The School

diigo

Map

teaching

June 02, 2008

Changing Schools

Exit Re-thinking how students learn and how teachers teach is not a new subject. Piaget influenced us to move toward student-centered learning in the 1970's and 80's. I remember taking education courses in the early 70's and also being heavily influenced by Ivan Illich, John Holt and Jonathan Kozol among others. I wanted my students to be self-directed, and I wanted to be the kind of teacher that created learning opportunities that meant something.
The reality is, though, my classroom management often took precedence over my teaching. Having to ensure 30 students were "getting it," I often fell back on tried methods of control: seats in a row, teacher in the front, "let me tell you what you need to know." And as educators, we all made many mistakes--remember open classrooms that changed the design but not the pedagogy? Sad.
Journalism, however, was a different story. With real-life application, student editors serving as mentors for other students, a monthly product (the newspaper), and an audience, the class became for me a vision of what learning and teaching could be. We took great pride that in 1988, our newspaper staff designed our paper with Pagemaker on one of the first Macs, long before our local paper moved to computer-assisted design!
I would constantly ask myself--how can I move this practice of learning to my English classes? I had moments that worked, but overall, I ended up back in the traditional role of teacher directing her students, and students spitting back whatever information I deemed important.
Fast forward to 2002, and my role as Director of Technology at an independent school about to embrace a 1:1 program, and suddenly I could see putting into practice all I believed about teaching. I believed the laptops would truly enable this paradigm shift that I had been unable to accomplish myself in a traditional classroom.
Ah, if only it were that easy.
Time management, differing philosophies, and lack of professional development all played into why our success was spotty. In classes where teachers saw the technology as transformative, the laptops enhanced student learning. In classes where teachers had little time to learn how to teach with technology or simply viewed the laptops as distractions (or had no laptops), fewer changes were seen.
This year, our Head of School asked me to resume my role as instructional tech coordinator, but he asked that I do it full time--with no distractions of other classes, managing of budgets, or technical hardware support.  With his support, I wanted to approach technology in terms of 21st century learning, as this was also the year the internet exploded with a wealth of opportunities for sharing and connecting for teachers and students.
What a year it has been. I've outlined many of our successes in earlier posts, and with teachers willing to take huge leaps of faith using some of the tools of student engagement, we've seen strong examples student-centered learning. I've learned much from our great faculty.
I hope next year's Powerful Learning Practice with Sheryl Nussbaum-Beach and Will Richardson will help take us to the next level. As Sheryl says, "the pace of change is going to demand us to unlearn and relearn."
Our school is also undertaking a shift in our schedule, one that will allow time between classes for students and teachers to meet, share, plan, work, and think. More reflective time for all--if it works as it should.
I am encouraged by discussions from Carolyn Foote here, Patrick Higgins here, and Antonio Viva here, and I am filled with a new enthusiasm, a belief that we can help students face a future of rapid change.This is a long post, but I also want to share some suggestions Viva lists in his post to "catapult innovative teaching and learning in the 21st century":

  1. Design rooms that are properly equipped and can function as flexible spaces to support different teaching modalities. Rooms should not focus on one method of teaching versus any other. Create rooms that are designed to meet different purposes.
  2. Rethink traditional scheduling practices - Rooms should be signed out and used as they are needed by a group of students and their teacher. Rather than continue to schedule classes as we currently do, consider creating teaching clusters where groups of teachers have access to these different rooms when they most need them.
  3. Create comfortable, well equipped and contemporary faculty work rooms. A teacher who has their own classroom finds it very easy to become isolated and close their door and teach. Making spaces available to teacher groups/teams where faculty can collaborate, obtain resources and materials, make phone calls and get snacks and good coffee, cold beverages and talk with one another can encourage colleagues to design and create innovative curriculum and teaching strategies with one another.

Much to think about. I love ending the year on a positive note.

Image:www.flickr.com/photos/44124472651@N01/47169667

April 13, 2008

A link to link moment

Linkphoto_2
Early this morning, I opened my Google Reader and linked from this to this, a history teacher's blog I hadn't read before.

As I read through some of Glen Wiebe's posts (and many are posts to which I'll return), this one about a new book caught my eye. I had been to Borders earlier in the day and almost purchased it.
(I was after presentation ideas in this book instead, and it deserves a separate post later.)
The 12 rules in Brain Rules provide "nice research and examples to explain how we interact with our environment and each other, especially how we as teachers can impact student learning," Wiebe says.

They are all fascinating statements, but this one in particular jumped out at me:

exploration EXPLORATION | Rule #12: We are powerful and natural explorers.

Next, I wanted to look something up in my Reader, and a link from Dana Huff took me to another great read, teacher Lisa Huff, who posted about a new tool, Moonfruit, which may be what I am looking for--a way to post student portfolios online.

When I finally decided to write a post about this serendipity, I went to grab a picture from Flickrcc and discovered you can now edit your pictures in Picnik from the front page!

Editpic_2

All in all, it's been a productive morning. And it's only 7:30 am!

