Tag Archives: Education

Happy Birthday America – July 4, 2013

HAPPY BIRTHDAY AMERICA! Keep the faith; hold on to the “American idea” of liberty for all.

lib·er·ty n
1. the freedom to think or act without being constrained by necessity or force
2. freedom from captivity or slavery
3. any of the political, social, and economic rights that belong to the citizens of a state or to all people (often used in the plural)
See also civil liberties

civ·il lib·er·ties npl
the basic rights guaranteed to individual citizens by law, for example, freedom of speech and action

“Education” versus “Learning”

“The difference between the almost right word and the right word is really a large matter—it’s the difference between lightning and  lightning bug.” – Mark Twain

In the spirit of Mark Twain, let’s begin with dictionary definitions –

ed·u·ca·tion – noun

  1. the imparting and acquiring of knowledge through teaching and learning, especially at a school or similar institution
  2. the knowledge or abilities gained through being educated
  3. training and instruction in a particular subject, for example, health matters
  4. an informative experience
  5. the study of the theories and practices of teaching

learn·ing – noun

  1. knowledge acquired by systematic study in any field of scholarly application
  2.  the act or process of acquiring knowledge or skill

Education sounds like something done to or for you; educators have something that you don’t have, and you need to go through them to get it.

Learning , on the other hand, sounds like an inside job – no one can do it for you and you can’t do it for someone else; it’s up to each individual to learn.

Seems to fit here: “You can lead a horse to water but you can’t make her drink.” But if you happen to  find a horse that is thirsty – that is quite a different matter!

What if kids – students – are naturally learning thirsty?

Isn’t that where those clouds of early child questions come from? Why is the sky blue? What is that? Why do I have to do that? How does that work? What happens if I touch my little brother in the back seat of the car? Does touching with my elbow count? Or my toe? Are we there yet? …

Observe your little learning machine in full action!

And there’s yet another saying that applies here: “To appear masterful or powerful, ride the horse in the direction it is going.”

In Jiu-itsu and Tae Kwan Do martial arts, one learns to use the opponent’s momentum to their advantage. Don’t stop or block your opponent’s movements – embrace their momentum and allow them to sweep past you harmlessly, effortlessly in a direction you intend.

So, what’s the point? What is a take-away for kids, parents, teachers?

  • “Education” may or may not always promote “learning.”
  • “Education” may not always be optimal for, or supportive of “learning.”
  • “Learning” occurs in a different domain.
  • Recognizing this can have a desirable outcome for the child, the parent, the teacher, the system, business, society at large.
  • Shifting the conversation and focus could empower the miracle and gift that each individual is, be she parent, teacher, or child.

Compare this with what we complain about now:

  • Missed opportunities for both children and for society
  • Increased and increasing costs of incarceration and recidivism
  • Family, personal, and institutional heart-burn and head-ache
  • Having to pay for the same thing over and over: didn’t get it by 3rd grade; didn’t get it in high school; still trying to get it via UNM/CNM remedial whatever
  • Employers having to “fix” new hires before they can get meaningful work done
  • Burnt out superintendents, principles, teachers, kids, parents

Maybe purposeful shifting orientation from “a little more school education”  to  “a little more kid learning” might be worth more than a few little trials. My guess is, the best teachers already know and are doing this. What do you think? How do we support making such a shift happen?

 

Watch A Teacher Make Her 3rd-Grade Kids Hate Each Other For The Best Reason Imaginable

A Teacher Makes Her 3rd-Grade Kids Hate Each Other For The Best Reason Imaginable

The payoff at the end is brilliant and a perfect metaphor for what we deal with and face every day in our society.

1:30: This teacher begins a study that will be talked about for 40 years.
3:00: She re-creates segregation and racism in her classroom.
7:45: Mrs. Elliott flips the entire class on their heads.
10:00 Jane Elliot makes the most profound discovery about us all
11:43: The students learn something that the world is still struggling to.
There are too many great moments to point out. Just watch.

 

Giving Students a Voice

“I had plenty of great resources and educators,” said Zak Malamed of his Long Island high school. “My dissatisfaction came from the lack of ability to be an individual.”

Zak noticed how #EdChat had quickly become a community that gave teachers a voice. He thought students needed the same and launched #StuVoice Twitter chats last May. During Teacher Appreciation Week, the first chat was “What makes a great teacher?”

