Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Wk 4- Ron Smith Interview – Use Any Method to Reach Students


You had me at "any method to reach students". OK, so it doesn't have quite the ring to it as that other, more familiar movie line, and the lead male isn't quite as sexy, but you gotta admit that there is something about this video that just makes an educator drool.

Ron Smith is teaching students using whatever means come to hand, trying out new techniques and technology, as well as old tricks - using his classroom like a laboratory. Ron talks about the fact that not everything he tried gave fantastic results, but that the differences in the individual kids had to be addressed. In other words, you keep trying different things until all the light bulbs are lit! This is always one of my overarching goals when I teach. It bugs me to let a participant who is willing to learn sit in confusion. I just can't take it. I will try one approach and then another until I hit upon the one that works. I use analogies a lot - whatever seems like it would make sense to that student. I try to make them laugh and cry to connect to their passion for the topic. I ask a lot of questions. I have used films, small group discussion, scenarios, probleml-based learning, and WebQuest and wikis, too. So far, I have not used the filming process (having the students film) because of time and tech constraints.

What works for you?

Wk 4 Publish Project Part 3 of 3- Waiting...


So, I have submitted my proposal to speak at the DevLearn conference in San Francisco this November. Now I wait. Part of me wants to be accepted, but if I'm honest, part of me wants to be turned down. I am still a bit intimidated by the folks I imagine would go to this conference. Will they think my project was puny???? Will they laugh at my "discovery" of the power of Wikis and WebQuests as classroom teaching methods? Rejection is so much easier to take when you don't have to look at the faces of the folks who think you are lame!
On the other hand, there is an opportunity to reach out to people, who like me, want to find a better way, but may not know exactly how or where to start. My whole purpose for getting into this degree program was to learn a different way to deliver excellent education. Maybe there is enough of an audience out there that would benefit from hearing about my experience with this process.

Wk 4 - Response to classmate #2

SATURDAY, APRIL 24, 2010

Week 3 Free Topic - Both sides of the coin.

One of the most fascinating things about people is how they can ignore things when they don't fit their beliefs. I think everyone does this to a certain extent. I still do. With the dawn of the Internet, it is easy now to find information that completely reinforces our own world view.

From this myopia comes the Law of Unintended Consequences, or as I like to call it, The Other Side of the Coin. No choice in life is a certain thing but some people think it is because they choose not to see the other side of the coin. For example:

No Child Left Behind. When it was written I at first liked the idea. Let's put down some standards for students to measure up to. Encourage success, and punish failure. Sounds good.

Of course there are many problems with this. Just the name itself is loaded with problems. No Child Left Behind indicates that all children will do equally well and nobody will fail (aka be left behind). The problem is when you look at the other side of the coin. If you want all children to do equally well then you have to hold back the high achievers too. Enforcing this standardization on everyone is a left over from the factory model education system. Teachers are handcuffed to Teaching to the Test.

The only skill the students will really have after they graduate is a skill of taking standardized tests.

So here is my radical idea. Disband the Department of Education entirely. Let states try 50 different approaches to education and see what happens. Let kids excel and provide guidance to help them get there. Over time the best approaches will become clear and will then be passed around to other schools. What makes this country great is American Ingenuity, not government.

Most critically, make sure from an early age young kid's native gifts are recognized and nurtured before the factory school beats it out of them. So who's with me?
jratka said...

@Andrew - I totally agree that it is easier than ever to find the information that satisfies and agrees with your view on any subject. You can convince yourself that almost anything is true. One of the more important skills that I try to teach my children is to be objective and skeptical when you are consuming information. This is an elemental rule when consuming medical research as well. It's always important to know who has a vested interest in the results.

