Thursday, April 30, 2009

Audio Journal Dialogue

Our third and last Audio Journal Dialogue session is this afternoon. I am always inspired by the energy and enthusiasm of this group of K 12 Administrators and Coaches even at the end of trying days. They love to share ideas and network. Hoping to get some thoughts from them about what format we should consider next year. I will attempting to use the CPS clickers and have a bit of concern about the hardware and software. It seems that the software updates create glitches - I hope to get it running by this afternoon. I'll let you know how that works out. As always, thanks for listening. Leslie
By the way, I'm now following a new blog created just yesterday by Leslie Brown, HPSI K - 8 PLC Facililtator. It's called Keeping You in the Loop. Look for updates in the Blogs I follow section.

Saturday, April 25, 2009

LinkWithin





You have got to add this to your blog. Notice I now have references to past posts that are related within each post. Easy to install as well. Man, I love this stuff :)

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Failing our kids

So here I am again with another thought provoking post from Will Richardson.
Here's the link:
http://weblogg-ed.com/

I find this post interesting and I smile because those kids he describes are my kids. The kids I worked with everyday for 33 years and yes, in some ways even my own two sons. Let's see, kids who live, and have always lived in the inner city, are African American, go to public schools that could be better, oh and yeah, kids who love to play and play and play. Make no mistake life has challenges for them as it did for mine (who had two well educated, financially advantaged and stable parents at home) and can be rough but the children I serve and live with are some of the brightest, creative and resilent individuals I have ever met. I tip my hat to Will who has looked for and found a way to reach in and add some mind expanding experiences to the lives of the children on his son's team. More should take up the challenge. But kids play and play and play because they are kids, not because they are poor, not because there's no daddy at home. My mother related many times that she was a child in the depression years in Pittsburgh, Pa and yet she didn't know just how poor they were until she was grown. Life was hard, but she was a reasonbly happy kid, that's what mattered. So, what do our eyes see when we look at those "poor kids"? Do we see their circumstances or do we see each of them as a doctor, lawyer or president? I suspect they know what you see and respond accordingly.

I could not agree more, we are failing our kids, we are failing ALL of them. Until we (me and you) decide that we will do whatever it takes change and transform our schools and classrooms into places where children really are first. Where what they learn and how they learn is driven by them and not by a test. Where we expect them to take responsibility for their learning and gladly facilitate that process instead of binding them with lectures, worksheets and lock step grading systems. I have seen the most recalcitrant and stubborn students bloom into thougtful and respectful students because they were given respect, because they were perceived as someone with potential and worth.

So forgive me if I bristle a bit at Will. I believe his heart is in the right place and I commend him for his efforts. His children and those his family touches will be better for what they're doing. Now let's get out there and help transform some schools and classrooms. As always, thanks for listening. Leslie


