The Footprint and the Digital Dossier

“Reputation, reputation, reputation! O, I have lost my reputation! I have lost the immortal part of myself, and what remains is bestial. My reputation, Iago, my reputation!”

(Othello Act II.iii.262-265).

Cassio only had his own foolishness and the treachery of Iago to deal with. He didn’t have to contend with social media and the digital dossier.

Iago -  who elsewhere in the play goes on an emotional rant about his good name -  disagrees, insisting that reputation is an abstraction to be manipulated.

“Reputation is an idle and most false imposition; oft got without merit, and lost without deserving” (II.iii.268-270)

In Shakespeare, attacks on honor and dignity could be settled with the challenge of a duel. When Thomas Mowbray is accused of treason in Richard11 he declares that  without a “spotless reputation” we are but “gilded loam or painted clay”.

But back to the 21st century:

When Will Richardson said that it should be a goal of every school to ensure that its graduates “google well” he meant that they should be found on line and he was using the verb as a stand in for all search engines.

It still has the whiff of a soap powder marketing ploy, but what he is talking about is personal branding.

Schools, he says, need to teach students who not only know how to seek, find, filter and navigate information but students who can be found with the reputation they have created for themselves online.

Because we know many colleges admissions people and employers are looking, we have two options – to live off the grid or be found in the ways we want to known.

And because not being found on line may raise as many questions in the eyes of a prospective employee, that means online presence and the digital footprint.

Turns out that the recent news item about 80% of college admissions offices checking facebook profiles was not quite accurate but that doesn’t mean prospective students should not be careful about what they put on line and especially about their privacy settings.

But what Will is talking about is far more than removing some unfortunate photos before they go viral. He is talking about active online personal portfolio creation.

What impression are you making with your digital dossier?

And while you start worrying about that, consider this:  cross-platform social face recognition is on the way.  With all our constant chatter and communication we don’t need to worry about surveillance and lack of privacy – we are doing the work of Big Brother ourselves.

Take a look at Viewdl:

Here’s an interesting tool to uncover the digital footprint of your name (and all those with whom you share it). It’s Personas, an installation by Aaron Zinman at M.I.T and presented as a critique of data-mining. Enter your name and – clickety clicky – “you” are mined and then represented in a bar chart that looks like a row of military campaign medals.

This is how Poughkeepsie Day School checked out:

Snow Day – A Gift of Time

A snow day is a gift of time for play, independent work and keeping connected in the ways that make sense for the work you want to do.

When there’s a chance of a snow day everyone gets excited. And for all kinds of reasons.

My backyard is now a place of deep mystery

For many it is the potential  for some good play time – a chance to sleep in perhaps and then do some things  for which there is never enough time.

And a piece of that delight is that we will see things transformed.

Snow changes shapes and light and we see things anew. Our world is changed and we delight in that.

And of course the educator in me starts to muse on the importance of embracing change and the role of playing and the changing culture for learning. (I know, I  know – so stop reading and go play in the snow.) Then come back and watch this video.

I think we all do our best work when the boundaries between play and work are blurred. This is so easy to see in children when they develop a passion for something – raptors or reptiles, Harry Potter, baseball stats or the cheat sheets for a video game.

All of a sudden they are truly experts with a mastery of information and all without formal instruction. Often they  memories and “know” vast quantities of information without the effort of formal study. They do this by independently delving in but also by becoming a member of the tribe of aficionados who share the same interest or passion.

Adults do the same thing when they find a community of interest  – a support group say – when faced with a new challenge. This is the new ecology of learning -  connected, infinite, open, social and often playful.

Knowledge is not a fixture out there – but rather something to be made, played with, uncovered, discovered, integrated, learned,  remixed and made anew.

Play is not just the work of the child. Play is the way all of us adapt to the swirl of change and embrace that which would otherwise engulf and overwhelm us.

Douglas Thomas and John Seeley Brown have a book on this very topic and you can read the first three chapters for free:

A New Culture of Learning:
Cultivating the Imagination for a World of Constant Change

I love that sub-title.

Of course snow days are not always fun and games and the disruption can be difficult.

So if you’ve been shoveling or  shivering or suffering in any way – may you, too, find time to play soon.

How will you use your gift?

Break out of the Box

Prior to the industrialization of education, the education model was centered around a single-room school house consisting of one teacher with many students throughout many grades. The teacher was a facilitator of an instructional design that had students teaching each other. The younger students benefited from the knowledge of the older students and the older students benefited by reinforcing what they had learned, encouraging their mastery of a subject.

