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Archive for the ‘Teaching’ Category

I had the good fortune of hearing Swedish mystery writer Henning Mankell speak this past weekend.  I’ve devoured all of his books and am just beginning his last Inspector Wallender book, The Troubled Man. Mankell is a marvelous speaker and knows how to regale an audience with subtle, yet powerful anecdotes.

Among the many topics he discussed, ranging from Mugabe to Mozambique, Mankell talked about art as the “search for friends to take into reality.”  He shared the story of meeting a man in the early 1990s in Sweden.  The man asked Mankell whether Mankell’s most renowned character, Inspector Wallender, was in favor of Sweden joining the European Union.  At that moment, Mankell noted, he recognized that Wallender had become this man’s friend who had entered reality.

This got me thinking about kids and digital media, ranging from social networking to gaming.  Kids love to create online identities, living with a mulitplicity of names, in different realities.  The question is how kids navigate between the real and the imagined, and which identities enter reality for them.

Instead of art being the search for friends to take into reality, for kids is it gaming and social media as the search for friends to take into reality?

I love the character of Inspector Wallender and as the woman who introduced Mankell explained, Mankell’s characters have a way of staying with you and the stories are ones that still have you asking questions months and even years later.  Do the characters and identities that kids are creating online have the same depth of connection?

Jane McGonigal in Reality is Broken argues for the need to invert reality into a game, and leverage the power of game thinking and design to solve global problems.  She writes:

“What if we decided to use everything we know about game design to fix what’s wrong with reality? What if we started to live our real lives like gamers, lead our real businesses and communities like game designers, and think about solving real-world problems like computer and video game theorists?” (p. 7)

McGonigal shares the story of David Sudnow’s 1983 memoir on gaming, Breakout.  She shares Sudnow’s “neurochemical activation” from the immersion of gaming:

“This was a whole different business, nothing like I’d ever known, like night and day…Thirty seconds of play, and I’m on a whole new plane of being, all my synapses wailing.” (p. 40)

Sudnow was “working at the limits of his abilities,” according to McGonigal.

Scavnger Founder Seth Priebatsch has spoken about this decade as being the decade of the game layer.

In the book Teaching 2030, the authors argue that teachers of the future need to be prepared to “Teach the Googled learner, who has grown up on virtual reality games and can find out almost everything with a few taps of the finger.”

The key is to figure out how to create depth in the learning experience with digital media in the way that Mankell has in his understanding of art and literature. Mankell understands how to build and sustain connections with his characters and with his readers.

I hope that we can still hold onto the magic of books, like the ones Mankell writes, to hold the imagination and feed the “search for friends to take into reality.”  I would hate to ever lose that to games and virtual learning environments.

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Think before you post.  No doubt former UCLA student Alexandra Wallace has learned this valuable lesson.  Her ill-timed, insensitive rant on You Tube, in which she slammed Asian-American students for talking on their cell phones in the UCLA library, in the wake of the devastating news of the Japan earthquake, fast went viral, and her life is forever upturned.  All it took was one click and one post, and her identity went public, from what appeared to be a private conversation with herself in the bed of her dorm room.

Her video sparked a deluge of responses, from a You Tube rebuttal by the UCLA chancellor, to a ditty by Jimmy Wong, in which he flipped Wallace’s rant on its head.  Remarkably, the Asian-American Wong has forgiven Wallace for her racial diatribe.  On NPR, Wong commented: “I was pretty offended at first, but then I realized that this is just someone going on a rant — we’ve all done it before. My visceral reaction to the video would not have been as appropriate.”  He goes on to say: “I would like to tell her that I totally forgive her. I would love to meet for coffee and give her a big hug.”

This is a great opportunity for schools to use Wallace’s You Tube gaffe as a teaching tool to help kids understand the power of the post.  Here is a possible teaching plan:

Start by having students watch the Wallace video. As they watch, break students into 6 groups, and adopt the perspective of the group, and plan a response to the video from that perspective.  The groups are

(1) The University – the Chancellor, (2) an Asian-American student at UCLA, (3) the American Civil Liberties Union, (4) The New York Times, (5) Common Sense Media, and (6) The Daily Bruin.

Have students share their responses in their groups and then switch and partner with a student from another group to share their perspective.  Rotate two or three times so they have the chance to hear a few different perspectives, then open up the discussion to the whole class.

Then have students watch the UCLA chancellor’s You Tube response.  Have them consider its effectiveness.

Then, have them watch Jimmy Wong’s You Tube song response.

Which is more effective, the song or the Chancellor? Why?

The New York Times in an editorial on the subject shares the following:  “Eugene Volokh, a First Amendment scholar at U.C.L.A., counseled why Ms. Wallace’s video is “clearly constitutionally protected,” no matter how obnoxious. A purpose of the American university, he said, is to debate major decisions about social and other policies — to build consensus and the foundations of community. To assure worthwhile debate, it’s necessary to protect some worthless, even hurtful, opinion.”

