Recently I attended a meeting for educators at our State Department of Education. As we were discussing current concerns over standardized testing in our schools, the governor walked into the room. You can imagine the surprise to see our governor, John Kasich, step into the room and take a seat in the discussion group.
As he talked he began to discuss the changes coming to our state, which he explained is no longer an agriculture economy or an industrial economy, but instead needs to move toward a "cloud" economy. I can't speak for the governor, but in my mind he was talking about the way technology has shifted economies. No longer are we limited to goods produced in our state and no longer are our companies limited to buyers in our area. Money can be made not just through industry or service, but through ideas. The internet has opened new possibilities for thinkers and entrepeneurs.
What does it mean to be teaching children in a time of ideas? How do we prepare them for an idea economy? It isn't easy to revision school as we know it. What do we do that needs to stay and what needs to go? Our classrooms and schools need to look and function differently. I'm not sure what that means, but I do think some important thinking starts here:
How are students using time? My new question has become, "Is what students are doing worth their time?" I think we have to be willing to really think about this. Students in an idea economy need to know how to ask big questions and seek answers. These answers don't always solve problems, but instead lead to new questions. Worksheets (paper or digital) and assigned tasks do not create thinkers and solvers. Are students spending time in higher order thinking opportunities that move beyond remembering/understanding/applying and toward analyzing/evaluating/creating? Are there opportunities to learn from peers and collaborate with others?
Who owns the learning? I'm amazed at how much my role as a teacher has changed since I first started teaching. It's sometimes uncomfortable, but always rewarding. No longer do I plan every step, every minute. Teaching requires more thinking on my feet, more following, more listening, more understanding. Students are now the decision makers in their learning. When students are not sitting beside us, what are they doing? Are they doing something we told them to do or something they decided to do? Is the work they are doing authentic? Is it connected? Is it taking them deeper in their understanding?
Do we have environments of trust? When I went to school, we seemed to most often function on compliance. To be good at school meant following rules and completing tasks assigned. Today learning has evolved. Ownership and choice are essential in personalized learning environments. We have to trust that children can make decisions about their learning, set their own goals, and talk about their own progress. We have to trust that schools can tell their own stories and that districts can make their own decisions. We have to allow communities to determine what their children need.
Are students and learning communities connected? In an idea environment, learners are connected. They are connected to their learning, to their peers, to their community, to information, to resources and to learning communities beyond their classroom. More and more I consider the way what we are doing connects to life beyond our day. I want students to be able to take what we learn and make it a part of their everyday life.
Is learning personalized? I love pondering this graphic of Personalization vs. Differentiation vs. Individualization. One of my favorite statements in personalization is "Connects learning with interests, talents, passions and aspirations." Are the structures we have set up flexible enough that students drive their own learning?
Are we resource rich? When developing learners willing to problem solve, think deeply, ask tough questions, formulate ideas, collaborate with peers, and create new understandings resources are essential. Are our classroom libraries able to support questioning, thinking, and learning more? Are we connected to resources that will support student learning? I often wonder what would happen if we took funds used for testing and moved them to resources. Oh, to dream...
Are we moving beyond standardized measures? We are often held back by standardized assessments. Standardized tests seek right answers. They work in linear formats. They require students to work for longer periods of time than developmentally acceptable. They take time away from real learning. They assume that everyone learns at the same rate and thinks in the same way. Our country has been successful because of innovators, risk-takers, creators, and communicators....not fill-in the bubble thinkers. Are standardized tests measuring what we value? Can they? What measures can be used to know if schools are effectively supporting student progress?
How do you think teaching and learning are different in an "idea economy"? What should we change? What needs to stay the same?
Other posts about rethinking education are here:
Follow Cathy's board Rethinking Education on Pinterest.
It's not what we know, it's what we're willing to learn.
Showing posts with label teaching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label teaching. Show all posts
Tuesday, December 30, 2014
Saturday, December 13, 2014
Teacher as Personal Trainer
Sometimes I get on a kick where I vow I am going to get physically fit. I'm going to exercise more I tell myself and off to the gym I go. Every time I go, I use the same three machines. I start on the elliptical, move to the tread mill and then finish on the bicycle. The bicycle is boring for me. I don't like it a bit, but I do it so I can get the final "calories burned" number I want.