That’s the opener for a good article by Farb Nivi in  Education in a Social World in e-School News.  It provides a strong contrast to Amanda Ripley’s  article in Slate Brilliance in a Box that gets it all wrong.

As the industrial revolution uprooted rural communities it likewise established a school system in the image of the factory. The rural communal schoolhouse was replaced by an assembly line model that moved children through the system in batches based on age, with teachers – wise or otherwise – bolting-on the information as the students moved on the conveyor belt of grade levels.

This one-size-fits-all mass production establishes school as a society segregated by age: Children at the same chronological age, at the same stage of readiness and development, and with the same interests and needs are put on the assembly line and processed through to graduation.

This is the model that so much of education reform is so desperately trying to improve with better delivery systems (aka teacher improvement), better assembly line techniques (curriculum change and the teacher-proof curriculum), improved quality control (standardized tests) and higher standards (more shoddy rejects and a higher dropout rate).

From one perspective it is a a highly individualized system: students are isolated learners and the teacher’s role is to manage the individual learning of the whole class.  The good classroom is a silent and still place with children on task working alone under the surveillance of the cheating police.

The article makes a simple proposal:

Go back to the principle that worked so well in the single school house model: social learning.

There are a few problems on the issue of that one room schoolhouse  model that I will write about separately, but let’s stay with the central notion of learning in a social shared space and the implications for learning and design. Farb Nivi looks to students for his answers:

Project Tomorrow, a national education nonprofit group, conducted a 2010 survey of more than 250,000 students and asked them to speak about their vision for 21st century learning. Three essential elements emerged:

Social-based learning – students want to make use of emerging communications and collaboration tools to create and personalize networks of experts to inform their education process.

This makes sense from the constructivist learning perspective that maintains all learning is social and interactive.

Un-tethered learning – students envision technology-enabled learning experiences that transcend the classroom walls and are not limited by resource constraints, traditional funding streams, geography, community assets, or even teacher knowledge or skills.

This makes sense in a world where we are swamped with information. Learners must become intelligent navigators, grazers and deep-sea divers.

Digitally-rich learning – students see the use of digital tools, content, and resources as a key to driving learning productivity, not just about engaging students in learning.

This make sense because it means using the best available tools to advance the cause of using, seeking and creating knowledge.

The Slate article was also on the topic of  learning and design but manages to get it all wrong. Brilliance in a Box is an unfortunate title that suggests good education can be manufactured and taken off the shelf as a prefabricated item. Look at the model of excellence proposed and the assumptions about learning.  In the comments there’s a wonderful and impassioned response from Prakash Nair that is worth quoting at length:

This is a horrible article and full of old stereotypes about education. It is based on a complete misunderstanding of what it means to be “educated” in the 21st Century. It repeats the Bush (and now Obama doctrine) that hammering kids into submission and then “measuring” how educated they are via test scores is the answer to a failed education system. Pathetic that in this day and age we are still stuck squarely in the 1950′s and … buy into this MYTH about what education is. … Before you jump on Amanda’s bandwagon, PLEASE, PLEASE watch the video … Sir Ken Robinson’s take on education in the 21st Century at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zDZFcDGpL4U). … it is time  to look around and see that it is actually impossible to have “brilliance in a box” unless you assume that Peer Tutoring, Multiage Groupings, Independent Study, Hands-on Project Based Learning, Learning from Nature, Performance-Based Learning, Seminar Style Learning, Play Based Learning, Distance Learning, Internet Research, Service Learning, Inter-disciplinary Learning, and Art and Design-Based Learning are all marginal and secondary to the “real” learning that happens only in a classroom with the teacher firmly in command. Oh! and the “box” also keeps teachers trapped instead of allowing them to collaborate with their peers as the rest of the world does. So what to do? Please see how brilliance can best be achieved when you do exactly the OPPOSITE of what this article recommends — break out of the box!! Want real world examples of this? Visit the projects we have been working on for the past 10 years at: http://fieldingnair.com. And anyone really interested in pursuing this and having an honest discussion about what is wrong with our education system and how to fix it should read Alfie Kohn‘s masterpiece: The Schools Our Children Deserve: Moving Beyond Traditional Classrooms and “Tougher” Standards.

Agreed.


