A New School Year in the Southern Hemisphere

Expat Educator Down UndIt feels like August. For the first 18 years of my career in education, school started in August. In Australia, the new teaching year begins this week.

Today’s post is a shout out to all teachers in the Southern hemisphere. Those in my beloved North may find something new too.

Why Are You Blogging?

Many posts are dedicated to teacher blogging and the notion that all teachers should blog. Last week, I wrote a piece for The Edublogger highlighting the many purposes behind blogs. If you’re looking to set up a class blog anytime soon, this post is worth a read.

First Day Lesson Plans

If you’re like me, you stare the first few pages of a lesson plan book and wonder How do I begin? Most of the time, I go back to first day games and activities that have worked successfully in the past.

This past year, I compiled a list of first year activities that are used by fellow bloggers. Feel free to use any of the ideas. Also, please share some of your favourites.

A Walk Down Memory Lane

If you’re simply feeling nostalgic, you might read about technology that has been used in education over the past 30 years. The post was inspired by my former school’s tech museum.

While you’re on Jaqui’s site, take a look through her posts. You’ll find helpful websites that enhance curriculum. You’ll also find written curriculum for tech instruction at each grade level. Jaqui is truly a master teacher – and an amazing person.

If you know of anyone who might find this article helpful, please pass it on. Also consider subscribing to Expat Educator for immediate email feeds. Your address will never be shared. Promise.

photo credit: Eva Rinaldi Celebrity and Live Music Photographer via photopin cc

Are We Confusing Standards with Standardization?

Standards, not standardization

My soap box. Here I go again…

As I write this, I’m ducking behind my screen, ready to dodge virtual tomatoes. Please bear with me as I question some assumptions we are making with regards to standards and standardization.

We educators use terms and acronyms, assuming that all people have the same understanding. First, I will clarify terms. Then I will ask questions.

Clarification 1: Textbooks are not curriculum.

Most simply put, curriculum is a list of things students should know and be able to do. We call the list a list of standards because we hope that all students will be able to know and do these things when they leave school. Then we create benchmarks, clarifying what those standards “look like” at various grade levels.

I often hear teachers and other school leaders saying that they want to find a curriculum that teaches to the standards. What they’re really saying is this: They are looking for the “magic bullet” educational materials that will help student test scores improve.

I haven’t used textbooks in over ten years. What I learned from my Australian colleagues is this: Teachers can look at a list of standards and figure out the best way to teach to those standards.

So here are some questions: Are schools underestimating teachers? Are schools assuming that teachers cannot teach to standards unless they have the “right” materials?

Clarification 2: Standards are different than Standardization

If we understand curriculum as a list of standards describing what students should know and be able to do, we can differentiate between curriculum and instruction.

Curriculum is built on standards. Instruction may or may not be standardized.

The progression of assumptions goes something like this (my reaction in italics):

  1. We need to teach to the common core (standards). True.
  2. The district has purchased materials that align with the standards. Okay.
  3. If we all teach this curriculum (a misuse of the term), then [the company's] research suggests that students will test better. Here is training on how you should all use these materials… Hold the phone!!!!!

We have crossed a line at #3. We assume that, to hit standards, instruction must be standardized according to commercially-created materials.

My next question: Once companies have convinced us that they have the “right” materials, are we requiring all teachers to use those materials in the same way?

Clarification 3: If we agree that instructional standardization is unnecessary, we can maintain creativity and passion in a standards-based classroom.

But we need to make a few paradigm shifts.

Specifically,

  1. Look at the standards before we look textbooks or think of “thematic” activities. The unit on Spiders is no longer a list of activities. It is a list of standards first (classification, expository writing, research, health and safety), then activities.
  2. Use team meeting time to plan. Work together to compile activities and resources that will teach to the standards. Use textbooks and other materials as resources. Trust yourself to create new activities that teach to standards more authentically than pre-packaged materials.
  3. Maintain checklists of standards and keep track of students that have and have not met specific standards. Project-based learning is then tweaked to include the following instructions: Somewhere in your project, you need to show me that you understand the difference between insects and spiders. You need to tell me whether or not your spider is dangerous and how you can tell. When I come and talk to you, I will ask which books and websites you have been reading and how they helped you.

Clarification 4: There are some things that are just wrong.

Wrong: Awards and sanctions for schools, teachers, and students based on test scores. Household rewards and sanctions do not get kids to bed on time, nor is bedtime a single standard by which we judge parenting (thank heavens!). Let’s pay attention to the scores, but realize that tests will never tell us the full extent of student knowledge.

Wrong: Hours and hours of standardized testing. I’ve created assessments where students learn through the process of demonstrating, synthesizing, and evaluating their knowledge and skills. Students learn nothing when they fill in bubbles. A few hours per year is okay. Weeks? Wrong.

Wrong: Teaching all students the same way. The little Steve Jobses and Mark Zuckerbergs in your classroom (who probably test well), will withdraw or start programming social media when they should be underlining the topic sentence.

There are more wrong things, but those are the biggies.

Conclusion: Education is not doomed, unless we confuse standards with standardization.

