News flash: Even with technology advancing at a rapidly growing rate, the world still needs teachers.

It’s important not to merely stick children in front of a computer, education research now shows. Instead, good teachers matter a lot — and nothing improves student performance as much as one-on-one human tutoring.

Oh, hey…you mean *teachers* still matter even when new technology is involved? Oh wait—and you’re saying they matter *especially* when new technology is involved? Well, imagine that.

The above quote is from an article about a brand new elementary school opening this school year in San Jose, California. Read more about the school here.

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Rebooting Pedagogy: Teaching teachers to brand their work in the digital space

This week I am prepping my curriculum for teaching a week-long class as part of the New School‘s Institute for Urban Education. I will be teaching the teachers enrolled in the class how to use a variety of digital tools that will allow them to quickly and effectively communicate with one another, collaborate on the work that they do, and ultimately promote the successes they achieve as they work on improving their respective schools over the next two years.

I’m especially excited about this class because it is giving me an opportunity to help teachers take on the task of implementing school reform, but in a way that helps them work more efficiently so that they are not over-burdened on top of the already demanding work of educating hundreds of children and young adults each day. Plus, I am looking forward to talking to the teachers about developing an online presence that allows others to see the great work that these educators are doing in their schools. So often, the only public persona teachers have is that of the union representatives whose job it is to work with “the media.” I’m excited about helping educators–who have traditionally shied away from “branding” what they do–create an online presence for themselves so that the public can understand the great work they are doing–and learn how they are doing it.

Some of the tools we’ll be working with next week:

  • Typewith.me and G+ hangouts, for online collaboration and discussion.
  • Twitter, for creating an online community of educators within and outside of the IUE project.
  • WordPress and Tumblr, for the teachers to work with simple blogging platforms that meet their needs.

While there are many teachers who have an active online presence and who embrace social media, many of the teachers I’ll be working with will just be getting started when it comes to creating a public identity online. I’m thrilled to be a part of that journey with them, a journey that I think will lead to greater innovation in schools beyond those where these teachers currently work, and greater empowerment for each of them in terms of helping others outside of education understand–and further appreciate–the work that teachers do every day.

 

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‘The myth of the “digital native” narrative’

This is the myth of the “digital native” narrative, the notion that youth can thrive in the digital world without any adult support, mentoring, or scaffolding of rich learning experiences. While a greater diversity of young people are using digital and mobile platforms than ever before not all media ecologies are equal. Thus it’s very possible that if poor and working class students adopt technologies like mobile phones in environments that do not offer adult engagement and scaffolding the potential benefits in terms of learning and empowerment may not be realized.

The above is an excerpt from an excellent piece by S. Craig Watkins, who runs The Young and the Digital. One of phrases I really loathe is “digital native,” because it is used to refer to a whole group of people who share only an age range, and the implication is that all young people take to technology “naturally” because they have “grown up” with it. But to have regular exposure to technology, one must first grow up in a household that can afford the various devices that contribute to technological fluency. On top of that, as Watkins points out, just because young people know how to do certain things with certain devices, that doesn’t mean they don’t need any guided practice with using computers, mobile phones and tablets in order to use them in the most efficient, effective ways.

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Cool new app Historypin maps history of places through pictures

 

Check out this video, which quickly explains Historypin, an app that crowdsources old photos of places to allow anyone who uses the app to view a place as it appeared at different times throughout history. This is such a great resource for history teachers, or for anyone who (like me) is fascinated by cities and the ways they have evolved over time.

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My Life Is True: A great new resource for increasing diversity of perspectives on radio and in the classroom

Link: My Life Is True: A great new resource for increasing diversity of perspectives on radio and in the classroom

Just visited the page for “My Life Is True,” a collaboration between KQED public radio in San Francisco and folks from the New America Foundation and Pop-Up Magazine. I already found a story to use with a unit on the DREAM Act that I will be doing with the summer bridge students I’m teaching this July. (The students will be reading, “My Life as an Undocumented Immigrant,” as well as some other pieces, in addition to doing their own research.) I’ve always found short audio pieces to be very effective in engaging students—they like hearing people tell their stories in their own words, their own voices. I’m looking forward to hearing—and using—more of these works as the project grows.