Cross-posted at Connected Principals

A Path to Success: Talents. Challenges. Problems

A PATH TO COLLEGE, CAREER AND CIVIC SUCCESS
Talents, when revealed, need to be celebrated. Challenges, when discovered, need to be addressed. Problems, when they arise, need to be solved. This is never so true as when we are talking about our children — their health, their growth, their education and their development. It is not enough to alert people to issues and then walk away. It is not enough to uncover problems and then neglect to work through them. It is not enough to lay blame and then move on.

I shared those words before the discussion following Race to Nowhere last week. they are from Gene Carter of ASCD and appear in the excellent facilitation guide to the film.

It’s been several days now but people are still talking about the impact of the film. Several people have told me that they were moved to tears. Others have spoken of the changes they are putting into place right now in their own lives.  Students recognized themselves, their friends and identified the pressures they feel. Everyone said that this film spoke to them in compelling ways. it is clear: we all have work to do.

Race to Nowhere is about learning, about education, about balance and about the quality of life for students and their families. It is not about our school or any of the many schools public and independent schools and colleges or home-schoolers that were represented in the audience. It is about a starting a discussion about what matters most and the health and well being of children. It’s about getting off the hamster wheel. That is an important discussion for all of us to have.

It’s a call to action and a call to collective action. Making changes to refocus learning on what matters most and restoring balance will take all of us working together. And perhaps it begins with the simple question that the film poses: What does success mean to you and your family?

We were delighted to see so many schools and colleges represented. We were grateful to the Randolph School in Wappingers Falls for co-sponsoring the screening, to the Kildonan School and Oakwood Friends for their participation and support. Millbrook, Kent and High Meadow schools were also there as well as parents and educators from many of our neighboring public schools.  we had college people too – a key component of any discussion about restoring sanity to the pressure cooker of  current education. We were especially pleased to see students.

It was wonderful to see so many people at the screening- the house was packed.

While watching the film, we asked people to look aspects of the film that moved them to want to take action. After the film there was an opportunity to identify some common concerns and connect with others who want to create change.

We also asked the audience members to notice at least one person with whom they could identify or strongly empathize, or find a moment or situation in the film that resonated.

We had a short time for discussion after the film and most people were able to stay and join the panel: Christopher Roellke, Ph.D., dean of the college and professor of education at Vassar College; Suzanne Button, Ph.D., psychologist and assistant executive director of Astor Services for Children and Families in Rhinebeck, and consultant to the Red Hook Central School District; Louann Joyce, first-grade teacher in the Beacon Central School District; Ben Powers, head of Kildonan School in Amenia; Zachary Missen-Jones, Oakwood Friends School senior; and Julia Raphael, Poughkeepsie Day School junior.

We ended at 9.15pm but the discussion had only just begun.

So what next?

We collected email addresses and we will contact everyone. In the meantime, what do you think?

Connections: How good ideas happen to good minds

The coffee houses of the Enlightenment; the  Paris salons of Modernism  – two examples of the spaces conducive to innovation and new ideas.

Here’s Steven Johnson on how good ideas happen to good minds and how they are incubated over time  and in spaces where  intellectual diversity thrives and connection happens. Could classrooms be like that? Faculty meetings? Admin meetings?

This clever video illustrates his major thesis: Chance favors the connected mind.

A lesson from the lunch-line: “Just try it”

First day of the new food service and a great lesson from the lower school lunch line.
“I don’t eat salad.”
“Just try it.”

The Shift in New Brunswick

This video was produced by the New Brunswick, Canada, Department of Education. It reflects their thinking about our rapidly changing world, the future of education and the needs of their students.

At PDS we are always thinking about our students and how to serve them best. As you watch the film – what are your thoughts about education, our children, their future and what matters most?

More Educator Luddites Please

Part two of:  The Age of Bricolage: School in the Change Blender:

Technology is always disruptive: Think of the introduction of the printing press, or the combine harvester, or the typewriter. Think of the mechanical looms and the factory system of the industrial revolution that destroyed a way of life for cottage industry weavers. Some of them took to frame breaking and gave us the unfairly derisive term of “luddite” for those who resist technological change.

