Sunday, July 29, 2007
Wanted. A Web 2 home for KPS stuff
Most of the merry little band who skim this blog from time to time will recall the frustration we went through when we began to set up the KPS site in one of the free Wiki spaces. Much to our frustration the Education system net police that control what sites schools can and cannot access blocked access to this Wiki site. Apart from tackling these folk (the net police) we do need a place where anyone can add/edit/write about the KPS stuff in which they are engaged. So.... this is a request for suggestions, ideas. I think it is important that students doing this work also have access to such sites. I can set up a site out of Deakin (Joomla or Drupal based) but would value some reactions from others.
Producing music, producing knowledge
What is knowledge and how is it produced are pretty important questions in the KPS space. When I grew up, knowledge was something that you had, more or less, in your head. To some extent there is still an element of this today but, IMHO, that is much reduced in its importance as about a billion folk set participate in all manner of conversations and debates using various bits of so-called Web 2 software to produce knowledge. As David Weinberger of Everything in Miscellaneous fame, has argued in a number of podcasts, knowledge resides in the conversations, the email lists, the blogs, the wikis. Of course, you don't need the online stuff to do it as the post from Edutopia flags. The creative arts have always been a place to look to find KPS-like stuff happening. More often than not the teacher is also a practising artist and is thus well placed to articulate what goes on in the classroom with what goes on in the world outside.
Sunday, July 15, 2007
23 questions
I must admit to enjoying the fun Roger Schank has with the silly parts of schooling. Here he asks 23 fun questions about some improvements in Maths scores in New York city. If such testing and its consequences were not so tragic it would be funny.
Monday, June 18, 2007
Micro testing vs. Projects
A lovely post from Jeremy Hiebert's headspace via Arti's blog.
He was telling me about this new grading system he's implemented -- identical to what is described here. Every test broken down into its component learning outcomes, with remedial steps and re-tests only on the parts the students haven't performed well on. At first I was thinking, "wow, pretty innovative and individualized." Then the reality of it hit me, and I blurted out, "that's pretty much the opposite of my educational philosophy!"
I'd have trouble arguing that his friend had a philosophy that warranted the adjective "educational".
He was telling me about this new grading system he's implemented -- identical to what is described here. Every test broken down into its component learning outcomes, with remedial steps and re-tests only on the parts the students haven't performed well on. At first I was thinking, "wow, pretty innovative and individualized." Then the reality of it hit me, and I blurted out, "that's pretty much the opposite of my educational philosophy!"
I'd have trouble arguing that his friend had a philosophy that warranted the adjective "educational".
Saturday, April 07, 2007
Exploring some collaborative publishing options
Given the wonderful support that EQ gives folk, i.e. bans access to Wikispaces and suggests folk use an inhouse Wiki (which makes sure no one else on the planet gets to see what is published!). I have been playing with Google docs and it might be a way around things. The Wikispaces site could still be used (it would mean editing it away for Qld schools) and kids could control just what they wanted to publish. It may be too messy. Just thought it might be worth an explore. Of course when they notice traffic to Google docs the Net Nazis might ban it also!
Monday, February 26, 2007
Not Happy!
I've gone online today at work to check access for the wikispace and blog in anticipation of getting students online to share some of the groovy stuff they are doing only to find that we have been blocked to both spaces. Oh the frustration...
Sunday, February 11, 2007
The Medici Effect
I just scribbled a note in my own blog about a book I have just read and ended up in a KPS end point (how unusual).
Thursday, January 25, 2007
Action research & KPS
I hang out on too many email-based discussion lists (yeah I know... indicates how bad habits are hard to kick). And I am mulling about links between what we've been calling the KPS agenda and action research. The mulling being prompted by some writing I am trying to do with Leonie. Back to the lists. One of these lists, XMCA (eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity-- runs out of U Cal San Diego via Michael Cole) has been chatting about AR and the focus of the list, which is pretty broad ranging - sociocultural ideas, activity theory etc. etc. In a long series of annotated exchanges, you know those emails with multiple replies to replies, Jam Lemke, one of my favourite thinkers in the educational space wrote (21 Jan 07):
Action Research is about solving immediate problems, but one of its strategies is to get people talking about what those problems really are. In the course of which they often re-define the key problems as being larger than their immediate symptoms. When you then start to collaboratively investigate these bigger issues, you almost always find that history has played a role in getting us into the mess we're in. And that understanding how to get out of it often depends on figuring out a way around the path that historically got us where we are.