The rule of unintended consequences runs through almost all facets of life where governing forces exist. You've given a great example with the school system. Did you know that the same thing happens in hospitals? In order to meet standards set by the government agencies, which are very well intentioned, we are seeing more and more focus on "passing the test" instead of taking care of the patient. Nurses are pulled into positions that take them away from the bedside so that the records can be examined and scrubbed, the guilty punished, and the innocent are really just the guilty that haven't been caught yet. So, I have to strongly agree that what made America great was not government control, but creativity, ingenuity and the "melting pot" mentality which took everything in, adopting the best features of any culture, and making it a part of the whole.

Monday, April 26, 2010

Wk 4 - Response to reading.


This week's reading hit home on so many fronts. The hardest part to read, and the section I re-read several times was the part about the "Revenge Monster" That is the monster I have struggled with many times over my adult life. Currently I think I am winning. I recognized early in my adult relationships, both at work and at home, that I had a clear choice to make between revenge and relationship. When I planned revenge and looked across time, I could see that there would be inevitable, permanent damage to the relationship. I have taught this concept in leadership development classes as well. Even though I totally get it, I still have to constantly be on the alert for the monster to reappear.

Wk 4 - Response to classmate #1

Sunday, April 25, 2010

MAC-Week 3-Reading Response


Things that make you go, hmmmm.....

"Mistakes can be like ice. If we resist them, we may keep on slipping into a posture of defeat." (p. 103). This statement hit me smack in the face during my reading this week. Not too long before writing this post I blogged about not liking to go back and readdress mistakes that could have been prevented if I had known the direction of the task more clearly. I think this was be being a bit whiny. I know that mistakes are inevitable in my life. I've made my fair share of mistakes and I'm sure I have many, many more waiting for my future. I guess the "ah ha" moment for me in this statement was the part referring to resisting those mistakes and basically setting myself up for permanent failure. I have come very far in this process of life and have hit several patches of "ice". Some of those patches I did not allow growth for learning to occur and as a result I faced some defeat along the way. The previously mentioned statement goes on to say " If we include mistakes in our definition of performance, we are likely to glide through them and appreciate the beauty of the longer run." (p. 103) I am no more immune to mistakes than any other human being on this planet. I think the thing I am taking away from this is that mistakes are going to happen. How I deal with those mistakes determines the success of my overall performance.

Zander, R. & Zander, B. (2000). The art of possibility: Transforming professional and personal life. Boston: Harvard Business School Press.

1 COMMENTS:

jratka said...

@Romel - I am so glad you picked this quote to respond to. I had almost forgotten it, and it definitely deserved some extra attention. Don't think you are alone in resisting the mistakes. It is our nature to defend ourselves against them. I also have to admit to whining about having to redo the AR stuff. I spent considerable energy resisting before I glided through the corrections.

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Wk 3 -Response to Classmate #2

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, 2010

WeeK 3: Reading Post: Reconnecting to Life's Passion

I connected with one of the passages in this weeks reading about passion:

Life takes on shape and meaning when a person is able to transcend
the barriers of personal survival and become a unique conduit for
vital energy.

I feel like I spent several years in the survival mode after my divorce nine years ago. It is only in the past few years that I feel like I have been able to transcend these barriers and become passionately involved in life again. I still have one last hurdle and that is to open myself up to the possibility of having another relationship.





Maybe he's the one I
will lose my head over??

1 comments:

jratka said...

LOL!! That was great.
Joking aside, it has been amazing to watch your journey. You showed tremendous grace under fire in those early years, always making decisions based on what was healthiest for your children. They have an amazing mother!
Your capacity to forgive, your generosity, and your resilience are all traits that I aspire to.


Wednesday, April 21, 2010

WK 3 -Response to Reading


“The life force for humankind is, perhaps, nothing more or less than the passionate energy to connect, express and communicate.” (p. 139)

This statement from the Art of Possibility hits home with me. I really believe that we were created to connect with each other. The tragedy of stroke, for example, is that the very things that make us who we are, our ability to communicate, to interact, are within only a few hours, forever changed. Who are we, if we are not in connection with other human beings? It is a scary thought.