In the early decades of 19th century England, years of war, economic hardship, crop failures and political repression incubated a spirit of rebellion that made the government nervous. Rather by chance, I discovered this year that I am a descendant of a luddite – an infamous rebel and the last person in England to be sentenced to be beheaded. In 1817, beguiled by a government spy, Isaac Ludlam –  a Methodist minister past middle age -  led a group of men armed with pikes, scythes and muskets on a march to unseat the government.  They were stopped by the military and Ludlam was captured and convicted of treason. His sentence, and that of two of his companions, was to be hanged, drawn and quartered.  The Prince Regent commuted the sentence to beheading. The trial and execution in Derby gaol was so vividly described by the poet Shelley that readers imagined he had been present.

Knowing that story has given me a new appreciation of luddites and I think it is time for a little revisionist history.   It may be a bit of a stretch, but I think we need a new caste of educator luddites to help guide schools forward.

The luddites of the industrial revolution were craftsmen and artisans fighting against forces that would reshape their industry and impoverish them. They were not mindless louts but desperate men concerned for a future that they saw threatened by the mechanized factory system. They were resisting the destruction of their way of life, their livelihood and the deskilling of their labor

In  Releasing the imagination Maxine Greene wrote of  the notion of teaching “social imagination,” which she defined as “the capacity to invent visions of what should be and what might be in our deficient society, on the streets where we live, and in our schools” (p. 5).

I think we need to cultivate that process of social imagination, reclaim the label luddite from the pejorative and establish a whole new ethos of luddism in our schools.

The educator luddites I have in mind are people who have always understood school to be more than  test prep and who see themselves as far more than the agents of a standardized testing industry. I see them leading the way to create inquiry driven schools where students and teachers are not too busy to think. Schools where the technology serves the learning rather than drives the teaching and where the demand for original work is a collaborate effort to solve compelling problems to which no one present knows the answer. In such a school, the curriculum is not driven by the textbook, the flow of information is not unidirectional, learning is networked and students and teachers work together across the boundaries of age and experience as active seekers, users and creators of knowledge. In this rosy picture, individual schools form a kind of globally aware and networked cottage industry of creative learning.

In order to start that journey we need a collective effort to figure out how to negotiate the changing world and make sense of it. Here, in a small collection of nutshells, are some observations about the context for the work:

  1. The web is changing (us). For the most part we are oblivious to the bigger picture as we take each new gadget, or shift, or industry upheaval for granted. For the cultural anthropologist Michael Wesch, the machine is us and the machine is using us. In his prescient and chilling short story written in 1906 “The Machine Stops”, E. M, Forster imagined a world dependent on an all-powerful, all-knowing machine where humans became shrunken, feeble underground creatures alienated from nature and the natural landscape. In Forster’s story, the machine falters and fails. In our world, it does not look as if the machine is going to stop anytime soon. And that, according to Professor Wesch, means we are going to need to rethink a few things, including: copyright, authorship, identity, ethics, aesthetics, rhetoric, governance, privacy, commerce, love, family and ourselves.
  2. In the networked world of ubiquitous and mobile access, boundaries are fluid and hierarchies broken. The ownership of knowledge is changed and the flow multidirectional. Students come to school wired and ready to join the knowledge stream. Learning needs to be organized around these networks and not contained in the traditional one way flow of teacher to student.
  3. We have to think off the world of the web and interactive technology as a new ecosystem – one in which any person, in any place, at any time can participate, contribute, communicate, produce, share, curate and organize. It’s an ecosystem that has the potential to make prosumers of us all. That is, producers and not just consumers of information and media content. Anyone with a connection can generate content and the tools of social media mean it can be Stumbled, tagged in Delicious, uploaded to YouTube, sampled in Moviemaker, voted on at Digg, pushed in an RSS feed, shared on Facebook and Tweeted to the world. And then someone can create an interactive commentary, put it to music and turn it upside down, again. This interactivity blurs boundaries. As the New Yorker cartoon put it: “On the net, no one knows you are a dog”. Expertise and value may be perceived without the limiting filters of age, status, nationality or appearance.
  4. We have both an explosion of creativity and an incessant need for problem solving and ethical thinking. Information, misinformation and disinformation are fast moving and in fluid abundance.  In Teaching as a Subversive Activity Postman and Weingarten wrote of the need to develop “crap detectors” to filter the disinformation, propaganda and hype. To some www means a world wild web of mayhem, mischief and malice. But with a sense of purpose, and the skills of filtering and information navigation, it also holds great promise and potential.
  5. Reading and writing are becoming less of a solitary and silent activity characteristic of the print era and more of a social activity. E-reading enables readers to interact with each other as well as the text and digital text is always on the move.
  6. We are headed toward ubiquitous access and ever more speed. As quotidian objects such as umbrellas and shopping carts become digitized we are being linked with products just as we are linked with each other. Building community and creating relationships are what people, and social media, do well.