His #StuVoice Twitter chats (Mondays, 8:30 EDT)  grew quickly, “A few months after launching I was connecting with renowned educators.” He knew he was onto something and has started the process for   Student Voice  (Check it out!)  to become a nonprofit.

During his freshman year at the University of Maryland, Zak said he probably spent more time on Student Voice than his school work but he “learned more from that than anything.” Zak said, “I learned how to work with and manage people, formed relationships, and had an incredible experience.”

Student Voice   has expanded beyond Twitter to bimonthly Google hangouts. “We recognized the value of face-to-face interaction–it’s often less about the topics and more about the relationships formed.”

Lisa Nielsen (The Innovative Educator) introduced us to Zak. She noted that “He recently put together their first conference (sponsored by Dell) which was a terrific success.”

An added benefit of promoting student voice is that it “helps develop entrepreneurial mindset,” said Zak. He was frustrated with the limitation of his political science major
so he created his own major in social engagements–a study of social, media, business, civic engagement.

The young organization is supported by dozens of volunteer students like Zak. Like Zak, they are convinced that the “idea of student voice, as individual and organizational level, needs to be promoted.” He noted that “plenty of teachers inspired me, but I recognize how much work needs to be done.”

I found this article on http://gettingsmart.com/

 

Tom Vander Ark

Tom Vander Ark

Tom is author of Getting Smart: How Digital Learning is Changing the World and founder of GettingSmart.com. Tom is also a partner in Learn Capital, a venture capital firm investing in learning content, platforms, and services with the goal of transforming educational engagement, access, and effectiveness.

What are 5 things you wish you knew as a senior in high school

This thought provoking question and the comments that follow are almost an education in themselves. You certainly don’t have to be a rising high school senior to enjoy the real-life insights, appreciation. and wisdom from these sharings.

Click here to read.

You might even want to pass this link along.

Education contact information

With a little bit of work you can use this post to locate the name, address and telephone number of an actual person who should be willing to listen to the situation you are having problems with. They may be able to either do something about it, direct you to someone who can, or note it for discussion at their next problem-solving meeting. As a reminder for how this works, see my earlier post, Bitching Doesn’t Work.        Continue reading

Common Core State Standards kerfuffle?

In the last few weeks and days, I’ve come across a number of articles expressing pro’s and con’s  about Common Core State Standards (CCSS), with critics mounting a flurry of attacks and proponents working hard to shore up support. One pretty good overview article is Common Core Under Fire: How Strong Is Support for New State Standards? You can get as many details as you want by clicking on various links.

My Prezi presentation on New Mexico’s use of CCSS gives a pretty good overview of what they are, what their intent is, and how they are planned to be used in New Mexico.

The Common Core evolved from a 2009-2010 drive by the National Governors Association and the Council of Chief State School Officers to delineate world-class skills students should possess. The standards, created with funding from, among others, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, set detailed goals, such as first graders should understand place values in math and eighth graders should know the Pythagorean Theorem.

“We brought the best minds in the country together to create international benchmarks that, once mastered, would make our students more competitive, globally,” said Gene Wilhoit, executive director of the Council of Chief State School Officers. He said his group has no plans to create national science standards.

Here is a brief summary of some of the pro and con positions:

Pro

  • A Kentucky fifth grade teacher said, “These standards take students much deeper into the subjects and force them to do more critical thinking,”
  • No Child Left Behind allowed states to create their own unique standards; which could give them the appearance of higher “scores”
  • A 2010 Fordham Institute study found CCSS Common Core to be “a great improvement with regard to rigor and cohesiveness”
  • CCSS do not dictate curriculum (e.g., textbooks and reading lists) or prescribe methods of instruction  
  • Education technology providers have already been designing products based on CCSS

Con

  • This is a federal intrusion into states rights via Race-To-The-Top via financial incentive
  • 5 states worry  CCSS establishes a de facto “national curriculum” (Utah, South Carolina, Michigan, Ohio, Alabama)
  • Implementation may require more time than planned or allowed
  • Republican National Committee decided at their March 2013 approved a resolution condemning CCSS
  • Can standards-based education also be individualized?
  • Seeing children as education industry profit centers may be problematic

So, what do YOU say?