Showing posts with label k12. Show all posts
Showing posts with label k12. Show all posts

Friday, November 15, 2013

Spark, Whimsy -- Learning simply to Learn

Space Models at Brick Fest, Flickr via Creative Commons
Young children are encouraged to be whimsical and imaginative and to always ask why. Students in younger grades look with awe upon the lifecycle of a butterfly and draw endless pictures of colorful circles that they truly believe resemble their parents.
Then a few years pass. Times tables are memorized and we increase the content we teach and begin to instill a sense of conformity and pressure in our students that focuses on attaining success measured by society. It is no surprise that the imagination of our students changes to reflect a stale, stagnant state because they are learning what others want them to learn. Yet, our students are still creative underneath a shell of academic standards. However, we don't give them the opportunities to show the whimsical, inquisitive nature deep within them.

As teachers, we suffer from much the same ill-fated trajectory our students do. Believing we can change the world as a young teacher, we come to the first year of our teaching careers with an energy that feeds into our innovative lessons. Years pass and we are met with more strict standards, more programs to teach, less time to teach them, and more students, many of whom are bored and unengaged with the curriculum since they are being told what to learn and how to learn it.

Think of topics that you find interesting. Think of what you'd want to learn in school. Now think of what you teach. Think of how you teach it. Ask yourself, would I want to learn that way? Would I want to spend my afternoons at home doing that? A recent article came out about a revolutionary way of learning that focuses on engaging students with what they are interested in. Joshua Davis writes for Wired, "How a radical new teaching method could unleash a generation of geniuses." In it he explores a variety of progressive philosophies on learning.

Peter Gray, research professor at Boston college, is quoted by Joshua Davis as stating, " 'We’re teaching the child that his questions don’t matter, that what matters are the questions of the curriculum. That’s just not the way natural selection designed us to learn. It designed us to solve problems and figure things out that are part of our real lives, ' " which raises some key issues of institutionalized schooling. The whole purpose of school should be to teach kids a love of learning, a desire to understand the unknown, and the ability to apply what they know to questions they have. Ultimately its about the spark that fires up their curiosity thus raising their engagement in the classroom. It should not be about what other people think they need to know.

So, what if homework was filled with activities that truly sparked the curiosity of our children, thus supporting that their questions matter. What if students rushed to school the next day asking why, why, why? What if students eagerly awaited the next lesson rather than day dreaming through it?

A simple task like watching a video about space could be that spark for a child. A spark that could change the trajectory of a student's life, assisting them in realizing dreams they have. Take a look at these amazing videos on the International Space Station by Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield.

Here are two class work or homework documents I’ve put together, one for primary grades and one for upper grades.

Take on the challenge of giving assignments that you’d want to spend time on. If you wouldn’t want to do it, why would your kids?
Inspired and want more? Additional resources can be found at Ramsey Musallam’s Cycles of Learning blog that discusses in depth the use of video as a curiosity spark for initializing a love for learning.

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Friend Request for JFK

What would historical figures post to Facebook, Twitter or Instagram? In light of connected educator month, try to infuse your curriculum with a social media flavor.

As Mark Zuckerberg states, "By giving people the power to share, we're making the world more transparent."


Strive to create a transparency within the historical context framework. Having students create social media "accounts" or "profiles" for historical figures allows them to work on the following skills:
  • Compare and contrast sharing of information from a historical and a current perspective
  • Analyze what information is necessary to share with a public audience
  • Discuss privacy from a historical and current perspective
  • Analyze whether or not the transparency of the internet is beneficial
  • Write about how the historical figure's life would differ if he or she were to post to Facebook, Instagram or Twitter
  • Compare the use of radio to the use of social media in politics
  • Create analogies of current social media tools to their historic counterparts (think blogs to newspapers)
Imagine the possibilities of leveraging the trend in social media to engage students with the ways in which we share personal information. A million conversations around privacy could surface really allowing you to teach students digital citizenship skills.

Check out a few templates below (thank you remixing culture of the present and the future):

  • Instagram template PDF and Jpegs. Print and draw photos or simply add your own photo over the top. 


Saturday, January 26, 2013

Perplexity versus engagement

image



http://www.flickr.com/photos/centralasian/3996106861/sizes/z/in/photostream/


Having concluded the 21st Century Learning Conference in Hong Kong yesterday, I have been left with a mind blowing number of items to ponder, to create and to learn. 


To ponder


  • Perplexity versus engagement is my number one goal. Do we create lessons for students to desire to figure out the answer to? or do we create lessons because we think that they will be able to actually stay awake?

  • Flipped learning and lecture. What is the purpose of my students watching video at home versus learning the content by desire to know the information in order to answer a perplexing question?

  • Capture perplexity, share perplexity and resolve perplexity. My new goals for lessons via Dan Meyer’s amazing talk at 21st century learning

  • Gaming. Enough said. Pretty much Rob Newberry, blog, convinced me I should learn Minecraft. 

  • My technology mission statement. 

  • Substitution, Augmentation, Modification, Redefinition of technology  Where do I fall on the SAMR model of using technology in my room?

  • iPads 1:1, I am so thrilled to begin to buy apps : ) yes done are my days of only using free apps. I want to think about how it would look for me to be in a 1:1 classroom. 

  • Both physical and virtual spaces that we learn in. 

  • iPads in readers, writers workshop. 

  • Taking learning with digital devices out of the classroom and thinking about how I can give weight and importance to my students learning that occurs beyond the hours of 8-3

To Create


  • Tweets and blog posts to share with the education community so that my learning continues and does not stop with 2 days of intense growth

  • A list of perplexing things

  • An RSS feed

  • A list of Education questions I have

  • iPad implementation goals

  • My edtech mission statement

  • Library of video clips to use as perplexing thoughts for lessons

  • An ibook

To Learn


  • Minecraft

  • About a billion iPad apps

  • Implementing iPad 1:1

  • iBook author

  • And so much more…

Looking forward to continuing to push myself as an educator and to learn from others. 

Monday, November 12, 2012

Humanizing the classroom—see the individual in the classroom by using technology to differentiate, to innovate and to provide interaction amongst students. Check out the full TED talk by Sal Khan here!

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Today's Meet...

Maths


Wow, wait, what? Many times I have found my students coming to class after watching a conceptual video done on Educreations or Khan academy and are still striving to grasp the concept of mathematics that was taught.


Flipped teaching has worked wonders in my fifth grade class, allowing me to better differentiate and keep up with kids using the coaching features on Khan academy. But there is more to flipped teaching than just watching videos at home and working on problems in class. 


Understanding the hows behind mathematics is key. This past month I have begun to use Today’s Meet at the start of my math class as a place to post conceptual questions. Right now I am creating the questions for the students about the math, but in the future I hope to have them create their own. As a table group, the students then discuss the questions with each other thus increasing their abilities to also discuss mathematics verbally. Next, student are called on to explain a question to the group. 


Throughout this time, each group has one computer set up that allows them to put in answers on Today’s meet or ask questions. An alternate to using todays meet is to make a simple google presentation with the concept questions on a slide and then share this with one student in each group. 


The next step is to give practice problems. I allow students to work collaboratively on these and will pull small groups during this time if needed. Additionally, sometimes this time is used for a project or a more open ended math activity like ones found on illuminations or the Silicon Valley Math Institute website. 


Overall, I am incredibly happy with the structure of my math class now. Each day needs tweaking and shifting and there are times where I simply wish I had another hour with them, but as a teacher it is good to reflect and be open to change because as we know change keeps us growing and learning just like our students. 


Photo source: http://www.flickr.com/photos/ajc1/8144344750/

UA-44643247-1