My intentions to exercise are always good, but it isn't long before my interest fades. Doing the same thing every day gets old. I don't know how to use the other machines and honestly don't know which ones I should use for the results I want. I'm all about that "calories burned" number anyway, but many fitness friends say that isn't enough.
I can't help but wonder if my workouts would be better if I had a personal trainer. If I had someone to get me started, develop a plan, and help me when things get hard. If I had someone who loved and believed in physical fitness enough for both of us. If I had someone who could fix the little things I wasn't doing quite right or make changes as I needed them.
Teacher as Personal Trainer
Today as I moved from room to room to support readers I couldn't help but think about how much a teacher is like a personal trainer. As I watch students during independent times in their learning, I realize how important the teacher is in helping students to make choices that keep them learning.
Often we set up elaborate plans so we can work with small groups and provide individualized instruction, but these plans can take away from the time students need to read, write, and create. If we believe students only learn when they are beside us, we are underestimating the power students have in their own learning. What are students doing when they are not beside us? Students spend a lot of time working independently, and the teacher as a personal trainer makes sure this time is valuable for students.
The teacher as a personal trainer (I'm new to creating an infographic and wanted to play with Piktochart. #playtolearn):
Maybe teachers are more like personal trainers as they help learners find places to begin, develop a plan, set appropriate goals and help when things get hard. Students feel our love for the books, writing, and thinking we share with them. We sometimes have to believe enough for both of us. We fix things when they are not quite right, and make changes for our learners. We're in and out --- just enough. Most of all, we believe...and our students amaze us every day.
My intentions to exercise are always good, but it isn't long before my interest fades. Doing the same thing every day gets old. I don't know how to use the other machines and honestly don't know which ones I should use for the results I want. I'm all about that "calories burned" number anyway, but many fitness friends say that isn't enough.
I can't help but wonder if my workouts would be better if I had a personal trainer. If I had someone to get me started, develop a plan, and help me when things get hard. If I had someone who loved and believed in physical fitness enough for both of us. If I had someone who could fix the little things I wasn't doing quite right or make changes as I needed them.
Teacher as Personal Trainer
Carolyn Carr talks with readers during Reader's Workshop. |
Often we set up elaborate plans so we can work with small groups and provide individualized instruction, but these plans can take away from the time students need to read, write, and create. If we believe students only learn when they are beside us, we are underestimating the power students have in their own learning. What are students doing when they are not beside us? Students spend a lot of time working independently, and the teacher as a personal trainer makes sure this time is valuable for students.
The teacher as a personal trainer (I'm new to creating an infographic and wanted to play with Piktochart. #playtolearn):
Saturday, April 20, 2013
National Poetry Month: Check These Out
What? We're more than half way through National Poetry Month already? Last year I told you about some of my favorite professional resources for teaching poetry. This year, I want to share some of the events I'm following:
Where Does Poetry Come From?
Mary Lee Hahn is featuring Common Inspiration: Uncommon Creations at A Year of Reading. Each day she is sharing a digital media inspiration from WikiMedia Commons. Mary Lee is using this picture/video/media as inspiration for her daily poem and encourages others to join her by sharing their own poem inspired from the media. Additionally, Mary Lee has been sharing useful information about copyright and courtesy when sharing the work of other artists.
Amy Ludwig VanDerwater is sharing Drawing Into Poems. Each day in April Amy sketches her inspiration for poetry at The Poem Farm. As she draws each picture she jots words, thoughts, ideas, and short stories around the illustration. Some of these will become the inspiration for poetry. I have shared several of her sketches with my students as we learn to play with our ideas in our writers' notebooks before beginning to write our poems.
Getting to Know Poetry
At Gotta Book Greg Pincus shares 30 Days / 30 Poets. I've followed this event for a couple of years now and learn so much about poets along the way. Each day Greg shares an unpublished poem by a different poet as well as important information about their work.
Want to know more about how technology and poetry can work together? Stop by Author Amok where you'll learn something new each day about technology and poetry.
You should probably make one more stop to No Water River. I'm enjoying Poetry Is (poets share their thoughts on what is important poetry) and Guest Poets (Renee talks with poets and shares some of their work). There are many surprises here to share with your students.
