Tuesday, 28 April 2015

What Should They Learn?

Part of a series...


So... I started to read this article about a Stanford Study to do with apps and "what will my child learn?" and before I was even through the start of it I could hear my head saying... "just what do you WANT them to learn... really?"

In a classroom students can't be forced to LEARN... at best you can co-erce them into activities (including 'playing' with apps) that consolidate learning, reinforce concepts, drill, etc - but it is all mostly just lower level Blooms stuff - remembering knowledge, reorganising knowledge, regurgitating knowledge - if you are lucky they may independently apply knowledge.

But can you please have a stern pedogogical talk with yourself... what do you actually want for your children/students? What is the point.. the end game of putting them in the public education system.

The traditional mainstream education system is still largely the same as it was when it was created - a factory for producing a person that fits into and supports that hierarchical / pyramid system for industrialised society.


The goal of this system was to produce clones for the British Empire that could be plonked anywhere in the world to run various branches of their colonisation.

To be continued.... (e.g. Not finished but I have a huge back log of draft posts and I need to get some of them published!! I will get back to this ASAP! and link it).




Wednesday, 22 April 2015

Growth Mindset vs Fixed Mindset

Looking for ways to turn around fixed mindset pre-teens right now.
Below is an outline of Growth and Fixed mindsets.


Basically fixed mindset means you think you are as smart as you're ever going to get - this is reinforced by parent/teacher comments about how smart you are, if you won, how high was your score...
 It is likely that if you have a student who rolls their eyes at new tasks, blames others, has anger outbursts when it's time for assessment, hides their mistakes and declares they "suck at this" has a fixed mindset. They belief that effort is a BAD THING and if you have ability you should not have to apply effort. They believe that making an effort means you are not smart.
Fixed mindsets sap learner motivation!

Growth mindset is when you know that with effort and practise you can improve performance - reinforced by comments about how hard you worked and your process - did all your hard work pay off, what new things did you learn...
People with a growth mindset understand that mistakes are a part of learning. They embrace effort and challenge.

I have been noticing the difference in myself and others with the use of "yet" at the end of some of my critical statements.  Most recently I used this with some of the young folk in my loom band workshop at IDEC (International Democratic Education Conference).
The video below is where I got the idea to start with.



Learner: "I'm not good at maths"
Teacher: "...yet..."



BEWARE LAVISH PRAISE!
Praising intelligence actually turns people off to learning.
Praising process encourages a growth mindset.

Monday, 16 March 2015

Play Based Learning


PLAY-BASED LEARNING: PRODUCING CRITICAL, CREATIVE AND INNOVATIVE THINKERS

Go inside any primary school classroom and look for the ‘play’. Where is it? When did we become so serious with our students and forget to include play? It was only 15 years ago that we could go into any Year 1 classroom and find children playing with play-dough and creating the most spectacular creatures, painting a masterpiece or gluing together toilet rolls to make a spaceship. They were engaging with each other, negotiating, sorting out arguments and establishing friendships. They were imagining, exploring and inventing. It was through taking risks, discovering new ideas and putting these ideas into action that learning took place.
Now it seems such acts of play are a thing of the past. We walk into a typical classroom and find containers of maths equipment that only come out at maths time, musical instruments gathering dust while they wait for the designated timeslot to learn percussion and Lego in buckets under the reading shelves waiting to be used on rainy days.

Reminds me of the early 2000s when we were schooling our primary students in ICT and HOTS and sending them to high school and watching all that enthusiasm for learning and thinking disappear - declaring that we wished the high schools would have a re-think about how they could do more of what we were doing...

EDIT (MAY 2015): This is on my current reading list - adding it here in the event I forget to get back to it now

Thursday, 5 March 2015

Loosing what makes New Zealand, New Zealand!

As New Zealand becomes increasingly more urbanised and our teaching programme becomes more crammed with national standard requirements  and our profession more pressured into being competitive with each other - it is more important than ever to make sure we are transferring to our ākonga those things that make us New Zealanders.
Unique! Our point of difference.

For year and a half I had the incredible opportunity in the late 2000s to work as an Environmental Educator for the Brook Waimarama Sanctuary - a development here in Nelson with the aim to do this very thing - protect our point of difference! An area of bush fenced with a predator proof fence where native species can thrive in an environment close to what it was like before we all started coming here. New Zealand has a biodiversity that is truly unique globally - which is already impossible to maintain without human intervention. There are a number of sanctuaries springing up in New Zealand now - please support them. A fenced sanctuary on will give many people the opportunity to see things on Mainland New Zealand that you just can't see anymore (unless you get the opportunity to travel to an offshore island that has been kept pristine from introduced pests... but those chances are rare indeed!).
In that role I saw class after class of students not just with a lack of knowledge but also a lack of appreciation (bordering on apathetic!) about our uniqueness.
Could this apathy be the result of a 'taking it for granted' culture in our generation?

I worry that we will get in a self perpetuating cycle here - increasing urbanisation and resulting disassociation from the natural landscape resulting in break down of transfer to the next generation. Transfer of not just a knowledge of how special we are but ways to keep us that way! I am emphasising our environment here, I know, but extinction is for ever.
Already when our parents were born the natural landscape of New Zealand was much changed to what it was before people started arriving here. Most bush we might happen to wander into now barely resembles the pre-colonisation bush - we are so used to the introduced species we are blind to their real impact on our native trees.
It is so hard to actually take Joseph Banks (an early 'naturalist' who came to NZ on Captain Cook's first voyage) at his word when he described the birdsong as deafening.

I can't even imagine what "tens of thousands" of kaka flying off the Takaka Hill could even be like but I have read many accounts of these numbers from the early 1900s.

