Monday, December 15, 2014
Life Lessons From A Salt Shaker
My grandfather was a painter and had a metal lunchbox he carried to work each day. One particular day he was home and ate his lunch outside under the shade of an old tree. I was about four years old and was fascinated with all the items, besides food, that he had in the lunchbox. As he answered my inquiries about the items, he pulled out a saltshaker to use on a boiled egg. I assumed it was salt but as he put it on the egg, pepper came out as well. I couldn't understand why he had both, salt and pepper, in one container. When I asked him about it he told me that putting them both in one container was more efficient and served the same purpose as two containers. And there was no need to separate the two if their purpose was to be used together on one thing. As an adult, this became the perfect analogy for unity among people. There was/is no need to separate or divide humanity into categories because we all serve, while different, the same purpose...to be compassionate and supporting while uplifting one another. While that notion screams of an idealistic world view, I believe there is truth at its foundation. To me, that salt/pepper shaker is and has always been representative of cooperation, collaboration and a commitment to serve others.
Monday, September 8, 2014
Cultivating New Ground
I am preparing to cultivate a new section of my personal Learning Garden. I am nervous, excited, frustrated and curious at the same time. I am in the process of learning to recognize the value of a process, the process of thinking, evaluating, constructing, risk taking and collaborating. My biggest stumbling block is recognizing how a process of learning can support producing a product, a grade from testing. Hopefully, while I am in Residency 1, I will get a clearer picture and understanding of process verses product, the importance and proper usage of each, and create a schema that will eventually support me in being the best teacher I can be!
Thursday, March 20, 2014
Constant Collaboration!
If you have never heard of
Creative Commons then you have to watch this video especially if you are an educator, parent or parent-educator
(my fancy way to say homeschooler). The title is Wanna
Work Together? and was produced by our friends at CreativeCommons.com. This
site offers a free copy right license that allows the copyright to be
individualized to meet the needs and desires of what you want to do with your
creations! I know many times I have not publically shared photos, slideshows
and other materials I have created because of the fear someone would steal my
idea and claim it to be their own. But wait, there is a flip side to this.
As parents and educators, we
move around fellow parents and educators who are always creating, discussing or
dreaming of ways to make things more productive, effective or appealing. Now be
honest, how many times have you and a group been talking about an issue that
led directly to a solution? Creative Commons provides educators with resources
and materials in a public domain free to use and that can be modify. Many times
I have found the perfect form or template if only I could change one thing to
customize it for my needs. And what educator does not like resources? This, my
friends, it a new and free version of those teacher resource sites that charge
or require a membership. It is also a place to share your creation, someone
adds to it, another modifies it and you now have that an enhanced version of
your original. This is what educators and parents do all the time. Now it is in
the digital realm of our lives.
A 21st Century Rip Van Winkle?
This is a cute video about a man who
awakes after many years
have passed him by. The
title of the video is Mr. Winkle Wakes produced by Mathew Needleman and is
located at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lm1sCsl2MQY.In
this video the author has created a modern day version of Rip Van Winkle and how he
responds to the technology advancements made during the past 100 years.
Initially Mr. Winkle is very excited, inquisitive and filled with wonder. That
is until he enters a school.
Like Mr. Winkle, I
have felt the same in similar situations although I did not miss out on 100
years of advancements. I have seen computers being stored in closet of
classrooms, software unopened lying on shelves. I have given information and resources
about the use of technology to be met with answers such as I do not have time,
I do know how, or it will not work at this grade level. I felt the same as Mr.
Winkle did! I was discouraged about the technology path I saw some teachers
taking. I was confused as to why they took that path and seemed to disregard the other.
Most importantly, I was dismayed over the loss of creative and interactive
opportunities students were missing. Hopefully, the tide will continue to
change and the use and acceptance of technology in schools will be the norm,
instead of
an exception.
Understanding a Digital World
I had never heard of a digital learner or a digital community although I consider myself part of both. As a future teacher, I am unsure how yet another label benefits others in understanding, learning or teaching. In my mind, a teacher meets the students where they are. If that is a technology savvy student or a student with limited exposure to technology, the goal is the same, provide meaningful learning experiences that extend and build upon what they already know. The key word is meaningful. In reading Understanding the Digital Generation: Teaching and Learning in the New Digital Landscape by Ian Jukes, Ted McCain and Lee Crockett I often felt a line being drawn in the sand or a great divide being created between teachers and students. One thing I do not recall being mentioned was the human component of technology.
I believe the human component is what drives the world of technology. If we did not have a need, would we have the first computers or programs? If the human component did not drive technology, websites would not be as interactive and inviting. I also would not have spent the amount of time I did in creating my website. I would not concern myself with how it looked flowed, etc. I would have been interested in information only. The way we communicate would not be as technologically enhanced. I used a form of technology to send typed messages before the birth of texting. The technology used was the teletype phone (TTY) which used a modem to send and receive text over phone lines in order to communicate with the deaf. This evolved into texting from a cell phone to the QWERTY keyboard on Sidekick cell phones to the present technology and use of texting. The human component was and continues to be the driving force behind this technology.
It Takes A Village..
I watched the video, Big Ideas for Better Schools, by the Edutopia staff at Edutopia.org. I assumed
it was another educational organization promoting a new
“thing” in
the world of education. While I am not against creating and exploring new ways
to teach, I am weary and worn by our current educational climate. To my surprise, this
video shared several components that make a good school great! The components were categorized into four categories, students, teachers, parents
and community. Although the components evolve and change over time, the four
categories, students, teachers, parents and community, remain the same.
In my career as a
professional educational volunteer, I spent over a decade assisting in the
implementation of new educational components. I recall the first computers
crossing the school’s threshold and the mixed responses. I had no
experience with computers but was curious, similar to getting new PE equipment, let’s check it out. Many teachers viewed having computers as an
addition to their already busy schedules. One must remember that the main pieces of technology used
at that time were photocopiers and laminators. As volunteers, a parent and I began setting up
computers in classrooms for teachers. Before I knew it, I was installing and setting up educational software for both teachers and students to use. I began sharing the latest techno trick
or ability I had discovered and how it could make life easier for a teacher and
exiting for a student. Students began having regular computer times and newsletters now had clipart. As computers became
a bigger part of the classroom environment, the community contributed by
donating paper, ink, and computer accessories. This was the dawning of the
computer age at our school! However,
the most important elements that made transitioning into the computer age were
the four categories mentioned by the Edutopia staff, students, teachers, parents and community. These elements created the relationship needed to allow our school
to move into the computer age. The need for this relationship and support will never change regardless of the new “things” that appear on our educational horizons. This is what makes a
good school great.
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