Teaching Poetry
Looking for examples of student work? Ms. Mac shares 30 Days of Student Poetry at Check It Out.
Susan Brown Taylor shares her work with mentor poems. Each day she chooses a mentor poem, talks about how she uses it with students, and creates her own poem from the mentor text.
Looking for More?
Stop by Jama's Alphabet Soup for more National Poetry Month Kid-Lit Events.
Where Does Poetry Come From?
Mary Lee Hahn is featuring Common Inspiration: Uncommon Creations at A Year of Reading. Each day she is sharing a digital media inspiration from WikiMedia Commons. Mary Lee is using this picture/video/media as inspiration for her daily poem and encourages others to join her by sharing their own poem inspired from the media. Additionally, Mary Lee has been sharing useful information about copyright and courtesy when sharing the work of other artists.
Amy Ludwig VanDerwater is sharing Drawing Into Poems. Each day in April Amy sketches her inspiration for poetry at The Poem Farm. As she draws each picture she jots words, thoughts, ideas, and short stories around the illustration. Some of these will become the inspiration for poetry. I have shared several of her sketches with my students as we learn to play with our ideas in our writers' notebooks before beginning to write our poems.
Getting to Know Poetry
At Gotta Book Greg Pincus shares 30 Days / 30 Poets. I've followed this event for a couple of years now and learn so much about poets along the way. Each day Greg shares an unpublished poem by a different poet as well as important information about their work.
Want to know more about how technology and poetry can work together? Stop by Author Amok where you'll learn something new each day about technology and poetry.
You should probably make one more stop to No Water River. I'm enjoying Poetry Is (poets share their thoughts on what is important poetry) and Guest Poets (Renee talks with poets and shares some of their work). There are many surprises here to share with your students.
Teaching Poetry
Looking for examples of student work? Ms. Mac shares 30 Days of Student Poetry at Check It Out.
Susan Brown Taylor shares her work with mentor poems. Each day she chooses a mentor poem, talks about how she uses it with students, and creates her own poem from the mentor text.
Looking for More?
Stop by Jama's Alphabet Soup for more National Poetry Month Kid-Lit Events.
Monday, June 13, 2011
Book Trailers: A Place In Our Classroom Communities?
It's summer and I'm sitting here thinking about book trailers. Yes, book trailers.
This year my students were so interested in connections between the internet and literature that I want to spend some time investigating these links. I hope to learn more about author websites, literacy apps for iPod/iPad, picture books available on e-readers, and other ways literature links to their world.
One connection I think may be powerful in our reading community is book trailers....but where to start?
Where do you begin looking for book trailers? What do you look for? How will they be useful with young readers? I wasn't sure. So, I did what I always do now. I asked my colleagues on Twitter.
Who better to begin this summer investigation than Mr. Schu Reads? I must admit that Mr. Schu may be the reason I have been thinking about trailers. He is good about tweeting links to new trailers and keeping us informed of books soon to be released. You'll want to follow his blog, Watch. Connect. Read., as he is constantly sharing new information about children's books. I asked for help, and he was quick to my rescue (thanks, Mr. Schu).
Like I said, he's an expert. I began looking through the trailers he had suggested. Here are some of my thoughts as I watched.
Some book trailers seem to be intended to advertise and generate interest.
These book trailers create interest in reading.
Shoe-La-La! Karen Beaumont (author) Leuyen Pham (illustrator)
They help get kids excited about new books with favorite characters like Knuffle Bunny.
They tell kids about books by favorite authors as in these trailers:
They bring new book possibilities to young readers.
Little Chicken's Big Day Jerry Davis (author) Katie Davis (author, illustrator)
While some trailers generate excitement about what a story will be about, others tell the story in purposeful ways.
Young readers can listen to stories at home. Repeated readings can help support young language learners.
Llama Llama Red Pajamas Anna Dwedney (author)
Like repeated readings, listening to stories can make them more familiar and easier to read independently.
Listening to books can help children develop a sense of story putting the sounds and rhythms of language in their hearts and in their heads.
Ladybug Girl Goes at the Beach Jacky Davis (author) David Soman (author, illustrator)
Some trailers can support learning about the craft of writing.
