Alan November's session on the last day of ISTE really resonated with me. What do teachers and admin do the first 5 days of school? Teach procedures! What do we need to be doing? Building relationships, cultivating passions and helping students find their own ways to learn.
Teachers should ask students "What's your passion?" and then help them find the best minds to follow. November gave great examples of how our students, though we may call them digital natives, do not necessarily know how to harness the power of the web (Google, social media +) to learn and grow. With one student who was shocked to find that November learned so much on his own rather than through a class, November asked him what he wanted to do? When the student replied that he wanted to be an entrepreneur, November pointed him to Twitter and the Harvard Business Review. But following HBR is not enough. November showed him instead how to draw from the much smaller group of people/businesses that HBR was following. These are the ones that HBR has already determined to be worth it. Follow these people to learn about starting your own business.
"It used to be a teacher's job to teach the information. Now the teacher's job is to teach how to find the information."
One of the things we need to teach in the first 5 days is rigorous research skills. Regardless of what subject area we teach, all teachers must teach students how to do research online. For example, while all of our students know how to type key words into Google and do a search, they do not fully know the "grammar and syntax" of Google. In trying to find how many schools in the UK teach the American Revolution, most people would enter something like "schools in UK that teach American Revolution." The results from this search and the one a well-versed Googler might use are dramatically different. Using site:uk in the search bar yields results from the UK. Certainly I need to do some learning on Google grammar and syntax as well!
Luckily, we can all access the Google Guide to instantly have these tips available.
How different would the start of the year be if instead teachers asked what students wanted to learn about and then helped them learn the ways to explore these ideas? Summer, yes, but teachers are always planning... The beginning of school is perfect for this. It shows we care about what they want to learn. It helps build relationships between teachers and students and build community within classrooms. It sets the tone for the year - teacher as a facilitator to learning. It lets students know that they matter and gives teachers a space to encourage them on their individual paths.
Ready to hone my Google search skills and plan my 1st5days!
No comments:
Post a Comment