Search this site
Other stuff

 

All banner artwork by Brady Johnson, professional graphic artist.

My latest books:

   

        Available now

       Available Now

Available now 

My book Machines are the easy part; people are the hard part is now available as a free download at Lulu.

 The Blue Skunk Page on Facebook

 

EdTech Update

 Teach.com

 

 

 


Entries from February 1, 2008 - February 29, 2008

Saturday
Feb022008

Life long abilities, behaviors and attitudes

What was once educationally significant, but difficult to measure, has been replaced by what is insignificant and easy to measure. So now we test how well we have taught what we do not value. ~Art Costa (via Lisa Linn's e-mail sig)

Call them what you will - dispositions, habits of mind, conceptual skills, life-long learning behaviors, high EQ traits - the educational spotlight is turning to abilities that are incredibly important and very tough to quantify. You can hardly turn around without bumping into a set of these things:

Daniel Pink's "Conceptual Skills" in A Whole New Mind...

1. Not just function, but also DESIGN
2. Not just argument, but also STORY.
3. Not just focus, but also SYMPHONY.
4. Not just logic, but also EMPATHY.
5. Not just seriousness, but also PLAY.
6. Not just accumulation, but also MEANING.

Costa and Kallick's Habits of Mind... (These are my personal favorites.)

  • Persisting
  • Thinking and communicating with clarity and precision
  • Managing impulsivity
  • Gathering data through all senses
  • Listening with understanding and empathy
  • Creating, imagining, innovating
  • Thinking flexibly
  • Responding with wonderment and awe
  • Thinking about thinking (metacognition)
  • Taking responsible risks
  • Striving for accuracy
  • Finding humor
  • Questioning and posing problems
  • Thinking interdependently
  • Applying past knowledge to new situations
  • Remaining open to continuous learning
hom4a.gif

 

Partnership for 21st Century Skills's Life and Career Skills

  • Flexibility & Adaptability
    • Adapting to varied roles and responsibilities
    • Working effectively in a climate of ambiguity and changing priorities
  • Initiative & Self-Direction
    • Monitoring one’s own understanding and learning needs
    • Going beyond basic mastery of skills and/or curriculum to explore and expand one’s own learning and opportunities to gain expertise
    • Demonstrating initiative to advance skill levels towards a professional level
    • Defining, prioritizing and completing tasks without direct oversight
    • Utilizing time efficiently and managing workload
    • Demonstrating commitment to learning as a lifelong process
  • Social & Cross-Cultural Skills
    • Working appropriately and productively with others
    • Leveraging the collective intelligence of groups when appropriate
    • Bridging cultural differences and using differing perspectives to increase innovation and the quality of work
  • Productivity & Accountability
    • Setting and meeting high standards and goals for delivering quality work on time
    • Demonstrating diligence and a positive work ethic (e.g., being punctual and reliable)
  • Leadership & Responsibility
    • Using interpersonal and problem-solving skills to influence and guide others toward a goal
    • Leveraging strengths of others to accomplish a common goal
    • Demonstrating integrity and ethical behavior
    • Acting responsibly with the interests of the larger community in mind

AASL's Standards for the 21st Century Learner has long sets of:

    • Dispositions
    • Responsibilities
    • Self-Assessment Strategies

 The new NETS standards call for students who, among other things,

  • create original works as a means of personal or group expression.
  • identify trends and forecast possibilities
  • develop cultural understanding and global awareness by engaging with learners of other cultures
  • plan and manage activities to develop a solution or complete a project
  • use multiple processes and diverse perspectives to explore alternative solutions
  • exhibit a positive attitude toward using technology that supports collaboration, learning, and
    productivity.
  • demonstrate personal responsibility for lifelong learning.
  • exhibit leadership for digital citizenship. 

 I don't think E.D. Hirsch and his cultural literacy fans would approve of any of this.

Gail Dickinson writes in the AASL Blog: (Read the whole post. It is really good.)

The [new AASL] standards are different. Yes, they are, and are meant to be. They reflect the future, not the past. They also more completely cover the work that school librarians do in schools, not just a narrowly focused information skills approach but are a more global direction....

And goes on to speculate about implementation... 

First, implementation has to start with beliefs.We need to talk deeply about our beliefs, why we have them, what they look like in action and who else in the school community shares those beliefs.

Second, we need to wipe the slate clean of old references and begin to delve into curriculum again, both to write the learning curriculum for the school, and to integrate standards into the curriculum from other subject areas.

Third, then, we need to re-think our instruction, both in the sense of formal teaching opportunities, informal instruction, and in the way that we teach indirectly, such as our arrangement of the library, our establishment of policies and procedures, and our work in our many roles as school librarians.

Fourth, we need to assess what we do. This includes making use of the range of assessments and indicators that prove our value in the education of each student, and it also means having a logistically feasible and instructionally sound way of informing each student and parent of learning progress.

Whoa! Go, Gail!

Gail's observations apply not just to librarians, of course, but to every educator who thinks these life-long behaviors, attitudes and abilities - these post HOTS - are important. Isn't this a fascinating time to be in education? Just how do we teach and evaluate an attitude?

Whenever I see the Habits of Mind list, I can't help up ask myself how many of these "habits" I personally have. How many I use. How many the educators I work with display.

And are we expecting students to have abilities the adults in their lives do not have themselves? Perhaps we are still evolving as a species. One can hope.

Saturday
Feb022008

Lost week

I should never read computer magazines.

When I got back to my office from our state mid-winter conference on Tuesday, there was a stack of journals on my desk - including recent Macworld and iLife, both extolling the virtues of MacOS 10.5, aka Leopard.

leopard_box_125.jpgWhile I am neither a drug addict or alcoholic, I empathize - I do have operating system abuse issues.  A new one comes out, I have to have it. No self-control whatsoever. What really intrigued me about Leopard was its new TimeMachine transparent back-up system. Like most busy people, I make a back ups of my files far too seldom.

(On a side note, I always wanted to ask a computer programmer to write a little program that would at random intervals display a message in big letters on my computer screen  - YOUR COMPUTER JUST CRASHED. WHEN DID YOU LAST BACK UP? Even better than a weird noise coming from your hard drive to inspire a back up.)

I should have known better. My computer is a two+ year old 1.5 GHz PowerPC G4 with only 768MB of RAM and a paltry 60GB hard drive at about 90% full. Things were working just fine with 10.4. But there were those shiny new features!

I installed it Tuesday and have been tweaking ever since - setting things back the way I like them, removing or updating helper apps, deleting files, making back-ups (TimeMachine works great - all teacher computers should have a program like it), and running little clean-up apps like Cocktail hoping to speed the system up. In a real bonehead move, I used the default settings of a program called Monolingual to remove unused "languages" from my computer to free up some hard drive space.  (I had no idea Manx was a language - tailless cats can write?)  Now a number of  web pages don't seem to display. Use this program with care!

Things seem to be running fine again, although a little more sluggishly than last week.  

I have asked to be taken off the departmental routing list for new computer magazines. In the immortal words of Dirty Harry, "A man's gotta know his limitations."

Oh, I did have an idea as I was waiting for installation, back-ups, virus scanning etc. and listening to the AG Senate hearings. Wouldn't a simple answer to whether a procedure is torture be to apply the procedure to the person who is defining it for, say, an hour? With the procedure ending any time he admits that it IS torture. Is suspect the list of things that qualify as torture would grow rather rapidly.

Page 1 ... 5 6 7 8 9