Wonder Walking Through Our Schools

Inspired by Georgia Heard and Jennifer McDonough, Katie D. over at Creative Literacy went on a Wonder Walk and captured this video for her students using her flip camera. I wonder what educators could learn about themselves, their students, and their collective work together if they wondered around their classrooms and schools in a similar way? Capturing our wonderment in this fashion could provide us some very meaningful information about our learning and our practice to reflect upon.

Students 2.0

Students 2.0 is a new network for young people that will be facilitated in large measure by young people, with a bit of support from some older people who try to remain young at heart ; ).

From the ning:

Students 2.0 is a network for learners to connect independently with other students and with mentors in order to shape educational paths and experiences which may be outside of traditional institutions.

We encourage you to explore passionate interests, to find people to help you, and to build professional competencies–creating your own virtual “Personal Learning Network” (PLN).

I am excited about this forum for a variety of reasons, and I’d like to invite you and the young people that you know to participate here. They can create a profile, begin a group, and engage in some fantastic upcoming learning opportunities. For instance, Jenny Luca will be hosting a series of Learning Web 2.0 sessions via elluminate, specifically for secondary level students who want to learn more about everything from RSS to blogging to Twitter. These sessions are free and open to all.

Jackie Gerstein and Jenny are also planning to host a virtual conference for and by students this spring. If you are a young person who is interested in sharing the things that you are passionate about and networking with others who may be inspired to do the same, please consider participating in this event.

The teachers, writers, and interns in the WNY Young Writers’ Studio will be supported to participate within this space, establish their own learning networks, and share their interests and expertise. Summer is coming! Lots of new opportunities to announce over the next few weeks. Have a wonderful long weekend Western New Yorkers!

Words, Words, Words

Found in my travels this week:

  • VocabGrabber enables users to see how words are used in context.
  • Confusing Words highlights the biggies that so many of us misuse.
  • Save the Words is kinda beautiful, although I’m struggling a bit with its utility.
  • IdiomSite.Com may become a quick favorite of some teachers I know…..
  • RhymeZone is a rhyming dictionary and thesaurus
  • Visuwords is an online dictionary that graphs word relationships

Contemplating Boundaries

This week, several people in my professional learning network have asked me to stream my demo lessons and share more photos of the work that I do inside of schools. Explaining why I can’t do that  in 140 characters or less on Twitter is something of a challenge, so for what it’s worth, I’m sharing my thoughts about it here. The truth is, I wrestle with issues regarding transparency and boundaries quite a bit.

Sometimes, when I’m coaching teachers around the use of social networking tools and the establishment of professional learning networks, I’m asked how transparent educators are expected to be online. My answer is always pretty simple: each person gets to choose how much they reveal about themselves inside of their networks. There aren’t any hard and fast rules, although there are recommendations and etiquette to be sure. Those that I trust most are clear about who they are and what they think in ways that are both honest and respectful, but when it comes to sharing anything about ourselves or our work online, the choices are ours to make.

Unless someone does it for us, of course.

What are implications of this?

As a teacher, it was always important to me that the learners in my classroom felt safe. My students wrote around topics that interested them, and sometimes, their work was very personal.  Some lacked confidence as writers, and others knew that their work was still in process and not ready for publication. It was never my place to decide for them what they would share. What an incredible violation that would have been.

As a literacy coach and service provider, the teachers that I visit are often engaged in learning and work that I find interesting. Some aren’t eager to share it with a wider audience for any number of reasons though, and often, focusing on the potential for sharing it gets in the way of the learning. It distracts me from listening or observing or engaging well, and it adds a level of pressure that isn’t at all productive.

Once in a while,  I’ve posted several reflections about the work of teachers that I admire, with their permission. One of the unintended consequences? Teachers who were not mentioned on my blog felt overlooked. The same could also happen with students.

Over time, I’ve realized that perhaps it isn’t my place to showcase the work of others, unless they ask me to. I don’t stream our lessons or post pictures of our work together because I’m sensitive to this reality. More importantly, the work that students and teachers do belongs to them, regardless of how I might have been involved in it. If anyone is going to mention it online, I guess I think that they should….and often, they do…..without any help from me.

In this iPhone and Flip-friendly age, it’s tempting to want to shoot and share every memorable moment of my day. The students and teachers that I work with give me pause though. I’m realizing that in accepting my role as a consultant and coach, I must accept other responsibilities as well. It’s not enough to simply choose how transparent I prefer to be online. It’s critical that I’m respectful of the rights of others to choose how much of themselves and their work they want to share and where and when. It’s not my place to post photos or videos of anyone–especially the children I work with, unless I’ve asked permission first or those kids have invited me to do so. My own daughter didn’t begin blogging until she was old enough to understand what it meant to have an online presence and choose this for herself. I know that much of this gets rather sticky and hard to remain vigilant about, though–particularly when my learning is so closely connected to the learning that others do and we all share within these spaces in order to learn.

Am I the only one grappling with this?

Whatever it Takes

Communities for Learning friends and fellows! I hope you’ll watch Whatever it Takes, a documentary by Christopher Wong that airs on PBS this week.  Giselle Martin Kniep and several fellows of our community learn and lead together inside of this school. Looking forward to being inspired!

Oh, The Places We Long to Go…..

