent questions…and thanks for sharing!

    technorati tags: , , , ,

    Powered by ScribeFire.

  • “Learning the way they’re living”

    The title is in quotes, because I lifted it from dharter’s blog, Thinking Allowed…who in turn quoted it from Pa. schools say high-school laptop program works so far, as a rebuttal against the NY Times article, Seeing No Progress, Some Schools Drop Laptops… (phew – that was complicated :))

    “They have laptops at home, iPods, cell phones … and then we have them open up a social-studies textbook and ask them to outline a chapter,” [Superintendent] Frantz said. “They’re not learning the way they’re living.”

    I tried to post a comment to this on Thinking Allowed, but it somehow did not work…so I’ll comment here instead :)

    I think that Superintendent Frantz understands the big picture completely when he says, “They’re not learning the way they are living”. This is true as a big idea and not only with regards to how or why technology is being used.

    In Reading Don’t Fix No Chevys by Michael Smith and Jeff Wilhelm they talk about how students (boys) are considered illiterate based on school standards, but they do read, for example manuals on Chevy fixing, when it is purposeful and relevant to their lives. What we need to do is find out what is relevant to their lives and make their learning in school as meaningful as possible based on that context, by creating connections so they can learn the way they live.

    As an educator that is what I am, a connection maker – between my students’ lives and the technologies I am teaching them to use: laptops, web 2.0 tools, books – whatever the technology is I need to make it relevant within their contexts, not mine.

    So yes, throw laptops out the window, BUT ONLY if you are not ready to show teachers how to make connections between their students and the technology, because if a teacher can do that…WOW, you’d be throwing a powerful learning tool out the window.

    Powered by ScribeFire.