Tag: teaching

  • Bridging gaps. In cultures. In my ideas.

    (brainstorming. getting closer to what I want to examine… see v.1 and v.2 for context)

    Bridging theory and practice.

    Building bridges. Sun rising. Strong metaphors for change in education. Photo taken by dogra, made available on flickr through a cc license. Click image to view source.
    Bridges. Sun rising. Strong metaphors for change in education. Photo taken by dogra, made available on flickr through a cc license. Click image to view source.

    There is a lot of theory around education, around the best way(s) to teach children.

    Often theory is presented to teachers as an end-product, in the form of curricular reforms or technological reforms that are expected, at times mandated, to be used in the classroom.

    Researchers question – why aren’t our findings being transferred into practice?

    Teachers question – why are we being asked to do something new, something else again?

    Policy makers question – why are teachers being so difficult?

    How can we change these questions?

    How can we bridge the gaps?

    I believe it comes down to

    competing value systems between the different stakeholders that create

    • difficult relationships
    • fragmented culture
    • unstable ground

    The feedback I received from my doctoral seminar group and from Chris is helping me to bridge the gaps in my ideas. Interestingly, as I do that I’m also discovering that my ideas are about bridging gaps.

    Time to read, think, write.

    I’ll keep you posted.

  • reiterations

    One common feature in a lot of tree architecture, and the starting point for Halle’s starting discovery, is reiteration. That’s when there are several copies of one of the architectural models within a single tree, as when a branch looks like a seedling, but growing out of the tree rather than the ground. Click for source.
    One common feature in a lot of tree architecture, and the starting point for Halle’s starting discovery, is reiteration. That’s when there are several copies of one of the architectural models within a single tree, as when a branch looks like a seedling, but growing out of the tree rather than the ground. Click for source.


    That tree is rife with reiteration. Reminds me of this process of knocking out a solid dissertation proposal. I presented my ideas tonight – I’m grateful for the process my university offers me, of receiving feedback from my peers and doctoral seminar professor as I go through the development stage of this proposal. I’m also grateful for, and I mentioned it this morning but I’ll say it again, Chris Parson‘s feedback. He’s been instrumental in helping me to refine my thoughts after v.1 and into v.2.

    My presentation is done, for now :) I presented this evening and have a lot to think about now. Lots of good feedback, that I’ll add in another post tomorrow. Most of it was about continuing to refine what exactly I’m looking for.

    Not sure if refining what I’m looking for is what I need to be doing… but I’ll return to that idea in the next iteration. There is something that does not sit right with me about deciding too much in advance. Again, I need to come back to it.

    Initial impressions? I’m slightly more overwhelmed than I was before I presented. What seemed to almost be coming into focus exploded with the different possibilities offered to me during the seminar. I am also rather exhausted, which is why I’m going to return to this after a sleep or two. And see what new iteration will grow from my trunk.

    Here’s the visual presentation that illustrated my little chat.


    Uploaded on authorSTREAM by TracyRosen

    The video that belongs on slide 5, under the heading Music and Life can be viewed at the bottom of this post –> How is this Normal?

  • Love and Affection. Learning. Report Cards. Fritz Redl

    I originally posted these quotes (see bottom of post) over a year ago. They resonate deeply within me.

    Love and Affection by Today is a Good Day on Flickr. Click image to view source.
    Love and Affection by Today is a Good Day on Flickr. Click image to view source.

    Love and affection can not be bartering tools. They just need to be. I believe they are conditions for learning, for real learning to happen. But what is real learning? It’s learning beyond the test. Learning beyond the classroom. It’s collaborating with others to move forward in whatever you might be working on – for students it can be learning about work ethic and motivation by spending extra time to make sure you are on the right track, to make sure you will be successful. For teachers it can be the same thing when we spend extra time collaborating with each other and with our students to make sure we are all successful.

    I want my students to believe that my love and affection is there whether they do well or not. Of course I want them to succeed, but I certainly hope they do not seek me out after school in order to ‘win’ love and affection. I hope they seek me out because they sense the caring and because they want to succeed for themselves.

    It’s report card time. I have a love/hate relationship with these times of the year. Because I have some students who are going to fail this semester. At least, they are going to fail on paper. But these same students have made such amazing advances compared to where they have come from. Advances that have nothing to do with the number that just might crush them on that government mandated piece of paper that reports on content, not process called the report card.

    I’m off to battle the numbers.
    later.


    Image: Fritz Redl found on Milestones: A Timeline of Wheelock College

    “The children must get plenty of love and affection
    whether they deserve it or not: they must be assured of the basic quota of
    happy, recreational experiences whether they seem to have it coming or not.
    In short, love and affection, as well as the granting of gratifying life
    situations, cannot be made the bargaining tools of educational or even
    therapeutic motivation, but must be kept tax-free as minimal parts of the
    youngsters’ diet, irrespective of the problems of deservedness” (1952).

    “Boredom will always remain the greatest enemy of school disciplines. If
    we remember that children are bored, not only when they don’t happen to
    be interested in the subject or when the teacher doesn’t make it
    interesting, but also when certain working conditions are out of focus
    with their basic needs, then we can realize what a great contributor to
    discipline problems boredom really is. Research has shown that boredom
    is closely related to frustration and that the effect of too much
    frustration is invariably irritability, withdrawal, rebellious
    opposition or aggressive rejection of the whole show.” (1966)

    Powered by ScribeFire.

    (originally Published on: June 3, 2007 at 8:16 pm)

  • Carnival of Education

    My inbox has been very active of late, with submissions to this week’s Carnival of Education.

    Carnival at Annandale, Virginia made available on flickr via a CC license. Click on image to view source.
    Carnival at Annandale, Virginia made available on flickr via a CC license. Click on image to view source.

