Archive for November, 2005

Being part of building a new school district is pretty exciting. Our director has made it very clear that we are building something from scratch and that new ideas are welcomed and expected.

With Christmas coming up, my kids have submitted their lists and we have the duty to examine these lists and determine which requests are feasible and which may have to wait. So in the spirit of Christmas and a new division, here’s my wish list for our new division in no particular order.

  • 1-1 computing. Be it a laptop, handheld or whatever until students stop having to make trips to the lab to access technology, we remain in the old world. Many of our schools have 5 computers in the room, this still isn’t enough. We wouldn’t expect kids to share pencils why computers? What about cost? Ever heard of the $100 laptop?
  • Connected students and teachers. Not only connected with technology but a sense of connection among each other. Technology enables us to connect with others in our classroom, school, district and the world. We know this but does it happen? Every teacher, administrator and student should have a learning space online. A weblog, a wiki, a podcast, whatever. Parts of everyone’s learning needs to be public. If you want to get into the whole privacy issue, head over here. My point is students need an audience for their work, we’re obligated to give them that much.
  • No more teachers. What? Teachers need to be replaced by directors or faciliators. In short this means transforming classrooms from silos of knowledge distribution to horizontal collaboration and exploration.
  • Blended learning environments. Our district has some major geographical challenges and declining enrollment. The possibility of school closures is real. We need to provide students of all ages the opportunity to learn independently at home. This may not be the solution for everyone but combined with some face to face schooling, this may offer those living in rural areas and even in the urban centres an option never before available.
  • Increased time for teacher reflection and collaboration. The advent of Professional Learning Communities has sparked some great conversations about learning. The potential is huge. However, unless teachers are given ample time to reflect and examine new ideas, this may only appear as an add on. I’m not sure exactly what it looks like, but teachers need time every day to step away from the students and develop learning strategies.
  • Balance Assessment and Creativity and Innovation. Assessment is an important issue for teachers and students. Using assessment correctly has proven to be a powerful factor in improving achievement. My concern is that at times, assessment attracts the lowest common denominator and we return to rote learning models in order to pump out data. Creativity is not always possible or necessary to measure. Innovation requires time to explore and fail. Establishing environments where these three concepts are at work is critical in the flat world.
  • Seamless Learning. If we truly believe in the idea of life long learning, we need to demonstrate that learning that happens outside the school day is valuable. Offering credit for activities such as music lessons, participation on sports teams and self directed learning should be recognized by our schools.
  • Relevant, Engaging and Ownership. This is my new mantra. Not mine but remixed from others. These three criteria should be at the heart of every classroom.

Okay, that’s the start of my list. I realize that some of these wishes will require wholesale changes from various agencies but I think it’s time to start thinking big. Our director told me today she wants to create a vision and figure out how we might get there. This is my vision.
This entry linked to Wikispaces page (Ideal School)

On my journey through the new Prairie South School Division, I spent some time in Evelyn Sillers Grade 5/6 class. They’ve embarked on a Tablet PC project. Evelyn has a great attitude and has placed herself in the vulnerable position of creating a new learning environment. Evelyn’s in her 29th year of teaching so don’t tell me technology isn’t for our veteran teachers. Listen to Evelyn’s story.

podcast

avonlea tablet 3

Rob has posted part one of our conversation with Stephen Downes. Grab a coffee, order up some bacon and eggs and give it a listen!

One of the teachers who attended my workshop last week has written a great piece on her barriers to blogging.

After spending a day with her and others, it was easy to see she would be considered a teacher with a high level of technical skills. But her honesty in explaining why she hasn’t implemented the tools of social learning illustrate a real problem with today’s educators. Technology was not the issue for Lona, it was largely her fear of risk taking and transparency.
As much as we talk about risk taking for our students, as adults we are pretty fearful of making mistakes. In order to get students to take risks they have to be in an environment that encourages that and offers a sense of community trust. I’m realizing that when I take time to build relationships with others, they are better able to forgive my shortcomings…and believe me I’ve got short comings, just ask my wife!

I know we all read way more than we write and certainly more than we comment and that’s natural and understandable. But we do have to make a point of commenting on each other’s work. That’s how we learn.

So let’s continue to model the idea of public learning and encourage each other with our ideas and thoughts. Let Lona know she’s on the right track.

On my way home from work I took advantage of the time to record my thoughts on privacy and the idea of public learning.

podcast

Show notes:

Educational Techknowledge Conference
Mousing Around
Bud the Teacher
Darren Kuropatwa
Share Point


I’ve been subscribing to Thomas Hawk’s photos for a while now and appreciate his quality and hopefully I’ll become a better photographer as a result.

He’s now begun podcasting on a site called Flickr Nation. He plans to do a weekly podcast updating new features and cool things to do with flickr. As a bonus, a 90 year old woman phones him via Skype during his podcast who’s obviously called the wrong number. Thomas humors her for quite a while and works very hard to sway her to learn more about flickr.

I was privileged to spend 2 hours with Stephen Downes and Rob Wall on Saturday. The talk ranged from education, DRM, politics and music. The interesting thing is that all of these topics ended up pointing back to concepts of distributed learning and the openness of the read/write web.

It’s not often you get to sit down with a keynote for 2 hours and basically fire questions and ideas at him and listen to his responses. Not only did I feel privileged but guilty that I was getting this kind of time and other participants at the conference were not. Yet because of the technology and Rob’s time, we’ll be able to share the same ideas with everyone. You won’t taste the eggs or smell the coffee but the ideas will be there. Hey Rob, why didn’t one of us think to take a picture. Duh!

I listened to a podcast from Steve after he attended NECC and he questioned why every session of a technology conference wasn’t recorded. This really isn’t a difficult process. Stephen had his session that ended at 10:00 a.m. online before lunch. My recording was uploaded a few hours after it finished and it could have been sooner. I would ask conference committees to not only ask their participants to have a link to handouts but also create some type of recording of their session.

Maybe it’s just too radical.

Two ideas have come together for me today. I’m in Regina, SK at the Educational Techknowledge E-Conference. This morning Stephen Downes talked about being Radical. The message being simply that since technology changes everything, we should be looking at ways to radically change the way learning happens.

Then I read a post on “How to Run a Useless Conference“. I’d hate to infer that this is a useless conference and since I used to be on this conference committee, I know the challenge behind running a conference. The article talks about how conference tend to be safe…not radical. And since they are safe, they do little to change behaviour. This concept, I think applies to me since I do a lot of workshops and inservices. I’ve felt disappointed at times with my workshops when although I’ve presented to my best, it’s done little to change behaviour. (i.e. Maximizing Microsoft Word last week. I only did it since it was requested but could not muster up enough passion to make it interesting…who could?)

The idea that emotion changes behaviour should drive conferences, presentations, workshops and teaching in general. Not a new concept but one that often is missed. My love of video/storytelling is something that touches emotion. It’s an easy sell. I tried to include more of an emotional content in my RSS talk and would be thrilled to see some behaviour changes. I know many of the people at this conference. I wouldn’t consider many of them average as the article says. So I’m hoping that in the next few months we will see some more Saskatchewan folks rummaging around the blogsphere, reading the good stuff, remixing ideas and learning more than ever. ‘

There were some radical ideas floating around this hotel and the challenge is to provide a forum for them to be explored. Stephen started it, hopefully the rest of the conference will continue it to become something useful.