Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Why teachers should visit other schools

A friend of mine who works construction told me that his profession shifted his world-view.
"Now when I look around a room I don't think of the walls a barriers; everything can be moved. If you don't like the wall, we can knock it down, or cut a hole in it, or put a door there. Nothing is static—paint it, bevel it, hammer it—there really aren't any boundaries."
Today I visited another high school down the block from mine and received a similar reminder that everything is transitory. The teachers at University of Hawaii Lab School ask themselves the same questions I ask myself daily (should I prioritize skill over content? Should I seat friends together or separate them with a seating arrangement? What is the best thing I can do to help my students gain proficiency in writing? Should I wear this skirt with those shoes?) yet they answered them differently.

What I saw:

-Music class with 7th grades belting out traditional Hawaiian songs.
-A social studies class re-enacting the French revolution with all of the peasants sitting on the floor to show their status.
-A fifth grade class studying algebraic principles.
-A thirty-student orchestra practicing the string section in a satellite building with shiny new violas.
-Students waving "Hi Mr. Bricket!" to the principal as we walked the campus.

What a wonderful reminder of just how much we have to play with in this profession. We should all pop our heads in other school buildings once in a while and remember that the walls aren't a constant after all.

Saturday, February 23, 2008

I Expected Resistance

Alan November visited on curriculum day and filled our heads with possibilities for the laptop in each freshman's bookbag. November modeled examples of different student-type jobs; this was the strongest aspect of his presentation. Many say our task as teachers is to prepare students for an unimaginable job market of the future and to teach them to head companies who services are not yet needed. November's list below trains students in skills of communication and information management--both are right-brain talents (see Daniel Pink).

1. Lesson review team. Students write, edit, and direct a podcast of past lessons they have learned (when to use the semi-colon, how to do long division for example).
2. Student-teachers. Students write lesson plans for the class and, as they present, record it with a screencast device (jing works) to make a movie of their lesson. Paste it on the class website for regular viewing later.
3. Daily class recorder or "scribe." One person takes scrupulous notes for the class. (I personally can never trust someone else to take notes for me because I learn as I write, but that's just me.)
4. Communal note review. All the class notes taken by the rotating scribe are pasted into google.docs. In or outside of class students edit (and elaborate on) the notes so they become incredibly complete.
5. Global community teams. Social network with other classrooms around the world using skype, wikis, del.icio.us. (Would my students benefit from reading The Catcher in the Rye along with a class in Tokyo and discussing it with them? Why not just talk to the person next to you? I have some doubts on this one.)
6. Research managers. Teach students how to research the backers of websites and find viable sources, then feed those sites (using RSS feeds) to their homepages so they get the latest updates on their research topics.
No teacher alive currently coordinates all six jobs.

The day after November's visit I tried some of the simpler techniques in class. I think I expected a fight—some kind of "who are you to mix things up?" attitude from the students.
"So I went to this talk and basically you guys are responsible for your own education and I'm going to get out of the way now…ok?" (rough pitch I realize…I don't know what I was thinking).
They blinked at me.
I turned to student A near the corner of the room. Student A has wide eyes and lips which turn down at the edges, like a bug flew into her mouth and she holds it there courteously until class ends.
"Student A, you are going to be our scribe for this class. Could you take notes for us on google.docs?"
She swallowed the bug.
"Sure." She typed away, engaged for the first time in a while.

The next day I tried a larger leap into the world of uncertainty.

"Today you guys are going to teach one another mini-grammar lessons and we will record them. Can you be ready in fifteen minutes?"

"Yes!" They all turned to their partner and started drafting lesson plans with enthusiasm.
What? Have I really underestimated them so much? Was I a fool to think they needed to be spoon-fed comma rules when in reality they can just teach one another?
The presentations varied in quality. Some muddied the waters rather than cleared them; some taught the presenter something but not the audience. One pair leapt on the task and offered to go first. Here is the recorded screencast of their presentation:


.


What I would do differently next time:
-Ask them to create a rubric for judging the presentations and give pros and cons to each presentation before and after.
-Visit each presentation beforehand and edit before they get up to present.
-Make sure to give them a small and teachable mini-lesson ("how to choose a good paper topic" was a broad one).

Saturday, February 9, 2008

Where psychotherapy, Buddhism, and technology meet


From Thoughts Without a Thinker
Forward by the Dalai Lama

Recently, psychotherapists, with their background in science and medicine, have begun to explore the possibilities of employing Buddhist techniques in a therapeutic context. I feel this is entirely consistent with the aim of overcoming suffering and improving the welfare of all sentient beings. Living experience of Buddhist meditation has given practitioners a profound knowledge of the workings and nature of the mind, an inner science to complement our understanding of the physical world. On its own, no amount of technological development can lead to lasting happiness. What is almost always missing is a corresponding inner development. This is an area in which there is increasing evidence that Buddhist assertions and modern findings have to potential to be valuable to one another.
--December 1994
The school where I teach is currently in the process of choosing new laptops for the academy 1:1 laptop program. As I provide more freedom in my English assignments to take advantage of the laptops versatility, the projects that result are a multi-media extravaganza. These students don't just know how to write descriptively about dead tiger sharks that wash up on the beach; they can email internationally with shark specialists, assemble powerpoint presentations of tiger shark videos borrowed from youtube, or make their own movies based on interviews with marine biologists.

I'm just not sure if they know how to breath.
This concept of the inner development necessary to process the whirl of technological development intrigues me. For me, that processing come with rules about when to shut down the machine and go outside, correcting my work posture, and recognizing when my eyes are growing fatigued from looking at a screen for so long.

Like now.
There are many attitudes technology between the poles of technophobe and automaton. Are students aware of them?

Friday, February 8, 2008

Understanding by Design


Am I the last teacher on the planet to read this book? First printed in 1998, this redefinition of the priorities in lesson-planning took ten years to reach my desk. I am a late bloomer, alas...but better now than next year.

Wiggins and McTighe suggest that knowledge (regurgitation of facts) is distinct from understanding which requires an ability to manipulate information under various circumstances. To set up students for understanding, a teacher ready to lesson-plan must shy away from the temptation to leap for activities and first ask herself:
1. What essential questions does my class attempt to answer?
2. What smaller, more palatable, unit-sized questions can I ask to engage my students into the topic?
3. What kinds of activities will allow students to grapple with various answers to those questions?
4. How will I assess a genuine understanding of those concepts?
5. Will this assessment overly-reward students for 'plugging away' at assignments rather than demonstrating true understanding?

Old-hat to many in the education world, but this really rocked my socks off. This is the scaffolding behind the student-led projects, the reason to the action, the supportive branch to the entertaining tire-swing of a class, the ying to my yang!
Do any of you lesson plan in this way?

Story of Stuff





This is the most simple, illustrated explanation of globalization I have ever seen.
www.storyofstuff.com

I have passed this along to many friends and family, and I am surprised at the extent to which we all respond with the knee-jerk reaction "oh yes, everyone else in this country is wasteful, but not me."
Recognizing our daily roll in this cycle as consumers seems like the first step toward change and improvement in the system.