This then is the sea in which schools can swim, or – if they allow themselves to become irrelevant – sink. Professor Wesch had his list and here is my list of some of the things that schools may need to begin to rethink:

Classroom and school design; the school day and the schedule; segregation of learners by age and rather than by interest, passion and commitment; the segregation of knowledge into subjects; grading and assessment; social relationships, adult learning, the role of teacher, peer-to-peer learning and the isolation of the learner; textbooks, curriculum development and the sources of information; the nature of literacy;  the nature of learning, creativity and the place of technology; citizenship and community; teamwork, collaboration, plagiarism and cheating; digital footprints, transparency and privacy; partnership with parents other adult learners; learning in the world and learning in school; what counts and what gets counted and how and by whom; and the dress code. (I added the last item because sometimes it’s useful to have a topic that gets everyone thoroughly engaged and busily distracted from important work.)

Above all it means a definition of education as going beyond the acquisition of knowledge. Critical thinking and digital literacy are essential but they don’t go far enough. We need to educate children for active and ethical participation. They need to be contributors and creators of knowledge and that means engaging in solving real problems from the very start.

Change is always hard. Socrates feared the effects of literacy on memory. He argued against it as harmful to young minds, short circuiting the arduous intellectual work of examining life. The scholar Elizabeth Eisenstein, who has written extensively on the effect on the world of the Gutenberg and the print revolution, has said it may be too soon to assess the full impact of that centuries old shift. If it’s too soon to gauge the effect of printing then we can only dimly imagine the effects of social media and the digital age.

Media has transformed our society  before, but never at this dizzying rate. The unforeseen and unintended consequences of this revolution that sweeps all before it loom for many as dark clouds threatening the very roots of civilization.  And here we are – smack in the epicenter. Unless we want to take ourselves right off the grid we had better start trying to make sense of it.

Educator luddites will be those who can learn with others, in and out of school, against the grain of narrowing definitions and toward what it means to be an educated citizen in a networked world.

I think it is our collective task to engage in the work of social imagination and envision our schools as we want, and need, them to be.

For schools it means some hard work and we are going to need all the help we can get.

Eisenstein, Elizabeth, L. (1979) The printing press as an agent of change: communications and cultural transformations in early modern Europe (2 vols. ed.). Cambridge UK: Cambridge University Press.

Postman, Neil, and Weingartner, Charles (1969), Teaching as a Subversive Activity,  New York, NY: Dell

Greene, Maxine (1995). Releasing the imagination. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass

Going places


Digital literacy across the curriculum

It’s not about the tools and the testing, it’s about the learning and the thinking.

Digital literacy is an important entitlement for all young people in an increasingly digital culture.

Every school should have an organized policy for language across the curriculum…

Two documents, two eras. The first from FutureLab (UK) – a wonderful introduction to, and handbook for, digital technology and learning.

The second from the influential  UK government report – “A language for life” – the Bullock Report HMSO 1975.

I was a teacher in London when the Bullock Report was published – an orange-mustard colored compendium of review, research and government recommendations for schools. Word came down from on high that we were to develop a school-wide language policy.

Bullock gave the official push that launched the “language across the curriculum” (LAC) movement in the English speaking world.  In retrospect, it and the work it engendered are beacons of enlightenment.

It was, and is still, a movement with intellectual roots in a wide range of disciplines – psychology, anthropology, linguistics and philosophy.

These disciplines lent perspectives on learning as a set of complex and personal interactions by means of which the individual makes sense of the world.

But teachers were the real heart and origins of LAC. Secondary English teachers were the prime movers but soon teachers from all disciplines were involved.

They grappled with the issues of language, thought and learning and the implications for teaching, language assessment  and school.

James Britton’s Language and Learning was the influential founding text. It was followed by the groundbreaking research of Britton and his colleagues at the London University Institute of Education: The Development of Writing Abilities 11-18 (1975) and a focus on the role of talk in constructing understanding and making meaning.

With that intellectual framework and research in hand, teachers of all subjects saw the connections between language, thinking and learning. If talk and writing were heuristic – meaning that children used them to uncover meaning and make knowledge their own – then the implications were enormous.