As Yong Zhao Trim said, American education was “doomed” in the 1960s when the Russians beat us to space. American education was “doomed” according to the 1980s publication “A Nation At Risk.” NCLB was created because schools were failing.

Yes, we have work to do in education. But, we have innovative teachers who care about student passions and are capable of creating lessons that teach to standards. Accomplished teachers know their students and how they learn.

Let’s teach to the standards, but teach them in ways that are individualized, differentiated, and personalized.

My last question: What if we change the assumptions?

If the new assumptions are as follows…

  • Teachers can teach to standards with or without specific, commercial materials.
  • No one set of materials (commercially-created or otherwise) will help teachers teach all standards to all students.
  • Standards can be taught and tracked in the midst of innovative, project-based classrooms.
  • We fight government initiatives that are truly wrong while resolving to show the world that students learn through individualized, differentiated, and personalized instruction.

…how would schools look different?

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STOP Teaching Tech!

This is my soap box. I started climbing it yesterday as I was reading articles and posts about technology in the classroom. I hesitated as I neared the top.

I hope that readers will forgive me if I step on the soap box every once in awhile to question trends I see in educational discussions. I hope you will keep the discussion going and correct me if I am in error.

STOP Teaching Technology To Students
Charlie Roy, in a guest post for Dangerously Irrelevant, clearly stated reasons why teachers should focus on pedagogy, not tech. This is my own proverbial litmus test:

If, after the first month of school, I spend more than 10 minutes teaching a program or tool, I’m doing something wrong. Take, for example, movie-making:

Month 1: Spend 90 minutes teaching students to make movies and make quality productions.
Month 2: Students videotape themselves to practice speaking and evaluate improvement for a Living Museum project.
Month 3: Students video a book talk to demonstrate knowledge of reading skills.
Month 4: Students demonstrate scientific process through video
Month 5: Students use video to communicate their learning to parents.

Notice how the activities for months 2-6 comprise specific teaching points. Students should speak clearly (eye contact, volume, posture, etc.), analyze and self-evaluate speaking skills, demonstrate reading comprehension, demonstrate use of the scientific process, and communicate learning to parents.

If, after the first month of school, students are asking me questions about tech tools rather than content, I am doing something wrong. Students can Google search almost any tech question. My tech-savvy colleagues have created video tutorials to remind students of Google site basics. Feel free to use those videos with your students. Students need to know how and where to research to find answers to general technical problems.

STOP Teaching Technology To Teachers…Unless they ask
We learn to use what we need to use.
I spent a whole semester learning to use SPSS for statistical research. I’m using six commands to complete my dissertation. After a semester’s-worth of work, I remember six commands. Teachers, in general, are practical people. If they see a direct link between a tech-based activity and increased student learning, they’ll want to find out more.

Suggestion 1: Rethink PD
We tell teachers It’s not about the technology – it’s about the learning, but we model the opposite. We plan professional development sessions around “How to use…” Instead, consider the following:

  1. Spend some time with teachers and teaching teams. Find out what they’re doing. Learn what they want their students to learn. Then, prepare PD by playing with some tools that you believe will enhance what teachers are already doing.
  2. Spend the first 30 minutes of PD showing (not telling) teachers ideas that enhance the learning currently going on in the classroom. Anticipatory sets apply to teacher learning too.
  3. Offer breakout sessions where teachers learn one of the tools demonstrated. We preach differentiation. Model it. Let tech-savvy teachers run the breakouts. Better yet, let students run sessions.

Suggestion 2: Employ an “Each one Teach one” philosophy.
My students have been making iMovies for three years. I made my first iMovie six months ago. Here’s how my students learned:

  • My teaching partner taught his class.
  • We scheduled an hour for his students to teach my students (60 min of tech).
  • I scheduled an hour for my students to teach another class of students (60 min of communication).

We have used this method to teach movie-making, podcasts, and Google ePortfolio sites. Only 60 minutes are spent “learning” the technology.

The other 60 minutes are about communication. We have one rule for students teaching students: Student “teachers” are not allowed to touch student “learner”s’ computers. The “teachers” can use any number of methods to communicate procedures. They can use words. They can set a computer beside the learner’s computer and model the actions. They can point learners to video tutorials. They can write lists of steps.

The “Each one Teach one” process helps allay the fears of teachers who are insecure about their own tech abilities. This doesn’t, however, give them permission to stop teaching. Instead of teaching tech, these teachers should be responsible for helping students analyze the quality of the layout, the presentation, and the content. They should be circulating and saying things like,

  • I like how you…,
  • That looks like it would be helpful for [so-and-so]… Can you show him/her?,
  • I need to see [x]…Can you figure out how to do that?,
  • I don’t understand what you mean by…,
  • Why did you choose…?
I agree with Matt Bromley: We may be unintentionally scaring teachers away from using technology in the classroom because we make it too complicated. Keep it simple.
  1. Give teachers permission to not know all the technology tools.
  2. Help teachers empower student discovery of cool tech things.
  3. Encourage teachers to focus on holding students accountable for their choices of tools, their uses of tools, and the quality of work produced.