Book trailers can help young writers learn how authors and illustrators work.
Authors and illustrators can help young writers know what is essential in good stories.
Little White Rabbit Kevin Henkes (author)
I'm thinking there is some potential with book trailers so I'm going to keep searching and pondering. How do you use trailers with young readers? Where do you find them? Are there particular characteristics you look for in trailers? I hope you'll share your thinking. Is there a place for book trailers in our reading communities?
A Few Channels For Trailers:
Thursday, July 29, 2010
Choosing Picture Books
"What is the use of a book," thought Alice, "without pictures or conversations?"
Lewis Carroll (from thinkexist.com)
On Tuesday, August 10th, Mandy from Enjoy and Embrace Learning and I are hosting a blogging event: August 10th is 10 for 10 picture books. The list of bloggers that will be sharing their 10 must-have picture books is growing. We're getting excited about the event, and hoping you'll join us. As Julie of Raising Readers and Writers said, "Guess I better save my money...I'll be getting more ideas for books to buy."
To get ready for the event I've begun to consider which 10 books I will add to my list. I've started to compile my list of 10, but I have realized how difficult (and fun!) it is going to be. Only 10 books!! My classroom is full of books I've collected over the years, and I've spent most of this summer updating my library. Only 10 books?? How is one to narrow the list to 10 when there are so many amazing books out there?? Right now I am sure of 1 of my 10 (it's a secret). I have old books I love. New books I'm amazed by. Authors I couldn't live without. Illustrators who captivate my students.
All this talk about picking 10 books to share with everyone has me considering characteristics of a picture book which make it perfect for the classroom. Besides being hard covered, and taped well, I'm thinking picture books for teaching need:
- Wonderful words: Picture books that beg to be read aloud in a classroom need wonderful words. There needs to be a rhythm to language, a way the words just fall out and sound like music. The words need to allow a little play with your voice. Places where the words say slow down, speed up, talk softly, pause. Words to help you to see the place, share the character's feelings, and participate in the story. My students love books with repeating phrases and words that are fun to say.
- Illustrations: In picture books illustrations help tell the story. Often they create meaning in ways that words cannot. How often have I been reading to my students and they notice something in the illustrations that is important to the story, but because I am so focused on the words I have completely missed the clue?
- Length appropriate for attention: It is important to consider the length of a text for read aloud. Let's face it, kindergarteners need a different length of text than a second grader. In first grade, at the beginning of the year, shorter texts are more successful. As the year moves on students are able to attend for longer periods of time so I can share longer stories then.
- Structured appropriately: Picture books that work best in the classroom are structured in a way that makes sense to children. Characters are manageable and dialogue is easy to understand. My students always love picture books with strong characters or situations they can connect to their daily lives.
- Mentor texts: While not a necessity for read aloud success, I like to share books with children which can serve as a mentor for their writing. I think it is important for my students to be able to say, "I can write a book like that," or "I can try that," or "I can illustrate like that."
- Anchor text: The picture books I couldn't live without are those that not only appeal to children, but also support the thinking and learning in the classroom. Let's face it, I'm a teacher. The best books for the classroom are books we can use for different types of teaching. Books which allow us to anchor our thinking and learning. They're books that make us connect, predict, wonder, ask questions, synthesize, debate, and reflect. Interestingly the best books do all of that anyway.
- Loved by kids: The best picture books for the classroom are those children love. They are the books students want to take home every night. The books classes have loved over and over again. They are books that make kids laugh and touch their hearts. Of course, I think if we love a book enough it will show as we read aloud, and students will be drawn to the story. Different teachers have success with different books. However, I think we have to remember we are adults and sometimes the books that appeal to us are not the ones are students will love. We have to read the silly books. The series books. The books kids want to pick up when they go to the library.
So, I'm off to pick out book #2 for my list. Here are a few sites you might be interesting in visiting:
- Mem Fox gives her read aloud commandments.
- Lester Laminack tells of his vision for children (scroll to the bottom), "Where teachers read aloud with the zeal of a street performer and the frequency of a birdsong"
- President Obama gives his read aloud tips. Stop by to see what you think.
- This site has some reasons for using picture books with children and many great links.
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