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The National Writing Project’s New Book: Because Digital Writing Matters

Link: The National Writing Project’s New Book: Because Digital Writing Matters

On my summer reading list is the National Writing Project’s book, Because Digital Writing Matters: Improving Student Writing in Online and Multimedia Environments, which hit shelves late last year. If you’ve already read the book or would like to find out more about what it has to offer, you can join the discussion on the book’s Ning, linked to above.

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Nice piece from CNN about how teachers can use Twitter during class to increase participation, es

Nice piece from CNN about how teachers can use Twitter during class to increase participation, especially among shier students.

I used Twitter last semester with my college freshmen and sophomores, and I plan to continue to use it going forward. It’s a great way to maintain transparent communication with students, while at the same time helping them gain fluency with a tool that many of them–contrary to popular belief–have never used.

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‘This Twitter thing does help!’: Twitter in the English Composition Classroom

This past semester, I had the students in my freshmen and sophomore English Composition classes use Twitter as our primary mode of communication. I am an enthusiastic Twitter user, and had been thinking for a long time that the tool is ideal for communicating with students and for having them communicate with one another. I’ve outlined below some of the ways that this tool proved to be exceedingly useful; in a future post, I will address the changes I would make to the way I would use the platform in class going forward. But for now, here are some ways that Twitter is incredibly useful for teachers and students alike.

Awesome thing about Twitter, #1: Communication on Twitter is public, unless a user has a protected account. This is probably my favorite feature of the platform when it comes to organizing the conversation related to class. I required students to have an unprotected Twitter account so that their tweets would be visible to everyone in the class. I also made a hashtag for each of my classes and listed that hashtag on the syllabus, along with the following information:

*The course hashtag is what we will use to share information related to the class via Twitter. Though I will be requiring that you have an “unprotected” Twitter account for class, you will not need to follow me; you just need to remember to use the hashtag in tweets related to the class.

In the case of my English 106 class, the hashtag was #E106. This means that every tweet containing “#E106” would be displayed whenever someone searched for “#E106” on Twitter or clicked the #E106 tag in a tweet. And that means that if someone asks me a question and I answer it, and we both use the hashtag in our tweets, anyone else who might have the same question need only to browse the hashtag to see if I’ve already answered that question. You teachers out there who are deluged with 20 different emails that ask the exact same question will understand why this is such a fantastic feature. But don’t just take my word for it; check out my student Abel, letting me know his appreciation for the public nature of Twitter after he saw me answer a classmate’s question about the night’s homework: 

Woot!

Awesome thing about Twitter, #2: Twitter allows the students to be resources for one another, rather than making the teacher the sole arbiter of information. I will demonstrate that idea with the following tweet, from my student Johnny:

Oh, you missed class, did you? Well don’t email me asking, “Did you do anything important in class today?”. Instead, browse the hashtag to see if you can find that answer on your own. And lo! What’s this? One of your amazing classmates has taken the time to upload his notes to his Tumblr and let you know where they are! That is FANTASTIC! Be sure to send him a thank-you!

[Author aside: I also used Tumblr—this very blogging platform I’m writing on now—this semester, and will discuss that in a future post.]

Awesome thing about Twitter, #3: Students can use it to brainstorm in preparation for class presentations. My freshman composition courses culminate in the reading of Don DeLillo’s novel, White Noise. Because the rest of the semester the students read nonfiction texts, this is their first foray into deep literary analysis. I try to have my students lead the discussion on various passages, so I have them work in groups to analyze what they are reading. As every teacher knows, the time we have in each class meeting is very limited. That’s where Twitter comes in. In this case, I had students use Twitter to work with their group members to decide on the passage they would analyze in class. This meant that if they did what they were supposed to do, they would tweet their ideas using a specific group hashtag, and then when they came to class, they would already have settled on a passage to analyze and could therefore hit the ground running with their time and just get to analyzing.