Hey–there is an interesting conversation taking place over here. I jumped in because the issues raised here are particularly relevant to the work that I….and a whole lot of other people I  know…..do. A theme has been emerging from my own learning over the last few years, and Bass digs into it in ways that I respect. He advocates for leading change by beginning with what is. He speaks to a reality that I understand, and I have a feeling that a few other people in my corner of the world might live in this same world. This doesn’t mean we aren’t aware of what is possible. It doesn’t mean we aren’t champions for change. It simply means that being on the ground inside of schools every day requires a different use of our energies. It requires us to think and plan with others around what is as well as what could be.

Helping teachers and students define a vision for the learning that they would like to accomplish and the work that they would like to do is critical, and this looks different everywhere I go. It should. The culture of every school and every community is different, and it would be incredibly arrogant and ineffective to assume that I have answers. In fact, I’ve discovered that teachers and students actually know quite a bit about what they need and how I can help them. Doing my work well requires me to  listen, ask good questions, and learn where the entry points into our work together might be.

Often, I learn about what isn’t possible right now.

Filters are a reality in every school I work in, and I imagine that things will remain this way for a good long time. I’ve worked in classrooms as recently as a month ago that did not have a single computer in them. In fact, there are still schools in our region who only provide one computer per classroom–for teachers to keep their grade books on.

I also work with teachers who are courageous enough to convey the fact that they aren’t at all comfortable teaching reading and writing. They aren’t certain how to provide quality feedback to the writers that they work with. Some haven’t really written anything themselves since grad school. I know more than a handful of teachers who still struggle to check their email on a daily basis. Terms like RSS, wiki, ning, and blog give them tremors. That’s okay. They are eager to learn from one another, and I’m honored to help them however I can. This often begins by finding out who people really are, what they long to accomplish as learners and teachers, and what they are passionate about. When people are engaged in meaningful learning that is aligned to these purposes, the development of skills like reading and writing and…improved instructional practice…..seem to become natural by-products of that experience.

As a service provider, I’ve found that real change is often slow change. Beginning with an audit of what teachers and students need, what they are interested in and experienced with, and what resources are available and open within the district has been an excellent place to start.This helps us ground our work together in what is possible. The fact is that even with filters and standards and testing and budget cuts and Race to the Top and all of the things people are confused and frustrated about….so much is possible. Advocating for what could be if a few thousand things simply change first isn’t a very good use of my time….although I think it is imperative that others, particularly those who are more powerful than I may be, do this work in a very big way. That’s not my purpose most days though, and I need to remain clear about this. My purpose is to respect and help people  in my little community remember who they are and what they want to accomplish in service to one another. My purpose is to support those teachers and students who are eager to learn and grow right now, using the resources and the learning opportunities that might help them best in the system they are in.

Clarity of purpose remains one greatest needs I’ve identified in my work with administrators, teachers, and students.

What is the purpose of our school? What are our purposes as leaders? As learners? As service providers?

What are we trying to learn about students and about our work as teachers? How do we study this best? Which of the tools that we have can help us do this most effectively?

How will we act, in response to what we learn about our students, our teachers, our administrators, and ourselves?

This is the work that makes me most joyful, and it happens best when I’m able to focus on what is possible. I have such tremendous respect for people and learning in progress, particularly when people are willing to own that reality rather than cover it up for fear of being told they are wrong or judged harshly by those who claim to know more than they wonder. None of what real learners do is perfect….in fact, none of us are perfect…..and in a huge way, I think that this is what makes us good examples.

WNYLIT: A F2F and Virtual Forum for WNY Literacy Leaders

Last week, I had the opportunity to facilitate the first session of WNYLIT, a new forum for literacy leaders in our area, hosted at the Carrier Center in Angola, New York by the fine folks at Erie 2 BOCES (thanks Theresa)! Twenty literacy coaches, administrators, and teachers came together to explore the benefits and challenges of building relationships with those aim to serve. We used a protocol for rich text discussion to explore several pieces of literature (hat tip to Joe, for reminding me of this text), did a bit of collaborative problem solving, and had an opportunity to share some of our resources, expertise, and strategies. As we worked together to shape our next agenda, we decided we were eager to learn more about how we might capture information from formative assessments to guide our work with teachers and students.

In the mean time, we’ve established an online community that will allow us to remain in touch with one another in between sessions and connect with those beyond our community who might help us learn and grow even more. Please consider joining us here if you are a literacy leader in your own school or community! This tool provides tremendous potential for all of us, and it would be wonderful to connect with those beyond our area as well.

Literacy and Augmented Reality

The folks over at Common Craft have gifted us with another gracefully simplistic video–this one is about augmented reality.

This has everything to do with literacy.

It has everything to do with learning.

Imagine the possibilities.

They already exist.

Is Professional Discourse Possible on Twitter?

Jennifer started a timely conversation. I hope you’ll join in……..

A Few of My Favorite Things

Just sharing what I’ve found in my travels…..

I know that I may be a bit late to the table here, but I’m loving this tool.

Lately, I’ve been teaching with StoryCorps almost as often as I’ve been teaching with TED. So much potential for the classroom……

Been playing with Firefox add-onssimple ways to download YouTube videos here.

Had the chance to create a few new Sir Ken Robinson fans last week. The Future of Education is featuring him in a free webinar next week!

And check this out–a tool that allows you to print a wall-sized poster with a standard printer (and if you aren’t subscribed to Free Technology for Teachers, you should be….that’s where I learned about this!)

And last but not least……AnyClip helps users locate slices of scenes from thousands of films.

Happy Tuesday! Hope the sun is out where you are today!