Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Taking Classes for Grades.

I just read this essay from the Chronicle by "The Shadow Scholar." (Dramatic, I know.) I'm thinking a lot about it.

1)  I know these people, who just want grades, not to learn anything.
2)  I know these people, who would do this.
3)  Dammit.  I know these people.
3a)  I bet the "Shadow Scholar" totally looks like this.
Besides my obvious, and familiar (Grr, I know these guys!) outrage,  there is kind of an underlying thought.

We, students, are not doing enough.  Its really that simple.  I remember in my freshman (sophomore?) year of college I was supposed to write an assignment for my American Lit class that would essentially be a proposal for a chapter to be included for an anthology.  I remember that I thought I should do it on humor (Ammurican humor), but do I remember what my argument was?  Do I remember what my proposal's main points were?  Do I even remember what short stories or essays I picked?

Nope, I sure don't.

Because I was doing it for a grade.  Sure I learned a lot in that class, and it was one of my favorite lit classes, but that assignment didn't mean crap to me.  It was a grade.

There's also a corollary to student's efforts, and that's this: Teachers Don't Let Students Do Enough.  Our Shadowy friend mentions that when he tried to get his independent study, an attempt  to get his novel published, approved, his faculty just sort of ignored it and made him return to his traditional classes.  Does publishing a novel have literary merit as part of an English program?  Undoubtedly, but when his interests were declined, he stopped going to class, and started writing papers for others' assignments.  He lost faith in the system.

In most of my education classes, I've been taught to use multiple learning strategies to encourage your student's personal involvement, but I've heard it in a lecture in every one of them.  The only class that's required me to actually do it was my class for special education students

Student engagement has been a tag for just about all of my posts on this blog.  Because it is that important.  Its the difference between enjoying something and learning it, or just doing it for a grade.  Flexibility is key in Learning.  and Technology is key in Flexibility.  Use any and all tools available to encourage your students to create something their proud of, not just chase a grade.

Photo exists in the Public Domain, taken from TheChive.com.

Sunday, November 7, 2010

1:1 Computing, and other, less fact-based stuff.

I recently got some news from my old high school.  Two things:  One pretty great and the other . . . I don't quite know how to feel about yet.  The first, and (pretty great) piece of news is that my high school is moving to 1:1 teaching over the next few years.  The other(and far more ambiguous news) is that a teacher I had in my last few years there is retiring. 

First, One-to-One Computing!  Fantastic!  Great!  Awesome!  If you haven't read up on any of this stuff, Start here, and here, and then move on, perhaps, to here.  This is even more amazing when you remember that my High School is Tiny.  and I really mean tiny.  I graduated with 67 other students, and we were the largest class in over a decade.  The whole thing might have 300.  On a good year.  The point is that our tiny agricultural school in Iowa will be moving to having one computer for every student.  Wow.  If that's not a sign that the future is literally happening all around us, I don't know what is.  
Seriously, Its like this.
The other News, though, has something to do with this as well.  When my old teacher told me she was retiring (We keep in touch), I was pretty bummed out at first.  I think that's understandable, She was a fantastic teacher.  She instilled in me a real love of learning (though to be fair, I was always a good student, and I was naturally pretty inquisitive), and that nerdiness has carried me through to becoming a teacher myself.

She was one of many great educators I experienced there, but that being said, I've come to realize that almost all my teachers taught in a style that really only benefited me, and students like me.  It was a Teacher heavy style: lecture, test, lecture, test, lecture, paper, etc., but it didn't work for a lot of the students.  I saw a lot of drifting of the student body away from any sort of learning just because they weren't engaged.  Its not that these teachers couldn't use technology, its just that they never learned how to use it to help students learn.  It was a curiosity, a fun add-on for projects, a nice break.  Its not that they were against technology, or that they weren't pretty snappy with those macbooks, it was that they had never learned how to incorporate it.

They were the old guard.  The ancient tweedy ones.  The lecturers.

Now, as I'm studying to join their ranks, I'm taking classes specifically geared to teach me how to use these new technologies to engage my kids.  I can't fall into the same traps as the old guard, as the tweedy ones.  I can't let the world change around me; because now even rural Iowa is going to have 1:1 teaching.

Photo by D. Sharon Pruitt, used under a Creative Commons license.