Failing Our Kids
My nine-year old Tucker plays AAU basketball for a struggling inner-city team about 30 minutes from where we live. His teammates call him “Shadow” and most times we are the only white family in the gym for games and practice. We (mostly my wife Wendy) haul his (and his sister’s) butt down there three times a week for a couple of reasons, first and foremost because we want him to see that a large chunk of the world looks little like the un-diverse, rural space in which he’s growing up, and, second, because the basketball is just grittier, tougher, faster, played at a different level than in these parts. The gym in which his team plays is 2/3 the size of regulation court with blue-padded stanchions that jut out from the sidelines and become part of the game, and dim fluorescent lighting that depending on the level of sunlight filtering in from the grimy skylights makes the basket a dark target. It’s a no blood-no foul type of game they play, the fundamentals of which are no look passes and under the basket scoop layups which even on a 10-year old level are both beautiful and at the same time difficult to watch. For most of these kids, basketball is a respite from the the difficulties of their lives, lives that are surrounded by poverty, violence and drug use. There are gangs in the middle schools, absent fathers, job layoffs and more, so whenever these kids get the chance, they play, and play, and play some more. And my kids try to keep up.
Tucker has made some fast friends with his teammates. They are sweet, respectful, fun kids to be around. The last couple of weekends, we’ve hosted sleepovers, or more aptly, shootovers as most of the time the sounds of basketballs being pounded by the hoop at the end of the driveway echo through the house. But we’ve also been doing some “field trippy” sort of stuff. A couple of weekends ago, Wendy got their parents to give them a day off of school to go to a statewide GreenFest to have fun but, as is my wife’s way, to get them thinking about the environment. They saw solar cars, learned about organic foods and, at one point, got a lesson on worms. Each of them got a container with some compost, a few poop generating worms, and instructions on how to use them to create great fertilizer for plants. It turned out that for two of the three kids that Wendy spirited off with, it was the first time they had ever held a worm. In the course of the few days they were hanging around with them, we found out all sorts of stuff about their lives and about what they knew about the world, which was, not too surprisingly, not much. At one point when Wendy asked one of them how many people he thought were in the world, he answered “10,000″. The next weekend, we went to “Ringing Rocks” which is this strange little geologic enigma near us, followed by some first-time skipping of stones in the Delaware River near our house. It was an interesting few days of learning for all of us.
There is no doubt that these kids face some pretty difficult futures as a result of circumstances not of their making. It’s pretty obvious they are behind in terms of what they know about the world and their ability to express it well. That’s not an indictment on their schools, per se, as much as it is the inequality that exists in this state and others between the education of the haves and the have nots writ large. But while they say they get “Bs” in school, I can’t help but wonder what that means. No doubt, there learning lives are aimed at what’s on the state assessment, yet they are behind in reading and writing and math. And to be honest, I’m not sure the system can overcome the difficulties present in these kids lives from the start. I don’t think the answer for them is longer school years or teachers getting “merit pay” (or battle pay) as much as it is a fix for the societal problems that surround them. Yet in this moment of steep budget cuts and layoffs, those fixes don’t seem to be on the horizon for them any time soon.
But it’s not just them. Last week I was on a panel with the state assistant commissioner of education where she told the story of seeing the “new” digitally published third-grade “U.S. States” projects, the ones we all did as kids, taking a state of the union and pasting the state bird and state flag and state flower on top of a map with some interesting statistics around it. She asked one young man who did New York State to talk about his slide and he read off all of the stuff. When he got to the population part he said “and New York State has over 19 million people,” and she responded with “Wow! Is that a lot of people?” He looked at her for a moment and said, “you know, I really don’t know.” It was a great example of the context and value that information loses when we fail to teach meaning over memorization.
For Tucker’s friends, for that kid learning about New York, for a lot of kids in this country, it becomes obvious very quickly that we are failing them. Like I said, I know it’s more complex than just blaming the schools and the teachers, which seems to be de rigeur these days, btw. Which is what is so disheartening about the rhetoric that continues to come out of Washington around education; there’s nothing really new. Nothing bold. Nothing that makes me feel like we’ve turned any corner on any of this. We’re arguing about the same old ideas and writing about the same old shifts when the reality is that the lives of those kids on Tucker’s team haven’t changed a bit from all the bloviating going on.
Not suggesting I have the answer here. My frustration just gets more acute when faces and smiles and hook shots come with the statistics.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

David Warlick's 2¢ Worth

I subscribe to David Warlick's 2¢ Worth and came across this post. I wasn't sure how to get the post to this blog so I just copied the text (Hope that's OK). At any rate I found it thought provoking and want to know what others think. Talk to me...Thanks Leslie
Here's the link:

http://davidwarlick.com/2cents/

Teaching & Learning in the new information landscape...
1 ItemUpdated: Thu, Apr 9 2009 8:04 PM
Let’s just put them all in jail 24/7
By David Warlick on education

Secretary of Education, Arne Duncan

This is one of those posts where I might have gotten a bit carried away. But that title about jail comes from one of the comments I got when I posted some quotes from Education Secretary, Arne Duncan, on Twitter and Facebook yesterday. The national education leader visited two Denver schools on Tuesday, and to an apparently unsympathetic room of about 400 middle and high school students,


Duncan said American schools should be open six days a week, at least 11 months a year, to improve student performance. (Gandy)
According to the 9News.com a story, entitled “Education Secretary says kids need more school,” Duncan said to the teenagers,


You’re competing for jobs with kids from India and China. I think schools should be open six, seven days a week; 11, 12 months a year.
I do not know enough about the school (Bruce Randolph) that Duncan seems to be holding up as a model for the nation, for an opinion. But the two statements, attributed to the education leader, not only make my blood boil — but they are simply “Dead Wrong!”

Arnie Duncan was nominated to the Secretary of Education post by President Barack Obama in mid-December last year, and smarter men than me immediately called foul (See Gary Stager’s “What Do Arne Duncan & Paul Bremer Have in Common?). I wanted to give Duncan the benefit of the doubt, but all doubt’s gone now. We’ve gotten no where and we’re going nowwhere, especially if we are going to extend the sentencing of our children.

One commenter of my Facebook posts said,


..the competition we have vs. India and China (2 Million … Read MoreMinutes) is an impossible task to overcome. Those are the best of the best compared to our better kids.
I would extend this mismatch to suggest that it isn’t simply that we’re comparing their best apples to our better apples. First of all, you’re not going to win the blue ribbon at the county fair by leaving your apple pie in the oven longer. And secondly, why not grow oranges instead. Doesn’t a global market place need diversity of talents and skills — not everyone trying to best each other on the same narrow array of standards.