Why are school classes only 40 minutes long? why are students segregated by age in schools? why don't teacher-student relationships in schools last more than a few months to less than one year? why are curriculum subjects separated? why is curriculum content dictated to be uniform? why do we use pencil-and-paper testing? why don't students get to learn from non-teacher mentors? why can't I take my students on a field trip outside the school? why can't they learn by participating/observing in other institutions?
Why can't we talk about the topics we're really interested in? why can't we spend more than 2 weeks on this? why can't I learn basic biology over 2 years instead of one? why can't we talk about human sexuality? or famous gay figures in history? why can't we learn about law, religion, economics, politics? why can't we discuss the causes of violence in my neighborhood? Why don't I get paid for all the work the school requires me to do?
The causes of most social headaches are institutional and structural, and the timescales across which we need to look to understand how they came to cause our headaches expand in historical time as we probe these networks of causes.
Remember: give a man a fish, he eats today; teach him to fish, he eats tomorrow too? Action research, and the CHAT perspective, is about learning new ways to eat, about looking across longer relevant timescales for alternatives and solutions, not about eating the first fish to come our way (though if you're really hungry, why not?).
JAY.
PS. Short-term solutions can give us the breathing space to seek longer-term ones. But they can also exacerbate longer-term problems, or disguise them until they get even worse.
I'd like to think that a good deal of KPS work is driven by kids/teachers asking similar kinds of questions. I can recall Trudy talking about how her students at Warraburra were puzzling about water usage in the school. Don't recall the exact history but it's that sense that it's ok to ask tough, interesting questions even when there is perhaps no immediate prospect of a solution. Which brings me to related point made by James Wilkinson in the Menzies Oration last year. He was speaking about undergraduate education and making, what I thought was a strong case for students learning about the process of inquiry. He wrote:
The skill that would be of most practical value to our undergraduate students, in my opinion, as well as the key to what we mean when we speak of educated men and women, is the ability to ask good questions and to work at seeking answers based on evidence.
As I read his carefully argued presentation (you can get text and or an MP3) I kept thinking that, with a little adjusting, the same argument could and most likely should be applied to schools. I then started thinking about the early thinking around schools as sites of serious knowledge production and how research/systematic inquiry might be the way to break the interminable "kids ought to know this stuff" arguments.
The origins of KPS go back to mulling over the so-called "middle school" problem, i.e. student disengagement, troublesome teens etc. And it occurred to me that if these kids were trained up to do systematic inquiry you could hit a number of spots: one they would likely respond to moving beyond the "pretend curriculum" that they had all seen through a long time ago, they could contribute usefully to local community, they would develop skills, habits of mind that were not all that amenable to curriculum check lists and they'd produce something in which they could genuinely take some pride.
I also recall how I was chatting to a primary teacher about these ideas over the phone (in those days, distance ed. we worked with amazing teachers...never met em face to face..but I was always in awe of their energy, passion and commitment) and suggesting that this approach would work in middle school but unlikely in primary school. She berated me for about 15 minutes, telling me all the inquiry stuff that goes on in a lot of primary schools but it is not taken very seriously. It is interesting that now, some years down the track, almost all the KPS stuff has spun out of primary schools.
Just some thinking out aloud about a bunch of questions.
Action Research is about solving immediate problems, but one of its strategies is to get people talking about what those problems really are. In the course of which they often re-define the key problems as being larger than their immediate symptoms. When you then start to collaboratively investigate these bigger issues, you almost always find that history has played a role in getting us into the mess we're in. And that understanding how to get out of it often depends on figuring out a way around the path that historically got us where we are.
Why are school classes only 40 minutes long? why are students segregated by age in schools? why don't teacher-student relationships in schools last more than a few months to less than one year? why are curriculum subjects separated? why is curriculum content dictated to be uniform? why do we use pencil-and-paper testing? why don't students get to learn from non-teacher mentors? why can't I take my students on a field trip outside the school? why can't they learn by participating/observing in other institutions?