Children’s language – writing and talk – was not something to be policed and corrected, taught and tested,  but an all-powerful intellectual tool for thinking and learning.

This was about language as a means of thinking. It placed learning at the center, not the teaching of  discrete skills and functions of writing. Correct use and mastery of certain language forms are not the goal; learning is the goal and language is the tool.

When the emphasis shifted to “writing the curriculum” – rather than the broader context of learning and thinking – the movement shrank in scope. And writing across the curriculum sometimes became grammar and spelling across the curriculum.

Talk and writing in math and science became opportunities for assigning word problems and essay tests rather than a means to understanding concepts. And  everyone got back into the act of being judge, jury and executioner of children s language.

LAC is essentially a set of principles focused on how children think and learn. It is not a set of teaching practices that lead to easily measurable language outcomes.

With the theoretical understanding in place it is left to actual practitioners i.e. teachers to create the environment within which learning and thinking can flourish.

So this is the personal context within which I read Digital Teaching across the Curriculum.

It doesn’t have Bullock’s heft and stamp of officialdom (My copy  cost £5 from the HMSO – it’s now available free online) It is not a government document and arrived free, weightless and digital.

It is however, a wonderfully helpful introduction to the world of digital media and education.

It begins with the cultural context and the why. And while it focuses on the learning not the tools it contains many useful starting points for professional discussion, training and development. There’s a really helpful digital literacy planning tool.

It is not prescriptive and does not pre-empt the role of the teacher in determining how to harness the technology in the service of what actually matters – learning.

It is teachers that are expert in their own school context, in the needs of their students and in the pedagogical techniques required to support learning.

This is a complicated area for schools and professional development. Many teachers feel fearful or inadequate in the face of rapidly shifting technology. But learners need their teachers. And they need their teachers to be learners.

The handbook does not shy from this issue and nor does it scold or become prescriptive. In fact, it includes important thinking on just why – for all their apparent confidence – the digital generation needs its teachers.

Rather – it begins with the context and makes suggestions for ways forward.

It starts – like the thinkers who gave us LAC – with the why, not the how and the what.

But read it for yourself and draw your own conclusions.

Let’s start with the why.  (Nicely captured in the graphic below.)  And let the rest follow from that.

Digital literacy is an important entitlement for all young people in an increasingly digital culture. It furnishes children and young people with the skills, knowledge and understanding that will help them to take a full and active part in social, cultural, economic, civic and intellectual life now and in the future.

from the introduction

Education systems need to help young people to understand and benefit from their engagement with digital technology and digital cultures. Fostering digital literacy in the classroom provides one way in which to make subject learning relevant to a society in which growing technology use is changing the way that both adults and children represent and communicate information and meaning and participate in cultural life.

Developing digital literacy in subjects of the curriculum is not about being fashionable or simply about trying to engage students in learning. It is about addressing the changing nature of subject knowledge and acknowledging that young people will need different kinds of skills, knowledge and understanding in order to develop their expertise in subjects. Developing digital literacy in subject teaching supports young people to be effective, competent, critical students of that subject in the digital age.

“The death of education as we know it may be the birth of learning as we need it”

I’m more than a bit late with my NAIS annual conference round up but then …excuses, excuses…what with returning to Poughkeepsie with a rotten cold,  the remaining effects of a  mega storm that closed school for three days (ably dealt with by Steve Mallet and the division heads) and then all the catching up…. So – a few random and incomplete notes and reflections.

First – a frustration. When you start to take free wifi for granted it’s annoying to be confined to a hotel lobby for a connection and beyond the lobby feels like being nickle and gouged for internet access. And then find yourself only intermittently able to be on line during the conference itself and always in danger of battery outage.  Why is that?

Now to the conference – bottom line: Great. Congratulations and thanks to all concerned and for Pat Bassett’s leadership, his avatar Captain Independent notwithstanding. Actually that was entertaining. (I leave aside the Wonder Woman misstep and I hope she got paid well to wear the costume. She assured me it was fun.)

But the key issue was the theme and content which flowed well from last year and allowed for a little celebration at having weathered all the storm metaphors.

And the theme was clearly transformation, adaptation, renewal, evolution. Call it what you will – the game of change is clearly afoot and this conference was charged with ideas, examples and tactics.