Image: 'Morning Mist on the Dumoine II'
www.flickr.com/photos/17875539@N00/542306837

January 08, 2008

A new year, a change of heart

I was getting somewhat discouraged the weeks before break.
There was that student editorial in the school newspaper asking that teachers stop assigning so much work with technology. Then a few random comments about tech overload from teachers frustrated me. Finally, because exams and grades were around the corner,  people seemed too busy to even answer emails. I wondered if I had been taking the right approach in trying to motivate and encourage people to use technology as a strategy in their teaching.
But a break is a wonderful thing.
Today, our second day back, brought several teachers to my door asking for help with Voice Thread and Google Earth. An email I sent today announcing a PD opportunity for RSS and Google apps was answered with 5 teachers signing up --two weeks ahead of time. I had a great meeting with the student I am mentoring for senior exhibit. And the discussion I had with the head of our upper school about teaching and integrating technology left me feeling supported, excited, and energized.
Ok, then. Back to work everyone. We are on track!

Powered by ScribeFire.

November 17, 2007

Networking and name-calling

Name I recently started a ning network for Virginia independent school teachers, and within hours, my friend HIram pointed me to another network for independent school teachers in general. Demetri has done a great job that satisfies a clear need. I may end up spending more of my time there, as discussions about technology in teaching and learning are beginning.
Yesterday, someone talked about what we call ourselves, what our title means to other teachers. She advocated for taking  "tech" out of the title. I understand her thoughts, as I've been grappling with similar feelings at my school. How do people perceive technology coordinators? Sure we can fix printers and help find cool projects, but is there more?
I commented with this:

I still prefer teachers to see me as kind of teaching "coach," one who advocates for using technology to improve the way we all learn. I try to model the concept of lifelong learning; I know I've learned more in the past few months than I've learned in a long time, thanks to the connectivity of the internet and the proliferation of tools we use to learn.

That being said, I don't consider myself the expert. When I visit other teachers who are using technology so effectively, when I hear them engaging students, I am envious. I want to be a student in their class! I hope I model what I think works best--all of us learning together, working together, creating together.
So what's in a name?

October 26, 2007

Time to talk

Lips Sometimes it works, and sometimes it doesn't.
Because we are so limited by time constraints at my school, I decided to invite teachers to "conversations" every Thursday and Friday during lunch.
I envisioned a time to discuss broad topics such as: how do we learn? what role does technology play? what can we do to prepare our students for the future?
Thursday's group seemed to go well. Because the network was down, I couldn't show the video I wanted. Instead, we chatted about middle-schoolers who can't seem to focus for more than 5 minutes. On Friday, I had prepared an article and the network was back up, so I wanted to show the video, too. Instead of leading into the discussion, I tried to force a discussion about the article,which no one had had time to read. And then, I played the vid (Michael Wesch's latest). With barely 3 minutes, left, I tried to get feedback.
Arrrgghhh. Why do I feel the need to control? I want this to be a relaxing time, a few moments in the day for teachers to just talk, share ideas, learn something new.
Thanks to my friend Jennifer, who reminded me of my original intent for the group, I realized what had happened.
We'll start again next week.

August 17, 2007

From Concept to Classroom

Iqvmi I learn so much from the blogs I read. One of my favorites is written by Jennifer Dorman. She posts regularly about teaching and technology, and she finds the best links to research. This morning I found myself reading about the brain and then discovering all kinds of teaching resources here. Go visit and spend some time at New York's PBS website. Please.

August 16, 2007

Thinking about teaching....

Chris Lehmann, principal of the Science Leadership Academy, writes about Understanding By Design. See what he has to say about "covering" and "uncovering" the material.

August 01, 2007

You're telling me

"Americans recognize the importance of technology in reforming the nation's schools and making them relevant for the 21st century, a new survey suggests--but they disagree on how schools should impart key 21st-century skills to their students."

http://www.eschoolnews.com/news/showStoryRSS.cfm?ArticleID=7268


July 27, 2007

Answering the tough questions

Chris Lehman, a principal of the Science Leadership Academy, responded on his blog  Practical Theory  to some thoughts on another blog, and I thought they were worth repeating here:

But there also has to be a recognition that the stuff that was going on in 1996 and 1997 was small and grew far too slowly. We are now seeing a revolution because the ideas are spreading so much more quickly. Does that discount what has come before? No, absolutely not, but it doesn't change the power of now. After all, Marx was nowhere without the ideas of Hegel, right?

In the end, I do worry about the hype-factor with a lot of these tools... and that's why I do think it is incredibly important to keep asking "What's good" instead of "What's new?" It's also why it's so important to talk in terms of what we want to do, rather than the tools we want to use. Steve Dembo talked about this recently in his post: Shiny Happy Tools when he wrote:

So what does this mean for educators? Simply this: Don’t get married to the tools in your toolbox. A hammer is a hammer is a hammer. So what if you really like the steel one with the yellow handle? At some point that one might disappear and you better be ready to pick up a new one. Need to cut a board but can’t find a saw? Time to get creative my friend. If you are willing to concentrate on what your actual needs are, you’ll find plenty of tools at hand for about every project.

We have incredible tools at our disposal. They are fun to use, but what we need to now do is start asking ourselves the harder question -- "What is that we want our students to do and be and what are the tools -- Web 2.0 and traditional -- that we need to help our students achieve their and our goals?"
And if you still have time, go visit the original blog--David Warlick's--for an interesting discussion about what Web 2.0 means to all of us and if the label really matters.

July 19, 2007

A Video Worth Viewing

Here is the closing address at NECC by Dr. Tim Tyson, principal of Mabry School. Lots of talk of what makes a good school.
His students post their digital work to mabryonline.org and upload it to iTunes! The video includes (among other things) a wonderful example of a seventh-grade movie about organ donation and another on genetically-modified foods