The World According to Matt

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Sometimes we learn in unexpected ways.
Today I asked one of my students to help me install Ubuntu on an old laptop that was giving me fits. While we were waiting for the software to install, I asked him about how his classes were going, specifically regarding the use of technology.
He eyed me somewhat suspiciously, and then he said: "Well, I wish teachers wouldn’t assign stuff for no reason. It seems that they are just adding on technology projects on top of the other things we already do." He senses from some teachers that they feel they have to "do" technology, not that they want to. His biggest criticism is the way we blog. A teacher posts a question, and the student writes a nightly response to it, much like he would do in a reading log or journal. He said there’s not much follow-up to the posting, either by students or teachers.
What Matt wishes is that his teachers would consider using blogs or forums to extend his learning. Perhaps assign a reading one night and the next night ask students to discuss the reading. No, he doesn’t want the teacher to assign a question because all kids do then is respond to the question–like regular homework. What if, he asked, teachers could assign students the job of discussing the literature, the war, the character, the concept on a blog or forum. Then, the next day, the teacher could ask about the discussion. Perhaps  put it up on the board via projector, share some responses.He thinks it would make students think rather than just answer the question.
"It would free up more class time for more discussions because the students would have already thought about the issues the night before," he said.
Even better, ask them to defend their answer, he said. Tell them they need to find other websites, videos, quotes to support their ideas…and share those on the website, too.
Less teacher directed, he was saying.
I don’t blame the teachers; many are blogging for the first time, taking those baby steps we talk about. I’ve made similar assignments myself. And I don’t think I have spent enough time explaining the value of blogs vs homework paper journals.
He said other students are frustrated, too. But he thinks a few conversations between students and teachers would go a long way to making all this work.
Now there’s an idea.

Image: ‘From where I sit
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Strategic planning with the focus on students

Ms_studentI love working with middle school students. They’ve nearly finished their American History wikis, and the engagement and excitement in the library is obvious.
Today, as I prepared to re-enter the world of strategic planning, one of the students walked up to me to talk about what he had done on his project.
He talked about how he had enjoyed working on it.
"Now all we have to do is answer the questions on the wiki," he said.
"Have you thought about narrating your comments in the Voice Thread instead of writing them in your notebook?" I asked.
"We can do that?" he asked, eyes wide. "Wow."
"Sure. You can all comment on each other’s now. Learn from each other…"
He walked away, smiling.
The moment wasn’t an epiphany. It wasn’t a tremendous "shift." But it was a moment that reminds me to keep the focus on the potential of change in how we teach. Does it matter that they answer questions on the VT instead of in their notebooks? Perhaps. I don’t have time to develop the argument now, but as I continue thinking about our vision, our hopes, our future, I will keep him in mind.

Image: ‘DSC00128
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