Disruptive Change is here now and it’s more than time to pay attention. Disruption is the new normal and the challenge for educators is to keep figuring out what that means when it comes to educating children for the world they will inherit. It was amusing then, to hear one of the high powered panelists with Pat Bassett in “The Power of Transformation: Disrupting your Institution to make it Relevant” trot out a canned and cloth-eared reference to Toyota.

It was in that workshop that Pat came out with the zinger that became “The tweet heard around the world” – apparently the most tweeted line from the conference. I heard it as:  “The death of education as we know it may be the birth of learning as we need it”.

As Bruce Hammond pointed out, it’s interesting to note that five of the articles in the spring edition of Independent School Magazine are written by members of the Independent Curriculum Group. (ICG, Bruce is the executive director). PDS is now a member and that means a seat on the board. As a school that has always structured time for high school interdisciplinary courses, and has never taught to the test (even as our students have taken them), it is good to be in such great and growing company.

Those articles go a long way to correct misperceptions of independent schools as uniformly bastions of tradition and conservatism. Indeed, so many schools across the country are doing innovative work and taking up the challenge of what it means to be a school for 2010 and the future. There are times when it feels like everyone is now catching on to what PDS has always championed. Just because we can sometimes sit back and say – “done that”, “do that” at PDS – does not mean we cannot learn and grow. Indeed, we must.

So, what did I choose to attend and what did I learn? Shut out of the session I wanted on Wednesday (“Leading toward a sustainable future”) I wandered the halls and dropped in on “Be like Google” led by Presbyterian Day School in Memphis.  (Known as PDS – how annoying is that?) Lots of interesting ideas on display as the presenters told the story of how they used and applied Google’s Nine Principles of Innovation at their school.

Later that day, it was good to catch up with some of the New Heads Institute ’06 cohort and trade stories.

Mimi Ito is a Stanford based international expert on how people use mobile technologies and new digital media in their everyday lives. In her presentation she asked some very pertinent questions about our assumptions. “Why do we assume kids only learn in school?”  And “Why do we assume that children online are not learning?”

Children growing up in a radically different media environment that keeps them connected 24hours a day present new challenges for educators who must grapple with the divide between home and school and seek proactive ways to bridge the gap.

With examples of new behaviors and opportunities for passionate and interest-centered learning she urged us to look at new media environments as a place of promise and potential. The complex narratives of Pokémon for example – and how children flock to participate with contagious media that is playful and interactive.

In this highly personalized and informal play, skills and literacy are a by-product not the focus of the engagement.

She had some good examples of community standards and how they are learned, developed and maintained in online environments.

Next up: Tina Seelig and Innovation as an Extreme Sport.

Meanwhile the conversation and community continue online at: NAIS Annual Conference

I had forgotten how many people seem to live on the streets of San Francisco. This man was reading in the drizzle by the light of a street advertisement.

“If a school fulfills its mission there must be constant evolution…”

It is quite possible that the assigning of grades to school children and college students as a kind of reward or punishment is useless or worse…

I’ve discovered an absolute treasure trove of fascinating material: Popular Science has put its entire 137 year archive on line.

The quotation above is from Examinations, Grades and Credits by Professor J.McKeen Cattell of Columbia University. And the date?  March 1905.

In this same edition there’s a piece on how immigrants are inspected at Ellis Island, cacti, Galileo and an argument in favor of adopting the metric system.

Several decades later – November 1957 – there’s another great education piece offering a test to parents to grade how schools are teaching science. It has some interesting suggestions for improving physics teaching.

How well does your youngster’s school teach science?

The future of your child demands solid training in the sciences. Is he (sic) getting it? Here’s how to tell.

Of course – the Soviet Union had launched Sputnik the month before and the nation was in a frenzy about staying competitive and fearful of falling behind in the arms and space race.

Also in 1905 there is the first  President Roosevelt’s address to the National Education Association. Mostly it’s an admonition to teachers to avoid stirring up class enmity and envy of the rich. He champions the virtues of being poorly paid while declaring:

You teachers make the whole world your debtors….If you – you teachers – did not do your work well this republic would not endure beyond the span of the generation.

And then – because it is our 75th year at PDS – I had to look up 1934.  Just look at the range of  topics in this one copy- – only 15cents and NRA – we do our part on the cover!

The articles and advertisements are a window to different era.  There’s the sheer range of topics and then the advice on do-it-yourself home improvements and plenty of the wonder of scientific discovery.