    As carnival host, I have control of the content and form of this week’s post and so I have made the decision to leave out the numerous postings I read that are either trying to sell a product/service that I felt did not have to do with education, or are providing a service that rubs me the wrong way, such as the selling of term papers ;)

    So…without further ado… except to point out that the posts are organized solely by order of reception…

    Let’s do this thing!

    — Andrew Bernardin writes about the need for scientific validity:
    Why Tests Are Essential posted at the evolving mind.

    — Rachel Rambach sings us a social story/song she wrote for one of her students:
    Marissa’s Guitar posted at Listen and Learn. She even offers to send you a copy of the story if you contact her. Great stuff!

    — Bogusia Gierus writes about the importance of not giving up as well as the lessons we learn as teachers:
    Dealing With Frustration – The Spaghetti and Marshmallow Towers posted at Nucleus Learning.

    — Scott McLeod raises my teacher’s blood pressure a touch by asking:
    Can a computer lecture better than a human? posted at Dangerously Irrelevant. There are many dimensions to this question, go take a look!

    — Lorri begins her post with this quote that echoes my own concern for the future:

    It scares me to know that I will be raising a family in a society were gangs are so prevalent and out of control. Knowing the influence that gangs have on teens and the violence, drugs and general lack of respect they have for society scares me to death. -Bree

    Dear Mr. President: American students write to our future president about what concerns them posted at the New York City Education Examiner

    — Denise offers a boatload of free math teaching resources:
    More Free Math Resources posted at Let’s Play Math!. As a first time math teacher (I usually teach English, History, and Ethics) I’ve subscribed to the site!

    — Amy Smith writes about a topic that is dear to my own heart:
    Emotional Intelligence posted at Kids Love Learning.

    — Skyler Reep tackles an interesting question when he asks whether self-directed ongoing learning will trump degree programs in the future:
    Take Control of Your Continuing Education posted at Skyler Reep’s Blog.

    — Andrea is in the thick of marking exams, but still managed to make me giggle by sharing some of the student responses, such as

    Steps in planting roses:
    … add compost, manure or soil condiments (amendments)
    … apply orgasmic mulch (organic)

    Moldy bagels posted at Andrea’s Buzzing About:.

    — Steve Spangler shares a video and a post about a special science teacher and his class:
    Don Cameron is Mad About Science posted at Steve Spangler’s Blog.

    — OKP has an existential crisis and asks, What do you think is the purpose of high school?
    Existential Crisis #1 posted at Line 46.

    — Matthew Ladner exposes something previously unknown to me – the benefits of illegal private schooling in India, Ghana, Nigeria, and Kenya:
    Black Market Private Schooling in the Third World posted at Jay P. Greene’s Blog. Makes me want to think of alternatives to some of our own public school crises and reminds me that it needs to take a village, not a commission or board, to raise a child.

    — Money Answer Guy asks a question I’m sure is on the mind of some parents:
    Should You Pay for Your Children’s College? posted at The Money Answer Guy.

    — Trisha Wagner also asks a parenting question, this time directed to work at home mothers:
    WAHM?s- Are your kids in daycare or at home? posted at Empowering Mom

    — As I sit here, sick at home, I run through Pat’s list of how she prepares for a substitute and compare it to mine:
    Preparing for a Substitute posted at Successful Teaching.

    — tweenteacher writes about anti-semitism in schools:
    ?Hit a Jew? Day – Oh joy. posted at tweenteacher.com.

    — Dereck and I are both INFPs. What the heck does that mean? Find out by reading his post:
    Your Comprehensive Guide to the MBTI (Myers-Briggs Type Indicator) Personality Test posted at I Will Not Die.

    — Americans may be interested in what Laura Varlas writes concerning who will be the next to lead the US Department of Education:
    ASCD Inservice: America’s Next Top Ed. Sec.: Sebelius? posted at ASCD Inservice.

    — Steph W. compares the process of learning how to ride a horse to the scaffolding process he goes through as a homeschooling parent:
    Horseback Riding and Writing posted at The Life Without School Community Blog.

    — I love that Carol Richtsmeier writes about the things you should never learn to do so you won’t have to do them! I never learned how to work those diaper things. You see, my nephew’s visit last summer coincided with a nasty tummy problem…
    Scanners, Mowing Lawns & Things You Just Shouldn’t Learn How To Do posted at Bellringers.

    — Oldandrew writes about the “Special Needs Racket” and student responsibility:
    The Blameless. Part 3: The Afflicted posted at Scenes From The Battleground.

    — Nancy Flanagan writes, ‘We all lose when kids perceive politics and voting as dirty and dangerous’ in this commentary on children’s perception of the voting process:
    One Vote Samba posted at Teacher in a Strange Land.

    — Matthew Needleman reviews the K12 Online conference and is ‘…in awe of the thinking, planning, and creating that has gone into creating the K12 Online presentations’:
    K12 Online: Week One Review posted at Creating Lifelong Learners.

  • Golden shovels and crayons

    Look at the beautiful shovel!
    Look at the beautiful shovel!

    Have I ever mentioned how much I love Michael Doyle? His science class must be one of the funnest places to be for a student.

    I’ve been writing forever on my wariness of technology as the golden egg, about how digital literacy is but a means to an end, not the doorway to a utopic state of education.

    And Michael sums it all up better than I ever have.

    Here you go, from The Cost of Tools by Michael Doyle.

    I love toolboxes, I have several in my basement. If you want to make me happy, buy me a toolbox for my birthday, loaded with tools.

    If you want to disappoint me, however, buy me a gold-plated heavy duty shovel and expect me to use it on my next project, no matter what that project is.

    and….

    The best teachers I know can squeeze their lessons into just about any new technology thrown down from on high. The best teachers I know can teach the same lessons just as well using a crayon on the back of a paper towel.