Ready to Travel?

Any FA teachers want to go to Philadelphia with me? This promises to be an enriching, exciting weekend.

Educon 2.0 — January 25-27, 2008, Science Leadership Academy, Philadelphia, PA

EduCon 2.0 is both a conversation and a conference.

And it is not
a technology conference. It is an education conference. It is a School
2.0 conference. It is, hopefully, an innovation conference where we
want to come together, both in person and virtually, to discuss the
future of schools. We are looking for people to present ideas,
facilitate conversations, and share best practice.

 

The Axioms / Guiding Principles of EduCon 2.0:

1) Our schools must be inquiry-driven, thoughtful and empowering for all members.
2) Our schools must be about co-creating — together with our students — the 21st Century Citizen
3) Technology must serve pedagogy, not the other way around.
4) Technology must enable students to research, create, communicate and collaborate
5) Learning can — and must — be networked.

A Night in Chicago

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I’ve been trying to work on streaming video for our teachers. All I’ve managed to do so far is bring down the network for three hours (long story).
When I noticed on Twitter that Will Richardson was going to be live streaming on Ustream.tv with David Jakes and Steve Dembo from Chicago, I decided to log in. I had tried earlier on one of Will’s first attempts, and couldn’t get the chat to enable. Last night, I logged in early and waited.
As I was washing dishes and folding clothes, I suddenly heard voices coming from my computer: "Live from Chicago!" or something like that…..hey, I was in. Will turned to the chat and noticed my "Hey."
"There’s scmorgan, whoever that is," he said. Me! Yeah, pretty cool.
But. And this was a big but for me. I quickly became frustrated. I loved listening to the guys discuss digital books and the future of books in general. At the same time, though, the folks in the chat were discussing 1:1 laptops, and I wanted to keep up with that conversation, too. Plus, by the time 25 people or so were in the chat mode, some long-time friends just saying hello and giving each other a hard time, I found it too difficult to participate. Oh, I could sit back and watch it all happening, but I couldn’t engage on any real level.
That’s not to say this was a failure. Wow, it’s exciting. And getting to see these folks live and "in person" was very cool. As this technology progresses and we all figure out ways to use it, I’m betting on lots of great sessions for our students, too.

Achieving flow

Flow
I was first introduced to "flow" by my colleague Jennifer a few years (6?) back.
The concept was new to me, and I set out to learn more. But it wasn’t until last night, when I had a few hours to myself unexpectedly, that I realized that I experience it–when I am online reading about learning, technology, blogging, and teaching.
Losing all track of time, I sat at my kitchen table, dog leaning against my foot, fingers sometimes typing-sometimes mousing, my mind moving from one concept to another.
Flow.

The flow state is an optimal state of intrinsic motivation,
where the person is fully immersed in what he or she is doing. This is
a feeling everyone has at times, characterized by a feeling of great
freedom, enjoyment, fulfillment, and skill—and during which temporal
concerns (time, food, ego-self, etc.) are typically ignored.[citation needed, wikipedia]

One of the reasons? I love getting emails like this from colleagues:

I am glad I got all the blog and wiki
pages set up before school started.  I would certainly not have been able
to do it now.  My Algebra-II class is gradually getting the hang of what
is expected on their wiki page.  The Math Analysis students are better at
it.  The AP Calc students see a definite advantage in their tests and
quizzes by working on the wiki problems.

And this from Jennifer, referring to our first experience with Google Presentations:

The best aspect of the application is that students can work simultaneously, the update frequency is very quick. The are working
practically in real time. Also, I can track not only their "chat" but
also the revisions. Like a wikispace, I can see who is contributing
which ideas. This technology helps me to ensure that the workers are
rewarded and the slackers feel a bit more self-conscious, and hopefully
motivated to get to work.

Ok, back to the flow.

New name, new focus

Desk
I’ve been spending a great deal of time thinking about our school laptop program. Though for years I’ve said, "Don’t think of this as an add-on, don’t teach technology separately, the title of my blog, Tech for Teachers, certainly didn’t support that concept. So now, I want to focus on broader concepts of learning– how do we engage learners? what are ways we will all be learning in the future? My tagline remains: It’s more than the laptops. Because technology won’t make bad teaching good.

This article certainly speaks to that.