Have students debate whether the video should be “constitutionally protected.”

Finally, should Alexandra Wallace be punished by the University?

She ended up withdrawing from the university.  She suffered a natural consequence.  Here is her letter of withdrawal, from The Daily Bruin.

Here is a wonderful story from NPR, titled, “Jimmy Wong Saves The Internet.” It hits on a creative way to address cyberbullying.

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Here is Alexandra Wallace’s apology to the Daily Bruin and the New York Times editorial on the controversy.  Also, here is the New York Times story on the controversy. This is a great opportunity to open conversation with students about the importance of thinking before you post, and the concept of public by default and how quickly things can go viral.

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A look at the digital white water rapids coming at us.  Powerful snap shot.

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Facebook wants to get into China.  Or, at least that’s what Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has led us to think.  On a recent visit to China, he declared, “If you want to connect the whole world, how can you leave out 1.6 billion people?”  Well, Mr. Zuckerberg will have to find a way to crack the Great Firewall — the impregnable Chinese Internet blocking system in place.  No Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube on the Chinese mainland. Because of social unrest in Xinjiang over a year ago, the Chinese government has put in secure measures to contain social media traffic.

But, as China looks to guard itself against intrusion, the country is also seizing on new initiatives to catalyze innovation through a drive to increase the number of patents, with the goal of 2 million by the year 2015, up from 300,000 applications in 2010.  In The New York Times, David J. Kappos, director of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office explains: “The leadership in China knows that innovation is its future, the key to higher living standards and long-term growth. They are doing everything they can to drive innovation, and China’s patent strategy is part of that broader plan.”

Having just returned from China as part of the International Society for Technology Education led People to People delegation, which comprised thirty U.S. school and university educators, I was able to experience the limits of social media in China, and to see the engine of innovation at work.

I toured and visited schools in Beijing, Xian, and Shanghai, and saw primary and secondary schools, and universities.  From the remote, rural Dongtun primary school, to the high tech, futuristic Shanghai TV University, I viewed a China as wide as the Mongolian steppe in terms of technology integration, access, infrastructure, and innovation.

At the Dongtun primary school, situated 90 minutes outside of Xian in central China, there was no heat (it was 20 degrees outside), and students sat in tight rows, doing recitation work. The students wore winter hats, coats, and gloves to stay warm, and while there was a coal burning stove in the corner of each classroom, it did not generate much heat.  There is one computer for the whole village, and its use centers around increasing knowledge about agriculture for the farmers.  The Chinese government has committed to putting one computer in every village, and the computer lives inside the home of one person.  The purpose is to give access to agricultural information.

In sharp contrast to the rural schooling, the work at Shanghai TV University is visionary and accelerating at a fast pace.  They took us into a surround vision room with interactive screens on the floors and walls.  It was a stunning atmosphere, with touch screen, and holographic imagery.  The Microsoft Envisioning the Future project is what comes closest to what we saw.  Shanghai TV University claims that they are a year away from deployment in homes and schools.  In our discussion with the Shanghai TV University educators, they expressed interest in learning about differentiated instruction, one to one computing, collaboration, and creativity.  They want to begin to move away from textbooks, and exam focused teaching, to utilize multi-modal approaches to make teaching and learning more engaging.  Interestingly, the day I left for China, international test scores showed that Shanghai students are at the top of the world in reading, science, and math.  On The Program for International Student Assessment, a test run by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, Shanghai blew away the competition.

There will no doubt be continuing tension between new modes of teaching and attention to testing and success, as measured by performance on traditional assessments. In The Wall Street Journal, Chinese educator Jiang Xueqin, comments:  “Chinese schools are very good at preparing their students for standardized tests. For that reason, they fail to prepare them for higher education and the knowledge economy.”  Jiang goes on to ask:  “But what about the entrepreneurs and innovators needed to run a 21st century global economy? China’s most promising students still must go abroad to develop their managerial drive and creativity, and there they have to unlearn the test-centric approach to knowledge that was drilled into them.”

The most interesting discussion occurred at the YKPao International School in Shanghai. We talked about a technology vision for the future, if given a blank slate, like the one YKPao has in starting its secondary program. YKPao is currently a K-6 school, but is expanding to add a secondary 7-12 school, on a separate New England boarding school modeled campus.

However, much of a new technology vision is constrained by government control of access to the Internet, blogs, and collaborative learning community models. Facebook, Twitter, blogs, and objectionable content, like certain New York times articles, are all blocked. CNN is tightly controlled.  When watching CNN at the hotel, the screen would go black for minutes at a time, and then come back on. YKPao and Beijing International School, another school that we visited, both expressed frustration with the censorship, and the limitations it places on their ability to open up access for their students.

The first item that rose to the surface in our discussion with YKPao educators, who were from Australia, New Zealand, and the United States, was the issue of email and whether schools are doing a disservice in continuing to teach students with email.  As many of us know, email is the messaging of last resort for students.  Real-time communication in the form of chat, text, and video dominate their social interactions online.