Why can't we talk about the topics we're really interested in? why can't we spend more than 2 weeks on this? why can't I learn basic biology over 2 years instead of one? why can't we talk about human sexuality? or famous gay figures in history? why can't we learn about law, religion, economics, politics? why can't we discuss the causes of violence in my neighborhood? Why don't I get paid for all the work the school requires me to do?
The causes of most social headaches are institutional and structural, and the timescales across which we need to look to understand how they came to cause our headaches expand in historical time as we probe these networks of causes.
Remember: give a man a fish, he eats today; teach him to fish, he eats tomorrow too? Action research, and the CHAT perspective, is about learning new ways to eat, about looking across longer relevant timescales for alternatives and solutions, not about eating the first fish to come our way (though if you're really hungry, why not?).
JAY.
PS. Short-term solutions can give us the breathing space to seek longer-term ones. But they can also exacerbate longer-term problems, or disguise them until they get even worse.
I'd like to think that a good deal of KPS work is driven by kids/teachers asking similar kinds of questions. I can recall Trudy talking about how her students at Warraburra were puzzling about water usage in the school. Don't recall the exact history but it's that sense that it's ok to ask tough, interesting questions even when there is perhaps no immediate prospect of a solution. Which brings me to related point made by James Wilkinson in the Menzies Oration last year. He was speaking about undergraduate education and making, what I thought was a strong case for students learning about the process of inquiry. He wrote:
The skill that would be of most practical value to our undergraduate students, in my opinion, as well as the key to what we mean when we speak of educated men and women, is the ability to ask good questions and to work at seeking answers based on evidence.
As I read his carefully argued presentation (you can get text and or an MP3) I kept thinking that, with a little adjusting, the same argument could and most likely should be applied to schools. I then started thinking about the early thinking around schools as sites of serious knowledge production and how research/systematic inquiry might be the way to break the interminable "kids ought to know this stuff" arguments.
The origins of KPS go back to mulling over the so-called "middle school" problem, i.e. student disengagement, troublesome teens etc. And it occurred to me that if these kids were trained up to do systematic inquiry you could hit a number of spots: one they would likely respond to moving beyond the "pretend curriculum" that they had all seen through a long time ago, they could contribute usefully to local community, they would develop skills, habits of mind that were not all that amenable to curriculum check lists and they'd produce something in which they could genuinely take some pride.
I also recall how I was chatting to a primary teacher about these ideas over the phone (in those days, distance ed. we worked with amazing teachers...never met em face to face..but I was always in awe of their energy, passion and commitment) and suggesting that this approach would work in middle school but unlikely in primary school. She berated me for about 15 minutes, telling me all the inquiry stuff that goes on in a lot of primary schools but it is not taken very seriously. It is interesting that now, some years down the track, almost all the KPS stuff has spun out of primary schools.
Just some thinking out aloud about a bunch of questions.
Sunday, January 07, 2007
With friends like these
I went back to the Escola Lumiar site and stumbled over the school's council of friends:
William Ury Antropólogo social pela Yale, professor da Harvard Business School e Harvard Law School, diretor do Harvard Negotiation Project, negociador do Carter Center e autor do livro "Getting to Yes"
Charles Handy Professor da London Business School, consultor em negócios e educação
David Perkins Diretor do Project Zero e professor da Harvard School of Education
Seymour Pappert Diretor do Media Lab do MIT, autor da linguagem Logo e vários livros de referência em educação
Henry Mintzberg Professor de Management e educação, Vice-Reitor da McGill University no Canadá
If I was setting up a school and could claim these folk as friends.... sure Semler has access to these folk by virtue of his business/management practices but this is a classy list of folk by any measure.
William Ury Antropólogo social pela Yale, professor da Harvard Business School e Harvard Law School, diretor do Harvard Negotiation Project, negociador do Carter Center e autor do livro "Getting to Yes"
Charles Handy Professor da London Business School, consultor em negócios e educação
David Perkins Diretor do Project Zero e professor da Harvard School of Education
Seymour Pappert Diretor do Media Lab do MIT, autor da linguagem Logo e vários livros de referência em educação
Henry Mintzberg Professor de Management e educação, Vice-Reitor da McGill University no Canadá
If I was setting up a school and could claim these folk as friends.... sure Semler has access to these folk by virtue of his business/management practices but this is a classy list of folk by any measure.
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