Please get your students and children and families involved in conservation in your area. Use the DOC website to find local groups and get out there! Find ways you can support natives in your gardens. DOC website also has many teaching resources and plans that you can modify for your own area.
If you can't get out and about (usually a local council does plantings that students can go on for instance) then follow a conservation website - like Kakapo Recovery (Sirocco even has his own Facebook page!).


Get in touch with passionate people (usually volunteers!) that can support you in inspiring the generation that come after us to continue to Keep New Zealand Beautiful! (and unique!).

Some useful Conservation/Educationy type links:


Thursday, 26 February 2015

IDEC in NELSON!



So IDEC is coming up!  It is the International Democratic Education Conference - so exciting as it is IN NELSON and I CAN GO!

I am going to be the Youth Zone Volunteer and I will actually get to see Yaccov do his talk!


Monday, 26 January 2015

10 Obvious Truths?

Ten obvious truths about educating kids that keep getting ignored
There is no end to the debate about school reform, but there are certain things about education that seem like no-brainers. The problem is that they continue to be ignored by policymakers and in schools. Alfie Kohn lists 10 of them in the  post linked with the heading above, which he first published in the American School Board Journal in 2011, but which holds as true today as it did then.

... If we all agree that a given principle is true, then why in the world do our schools still function as if it weren’t?
Do we agree? Let's look (Shine style!)

1. Much of the material students are required to memorize is soon forgotten
Of course it is!  Remember cramming at Uni for exams? Yes. Remember anything that you crammed. Not likely!
Shine reminds: Teach students how to think, not what to think! Remembering and knowing at at the lower end of Bloom's.
TICK
2. Just knowing a lot of facts doesn’t mean you’re smart
 See number 1 above!  :) Plus... knowledge is pretty useless if you can't apply it.
TICK

3. Students are more likely to learn what they find interesting
Were children born knowing how to play Minecraft? Need I say more!
TICK
P.S. Interest bolsters motivation. Motivation bolsters achievement/success. Success bolsters esteem. Esteem bolsters confidence.  This fulfils Shine's Concept of Sustainable Learning® and ™ (I trademark that just in case!)
I heard (and probably blogged at least once about) a quote along the lines of "You can't teach a student something they don't already know" - which I translated as meaning that it is our job, as the facilitator/curator of learning, to set them up with activities they find interesting that make them believe they discovered it/thought of it themselves.

4. Students are less interested in whatever they’re forced to do and more enthusiastic when they have some say
Ever actually tried to force someone to learn something... the only thing they will actually learn is TO HATE IT and detest/resent doing it (and probably you as well!).
This is why negotiated rubrics bolster motivation.
Imagine student motivation and enthusiasm when they feel they have ALL the say...
TICK

5. Just because doing raises standardized test scores doesn’t mean should be done
TICK.
P.S. Can I have a hallelujah on resenting the fact that in NZ we are now in the position of doing all sorts of circus type manoeuvres to blend motivating, contextual and government requirements into our daily programme (more time in the day anyone?!)

6. Students are more likely to succeed in a place where they feel known and cared about
This has been a biggy for me in recent years being the ONLY successful strategy to engage a particular set of severely at risk/disenfranchised students. It was a hard road with far to many disapproving looks - but all worth it to see a change in attitude and "success" (both national standard wise and confidence wise (I could easily digress on this one for quite some time!).
So.. yes... TICK!

7. We want children to develop in many ways, not just academically
Holistic education - YOU BET! Integration is a NZ teacher's best friend for many reasons! Get those values and key comps in there! Use those ICTs and recognise those Multiple Intelligences. Foster that Growth Mindset!
Many roads lead to Rome - Rome being the goal of education (which is in my opinion to produce an individual that is happy, confident and sustainable.
TICK

8. Just because a lesson (or book, or class, or test) is harder doesn’t mean it’s better
This one caused me pause momentarily - positively meeting effort, persistence and challenge are the building blocks of a happy confident person. However sustained 'rigour' or rigour just for the sake of constantly pushing a learner (or actually any time I hear the word rigour)  is not something I feel good about. In the very least it needs to be very carefully implemented so...
TICK

9. Kids aren’t just short adults
Indeed they aren't -  they much more confident, playful, enthusiastic, kind, creative, resourceful, unbiased, friendly, tolerant  and masterful at problem solving. LOL!
TICK

10. Substance matters more than labels

I turn to the article to explain this one...
A skunk cabbage by any other name would smell just as putrid. But in education, as in other domains, we’re often seduced by appealing names when we should be demanding to know exactly what lies behind them. Most of us, for example, favor a sense of community, prefer that a job be done by professionals, and want to promote learning. So should we sign on to the work being done in the name of “Professional Learning Communities”? Not if it turns out that PLCs have less to do with helping children to think deeply about questions that matter than with boosting standardized test scores.
The same caution is appropriate when it comes to “Positive Behavior Support,” a jaunty moniker for a program of crude Skinnerian manipulation in which students are essentially bribed to do whatever they’re told. More broadly, even the label “school reform” doesn’t necessarily signify improvement; these days, it’s more likely to mean “something that skillful and caring teachers wouldn’t be inclined to do unless coerced,” as educational psychologist Bruce Marlowe put it.
In fact, the corporate-style version of “school reform” that’s uncritically endorsed these days by politicians, journalists, and billionaires consists of a series of debatable tactics — many of them amounting to bribes and threats to force educators to jack up test scores. Just as worrisome, though, is that these reformers often overlook, or simply violate, a number of propositions that aren’t debatable, including many of those listed here.

TICK!


So... I agree. Have I convinced you too? If not, go read the supports on the actual article and maybe then you will!
Can we start doing them more overtly now please?!