Friday, December 11, 2009

Can't hold it back...

"Once you have learned how to ask relevant and appropriate questions, you have learned how to learn -

and no-one can hold you back from learning whatever you want and need to know."

- Neil Postman, "Teaching as a Subversive Activity", quote at http://www.angelamaiers.com/2008/03/creating-better.html


Yesterday, my  students asked about 50 terrific questions of a 'star' basketball player who came to our session. They showed curiosity, engagement, questioning ability... in other words, all the skills that learners need to develop.

So, how can I harness that curiosity - have students learning & engaging - when I don't have a fancy guest speaker visiting...?

Thursday, December 10, 2009

"Professional Development in the 21st Century" - notes

I've heard this term for some time, in conversation with Konrad Glogowski, Sharon Peters, and other similarly well-connected educators with broad technological background. I had this conception that like a blog/facebook page / moodle there would be some kind of 'main page' where all of one person's resources would be collected.



Konrad, in the presentation above (part of the K-12 Online Conference, happening right now!) talks about learning WITH as a part of a personal learning network. Blogs, twitter, etc - these allow us to learn FROM. To learn WITH, we must work alongside other educators.

He also focuses on the importance of learning from the classroom. Simple, yet profound - becoming aware of what happens day-to-day is the best way to become a more empowered professional. He suggests that we ask: am I an 'implementer' of strategies from other classrooms/environments? Or am I a 'designer and maker' of my own tools? If anything, I'd say I focus on the latter, and would like to incorporate more of the former. We want our students to be enquirers, and perpetual learners; therefore we ourselves must be inquiring, and constantly learning.

We want to: connect with our colleagues, through our networks, in conversations that grow our of our classroom - YES!

1) classroom-based teacher development. Learning from our context; this is about focusing who we are, what we do, and why we do it in our classrooms. This is based on the idea that we have a lot to learn from our classrooms & our students.
- Involves students AND teachers working together... the primary relationship is student-teacher. Students need to be involved in choosing content, evaluation & environment.
- Engages us in the process of learning & reflection
- Reflection leads to transformative practise, leads to meaningful action
2) Reflective Practice - practice that leads to professional growth & meaningful action
- Requires that we look critically at our classroom practise, and make decisions regarding our professional growth
"Active consistent and careful consideration of any belief or supposed knowledge" (Dewey)

Reflection CONTENT:
- physical presence, preparation, kinds of learning opportunities, homework, instructional practise, goals and values, evaluation/assessment, assumptions about teaching & learning, why choose some topics and avoid others? Questions that involve us as individuals, with our own set of values & beliefs

Reflection PROCESS:
1. Describing ourselves. What we do & how we do it?
- "problem-setting" (Schon). Biggest challenge is not solving problems - it is identifying areas in need of improvement. Hardest part of the process - to find our weaknesses!
- is this working, is it working for everyone, am I pleased/proud/concerned?
2. Questioning our practise OR "informing". Why do we do the things we do? What else could we be doing?
- We try to unpack our classroom practise & see the forces that cause us to teach the way we do. Why have I organised things this way? Identify limitations of our own point of view; question long-held practises or assumptions.
3. Confronting our long-held assumptions / Critical reflection
- Our classroom is a deeply personal construct. What does this reveal about my values or beliefs?

some way we should also have 4: Reconstructing our Practises
Having observed ourselves & reflected on our practises, we should reconstruct our practise.

And this is where the video cut out for me, unfortunately...! Excellent reminder of the importance of what I'm doing right now - professional development, on my own schedule :)

Monday, December 7, 2009

Amazing blogs out there...

Today I've been so absorbed in reading other blogs, I've barely had time to process them. Check out the list on the right hand column to see what I've begun to check out.

In particular, I appreciated this post, which another blog directed me to:
http://blog.edufire.com/2009/03/05/a-manifesto-for-educhange-on-the-eve-of-hacking-education/

Quite a series of revolutionary thoughts, and definitely in line with what I'd like to explore and practise.

That's all for today!

Friday, December 4, 2009

Bullying

Recently, I've been witness to and heard wind of a remarkable amount of bullying with some students I work with. Given that I also have an interest in 'building empathy' as one way for students to connect to Kenya, I thought it might be good to find some resources related.



This video shows a Japanese teacher working with the group; the moment of 'change' seems to come when one student empathizes on a deep level with the girl being bullied.

How can I create such a positive and constructive dialogue amongst teen and pre-teen youth? Is is possible for such a process to happen 'virtually' - involving youth from different parts of the world?

Intentions

Before I begin anything, I like to state my intentions. If at least my intentions are positive and targetted - then there's a chance good things will follow. Here's a go, for this blog:

1. To reflect and share my thoughts on education in Canada and Kenya (obvious, I know)
2. To engage with an online community of educators who actually use web 2.0!
3. To express my ideas clearly & concisely
4. To keep a record of my discoveries and brilliant (or not-so-brilliant!) ideas

Ideally, I'd like to write in this blog once a week - or at least once every other week. Even if no-one reads this blog, I have a feeling the process will help my own journey of professional development.

So here goes nothing!

Mali