A recent NYTimes article supports this trend. Andrew Bosworth, director of engineering at Facebook, comments in the Times article: “The future of messaging is more real time, more conversational and more casual. The medium isn’t the message. The message is the message.”

James E. Katz, the director for the Center for Mobile Communications Studies at Rutgers University, explains, in the same Times article:  “It’s painful for them [the younger generation].  It doesn’t suit their social intensity.”

At Beijing International School, where many students stay for two to three years at a time before their families are relocated, the school creates digital portfolios with students, from application to graduation.  Families want access to their child’s learning, as they migrate to different parts of the world.  Everything lives in the Cloud.  Every year is carefully organized, mapped out, and continuous, so that they also know their students really well.  They have student led conferences where kids share their digital portfolios.

Beijing International School is hosting a conference on the Flat Classroom Project in late February.  They have partnered with Katie Salen’s Quest to Learn School in New York City, using Gamestar Mechanic, which “was designed as a learning platform to foster the development of 21st Century skills while teaching the principles of game design.”  Beijing students create and design their own games, and iterate through the process with students in New York City, testing prototypes and receiving feedback. They are using design thinking, and are intrigued by the opportunities with game design.

The two international schools, YKPao and Beijing International, are global in their outlook and approaches, and open and eager for innovation with technology. They are just further along than the Chinese schools that we visited, but the Chinese educators with whom we met share interest in innovation, collaboration, and technology integration, and appear to want to move at a fast clip, like Shanghai TV University, to catch up and even surpass U.S. educational approaches. Our tour guide in Shanghai captured the pace of innovation there when she said that she buys a new map every six months because the city is changing so fast.

I am fascinated to follow the direction that China heads in with technology integration, social media, especially if Facebook can gain a foothold in China, and education.

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The New York Times reports on the spreading use of the iPad in schools. In the article, Larry Reiff, an English teacher from Roslyn, New York, said, “If there isn’t an app that does something I need, there will be sooner or later.” The shortcoming of Mr. Reiff’s views and of the article’s focus is that the iPad can be more than a device to facilitate access to information or new apps. Kids need to be enlisted in the design and creation of iPad apps.

And, they are more than capable, as the story of Utah 14 year-old Robert Nay illustrates.  His new app, Bubble Ball, “a physics simulator, challenges players to use objects and gravity to guide a ball to its destination.” His app has shot to the top of the charts, surpassing the ever popular Angry Birds.

Of course, his web programming learning curve grew outside of school and through his own initiative and passion. Ina Fried, from All Things Digital, writes:

“Although it’s his first game, Nay has been into computers for some time, including Web programming and helping others with their computers. When he’s not at the computer (or school) he also likes reading, especially science fiction, and playing the piano and trumpet.  Some months back, a friend suggested that if Nay liked his iPod touch so much, perhaps he should try his hand at programming for it. At first he tried the standard Objective-C programming tools, but found the learning curve a little steep. He tried another tool called GameSalad, but didn’t like the results. In the end, he settled on the Corona tools from Ansca Mobile. Corona was easy to use, he said, and also let him write once and publish for both Apple and Android devices.”

Kids should be able to have app learning environments in schools.  This is a perfect opportunity to embed design thinking into school curriculum. Kids in school communities can work together with different constituents to identify the needs of the community with app development. Schools can launch programming courses to help catalyze student interest and learning with technology and shift the focus to students as creators with technology, instead of just consuming new apps.

Mr. Reiff also comments, “It allows us to extend the classroom beyond these four walls.” This is no different than laptops, but the iPad is lighter, sleeker, and easier to walk around with on campus. With the remote keyboard, it is possible to transform the device into a laptop.

The article also highlights benefits that educators see: “Educators also laud the iPad’s physical attributes, including its large touch screen (about 9.7 inches) and flat design, which allows students to maintain eye contact with their teachers. And students like its light weight, which offers a relief from the heavy books that weigh down their backpacks.”

One of the challenges with laptops is that students can hide behind screens; with the iPad that’s less of an issue. Students can’t flip screens the way they can on laptops.

Alex Curtis, the head of Morristown-Beard school in New Jersey, in the Times article, comments: “It has brought individual technology into the classroom without changing the classroom atmosphere.” It may be that the iPad comes with less potential disruption from distraction with laptops.

An additional benefit, if schools move to adoption, is the ability to give access to a broad array of applications to students, and facilitate the home-school transition with school work and learning.

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Check out my letter in the New York Times, published last Sunday, December 12th. It’s in response to As Bullies Go Digital, Parents Play Catch-Up.

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Fascinating discussion of teaching with technology on Soundprint.  Teaching: The Next Generation.  Excellent points brought up about how to move beyond the “preparing for the worst” situation, knowing that the technology will likely fall apart in the middle of a lesson, and how to turn students into engaged problem-solvers with technology.  Worth listening to.

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