Isn’t this what we’re doing to our children?


But we’re not talking about fruit are we? We’re talking about our children. ..and let’s face it, we’re talking about nothing less than institutionalizing “child labor” to satisfy a failed belief that higher standardized test scores will reliably lead to a stronger economy, more prosperous citizens, and a vibrant democracy. What it leads to is boredom, ca lapsing morale among our best teachers, children without passion, children dropping out, and a growing and prospering testing industry.

I was so incredibly lucky to have gone to school when I did. Even though I did poorly on tests, was not conscientious about homework, blah blah blah (we didn’t diagnose leaning disabilities (diversities) back then). I had wise teachers who said, “He’s bright and he can learn anything he wants to learn.” My parents didn’t worry.

My son, who’s not A.D.D., still performed poorly, because he was bored. He didn’t care. He wasn’t drinking the kool aid. He spent his time and attention with his music. I remember when a middle school math teacher refused to sign off on his enrolling in more advanced math classes in high school. She urged us to keep him out of math. The cynic in me is convinced that continued poor math performance wouldn’t have been good for the school.

We put him in Math and he performed poorly — until he approached his senior year and realized that his grades would prevent him from earning that music scholarship he need for his music school of choice. So during his senior year, he out-performed, in calculus, classmates who’d already been accepted at MIT.

Now if you think that the moral of this story is “making kids want to do well in Math will result in better performance,” then you’re wrong. The moral of the story is that if my son finally wants a job, where he needs to know Calculus — then he’ll learn calculus. You see,

Anyone who can master something that he or she is passionate about,

Can learn anything!

Bring passion back into education — and kick out the standards!

..and while you’re at it, kick the amateurs out too!

Friday, April 3, 2009

Thing 23

Final Reflections

In my leisure time (what little of it there is) I like to design and make jewelry. Before learning this craft I had never heard of crimping pliers. They are used to “crimp” a small bead at the ends of your beading to ensure that your necklace or bracelet doesn’t come apart. There are other pliers that can be used but once I discovered the crimping pliers I would never choose any other tool for that job. The right tool for the job makes all the difference. Thanks to 23 Things I now have a large repertoire for teaching and learning using Web 2.0 tools. I am a happy camper. So today for example when I sat in a meeting where a document was being edited by a group and one person was attempting to capture all the various suggestions for edits and changes, I immediately thought WIKI!!!
My new tools will help me to ensure that various tasks are done well, easier to do, done more efficiently and more likely to accomplish the intended goal. There are some challenges however and I’d like to offer my list of pros and cons.
Pros

  • I have an increased number of communication tools at my fingertips
  • Time can be saved when multiple contacts are needed to edit a document (WIKI, Google doc)
  • Tools allow for easy sharing of work
  • Decreases or eliminates distance barriers, encourages global communications
  • Data collection widget allows you to hear from those who visit your site
  • Don’t have to know HTML, scripts are provided
  • Increasing amounts of information are available

Cons
  • I still prefer face to face contacts for some tasks. I like to see facial expressions, gestures etc in attempting to fully understand someone’s point
  • May miss cues that you can observe when working in person
  • Some tools rely on user preferences i.e. tags are not “standardized” and don’t mean the same thing to everyone.
  • Information overload!! Bloglines brings in way too much to read at one time if you subscribe to prolific bloggers
  • Can’t always control or know who’s responding
  • Limited to page, object formats if you don’t know scripts or HTML
  • Information overload. 2 cautions: increased information does not guarantee increased wisdom and all information presented does not necessarily meet “standards”. How do you know information can be trusted?
  • Lots of advertising on some sites
  • Equal access is not available for all stakeholders
  • Sometimes difficult to control who sees or has access

That’s my 2 cents worth. Now I will make some choices of which tools to get good at and explore them more. Hey 23 Things, what’s next? As always, thanks for listening. Leslie


Thursday, April 2, 2009

Thing 22

OK, here's my wiki https://knowtes.wikispaces.com/ . What a great way to collaborate. This is more than just self-expression (which is what blogs allow you to do and then others respond). This is "here's my work" and now it's your turn. Change it, add to it, revise it, edit it, delete it (scary) but I WANT you to put your 2 cents in. I would imagine that you have to be ready not to "own" whatever you put out there. It's amazing how differently people see things. I learned that with tags. I never cease to be amazed at what people put under certain tags?????? At any rate, if I had a class of students I would definitely use wikis. This is a tool I would choose as a teacher and then go deep with. As always, thanks for listening. Leslie

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