Here’s a glimpse of what that looked like:

Scott opened up the discussion with the passage he was suggesting. Notice he’s using #wn5, the group hashtag, so that his peers in his group will see his suggestion.

Because of the hashtag, Scott’s peer Bianna was able to see that they both thought the passage on page 92 was worth examining. 

Then, their third (and last) group member chimed in:

The students floated other passages, and then, because of the public nature of Twitter, I checked the hashtag and was able to help them along:

I was excited that they each were recommending so many passages (I haven’t included all of those other tweets here for brevity’s sake), but also wanted to remind them that they needed to settle on one before class the next day.

Again, this public nature of the platform makes a it useful one for teachers. When I did this assignment in the past, students were supposed to brainstorm with one another over email, but there was no way for me to tell who was or who was not participating in the brainstorm. With Twitter, I can check out the hashtag, see how things are going, and know well in advance of class if people will be up on their game and ready to go, or if they ditched the homework and will start out behind. I can also let the students sort things out for themselves, or provide a quick suggestion, as I did in this case.

These are some of the things I did with Twitter this semester. As I said at the beginning of this post, cautions as well as things I would change will be forthcoming in a separate post.

Have you used Twitter in your classes? How did it go? I’d love to hear your ideas in the comments.

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‘Free of other people’s inventions’–A case for diversity–not ‘objectivity’ in the newsroom

Oh, let’s start with a quote, shall we?

Tridib said that we could not see without inventing what we saw, [and so] if we didn’t try ourselves, we would never be free of other people’s inventions.

That line comes from the narrator in Amitav Ghosh’s novel, The Shadow Lines, a beautiful book about nationality and heritage and the borders we draw to separate ourselves from “others.”

The quote is on my mind now because I am thinking about diversity. And bias. And the places where we get our information. An ongoing debate among citizens and journalists alike concerns whether or not we should–or even can–expect “objectivity” from those charged with the responsibility of delivering to us the world’s news. One camp (and for the sake of full disclosure, I should say that this camp is the one that I reside in) argues that “objectivity” is a myth–no news coverage can be stripped of all possible slant, and that fact in and of itself does not make slanted coverage immediately irresponsible or unreliable.  Those on the other side of the debate disagree, arguing that “objective” journalism is not only possible but essential for a democracy; only with objective journalism can citizens come to their own conclusions about the issues and events of the day. Continue reading

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Waiting for the rest of the movie: Why Waiting for Superman was an unfinished film at best

It’s really a bummer when a film you’ve looked forward to seeing for months turns out to be a huge disappointment. but that was the case for me when I saw Waiting for Superman. The documentary seeks to highlight the increasing ineffectiveness of public school systems throughout the United States, and to illustrate the harm these failing schools are doing to our kids–and by extension to our society as a whole, which suffers the effects of a poorly-educated populace: higher crime rates, entrenched poverty, and–according to the film–not enough skilled workers to fill the professional jobs of the future.

I was excited to see Waiting for Superman because I, too, am worried about the current state of education in this country, and I was especially thrilled that the timing of the release landed the movie in theaters just as the public consciousness of problems plaguing our schools has been raised, via articles in the Los Angeles Times, The New York Times, NPR, and a variety of other outlets.   I would love to see this national discussion we’re having–fractured though it may be–gain in momentum so that we may begin to address the problems that currently plague school districts throughout the country.

Unfortunately, though, Waiting for Superman adds nothing to this national discussion because all the movie offers is an incredibly simplistic look at a very complex problem.  If Davis Guggenheim, who directed the film, is to be believed, our educational system has deteriorated solely because tenure and teachers unions have kept horrible teachers in the classroom for far too long. Continue reading

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