And don’t miss those ads – everything from 1930′s social anxiety about being too skinny and body odor to how to calm your jangling nerves with a Camel.

And all the tools and plans for building things at home and all the wonder gadgets, modern marvels and the purely bizarre: Girl Fights Octopus for Underwater Movie.

There’s even a radio kit ad ad that touts progressive education methods – learning by doing.

Together with all the reports of amazing discoveries, new inventions and build-it-yourself advice that span the decades there are quaint and curious  articles about education dating to the 19th century full of earnest pleas for moral education and modern methods.

You can track the long history of anxiety about science and math teaching in school with a simple search.  And there are pieces on coeducation, kindergarten and the “proven” uselessness of freehand drawing. Art in school is a total waste of time and money it seems when compared with the value of mechanical drawing. From November 1897:

But some things, it seems, never change: See for example Determining Educational Values from  October 1914. Change the language a little for a contemporary reader and you have a ready made article on current teaching and learning controversy. Look at this from the last paragraph:

If a school fulfills its mission there must be constant evolution…

Now that’s statement that could have been the centerpiece tagline for the NAIS  Annual Conference in San Francisco last month.

On that subject, more anon.

“Can we have a bake sale?”

“George, can we have a bake sale?”

That was Wednesday last week, in the hallway, right at the start of school. And this afternoon we wired a check for $1124 to the Red Cross.

It’s over a week now since we first heard the news of the catastrophic consequences of the earthquake in Haiti.  That very morning, first thing, students began planning what they could do to help send relief.

This morning dozens of students in grades 5 through 12 gathered in the Kenyon Center to brainstorm ways to support the relief efforts in Haiti.

All week I overheard fragments of conversation among high schoolers as they gathered first thing in Kenyon. They pieced together elements of the story involving the history, infrastructure, politics, economics and culture of Haiti and the science of earthquakes as they began to spin out ideas for how they could raise money and help.

One student is organizing a benefit concert and has put together an impressive group of musicians, found a donated space and set up a Facebook page to promote the event. Other initiatives are in the works.

In morning meetings students began to pool their ideas and share their reactions. Students urged each other to text a Red Cross donation via their  cell phones . (“Don’t forget to check with the account holder,” one voice cautioned.)

The brainstorming meeting this morning focused on how to distinguish immediate and intermediate relief from a longer term commitment. There was no shortage of ideas, suggestions and options for ways forward. They worked on organizing strategies and how best to continue their thinking in smaller meetings and online using the PDS Ning to connect, share and communicate.

And as I listened I was impressed by the depth of caring, thoughtful attention and intelligence these young people ages 10-18 brought to this task.  They had taken on the tasks of learning, of emotional resilience and mindful, informed action. They care. They want to act intelligently.

This week we have celebrated the life and legacy of Martin Luther King. In 1947 – when he was a teenager – he wrote in his college newspaper:  “Intelligence plus character – that is the goal of true education.”

Intelligence and character – the young people in that room this morning demonstrated both as they grappled with the interconnections, complexities and ambiguities of the crisis in Haiti. This was problem solving and leadership at its best, and with no easy set of immediate hand-me-down answers.

Intelligence and character: These qualities are not unique to students at PDS.  I know that in schools across the world children have been responding to this crisis and doing remarkable things. Young people everywhere have this potential and this same desire to make the world a better place. That is my experience. And of course, they are qualities not confined to the young. We all have that potential. That is a source of hope

Guy Claxton on Education for Lifetime Learning

School of the past, school of the future

This summer I visited the quite wonderful Hancock Shaker Village. It’s where in craft and design, form meets function with simplicity and beauty.  So many interesting things to see and pay attention to.

Of course – I had to visit the schoolhouse, now separated from the main buildings by a busy highway.

The school room was bright and well lit and seemed both familiar and welcoming. The shelves held books, quills and slates. There was a stove with a long pipe, and a teacher’s desk at the front and on it a handbell. Student desks were in rows and tall windows framed pleasant vistas in spite of the road.

The date on the blackboard was 1898.

At around the same, a French postcard presented a view of the school of the future – the year 2000. The same room, students still in those desks and rows. But now knowledge has been mechanized. Knowledge as represented by books  is  fed into a hand cranked mincing machine (at least there’s one active learner!) and directed to the heads of passive students via electrical circuits dropped from the ceiling.

It all looks like the nightmare of an isolation chamber/  computerized/ learning laboratory devoted to mind control.