Wednesday, September 12, 2012

eclectic gatherings

nurturing-children-why-early-learning-does-not-help

Helen Ward is the president of a non-partisan, grassroots group called Kids First Parents Association. She highlights how attachment and socialization work together. “In order for children to grow up into the mature adults we desire them to be, they have to spend time with adults they are attached to, not their own likewise immature peers.” She goes on: “This means that if we take the attachment figure away—through death, illness, distractions, daycare, or any disruption in attachment relationships—and replace it with peer attachment  - puff - the kid will be a 'lord of the flies' type because the seemingly 'socialized' behaviour is simply copying, it is not 'inside' yet. It is developing, but can just as well ‘undevelop.’” [10]


Ironically, some who advocate for homeschooling do so in order for proper socialization to occur. In Home Schooling and the Question of Socialization, author Richard G. Medlin highlights how healthy socialization does happen for homeschoolers, writing “home-schooled children are taking part in the daily routines of their communities. They are certainly not isolated; in fact, they associate with—and feel close to—all sorts of people.” [12]

thanks Deb

content and choice



http://plpnetwork.com/2012/09/04/rethinking-content/
via Julie on fb


love Patti's thinking/changing of her classroom.. we do need to be doing that. today. so bravo and thank you for sharing.


i do however think this is the heart of the matter (choice).. and perhaps in the heat of the topic, we're not really being understood by each other (gb shaw)

disclaimer - this coming from someone who doesn't believe hs as is will be around for much longer.. not even beyond a year or two..
there's no reason for it (hs as is) .. the only reason it's carrying on now, is that we have people believing there is no other legal way to do public ed.
we've gotten good about glossing over legalities, what it means to be human and alive, so that most people are bots, doing what they're told... [paying bills that are optional, believing they can't homeschool, because they would have to pay the district $3000 to do it]

so perhaps, we redefine public ed..
public - concerning all the people
ed - one of the fundamental aspects of being human - learning is natural

having followed roger's work, he's not advocating we don't have drs, that we don't go deep, he's advocating choice.. just in time learning.

k.. i'll stop talking for him.. cause i'm sure i'll mis-talk.
this is me.
we don't need more drs, esp if we start being healthier - by letting people be themselves. suicide rate at 1 per 40 seconds.. we need to take better care of ourselves rather than mandating everyone prep with algebra - just in case they become a dr.
malpractice rates are high.. many drs are there because other people wanted them to be drs.. they didn't.

and more - in regard to the piece below -
you don't find a person's passion by force feeding.
perhaps some might find it..

but if we did public ed better..
everyone is known by someone
talk to yourself daily

we could truly facilitate curiosities within each person.
it is doable today.
which does indeed take us all deeper, once we believe there is no catch. that people value us right now.. and want to know what we are curious about. that they want to facilitate our curiosities.

that is a much better way to find the thing(s) a person can't not do.

in hs as is (in most places) not only do we disrespect people (students, teachers, parents, admin, custodians, community, et al, all people) .. we are disrespecting math (fill in your topic/content), mathematical thinking.
mathematical thinking to a depth that matters, doesn't show up, can't be experienced, in a classroom with 30 people, many, who would rather be elsewhere, on a thursday at 11. knowing that on the following tuesday you will be tested on specific details you encounter as content.

requirements are keeping us from brilliance. 
learning is not linear. 
pyramids have a foundation. but pyramids are linear.
networks have no foundation.
no basics.
start anywhere, follow it everywhere.

cool thing.. 
as educators, this might freak us out... oh. .. the chaos.
but how many of us now, spend way more time on prep and grading than on swimming with kids in the passion of your topic/discipline/whatever.
did we really go to school for classroom management? does anybody do that?

we do need a dialogue.
one of and, not either or.
one of choice.

but we need it now. we need to disrupt ourselves.
disruption is coming.
let's disrupt ourselves first.. no?




My first question is this – How “deep” into a subject such as Algebra, Biology, Chemistry, or Physics do we need to go for students to identify a passion for the subject? If we stopped teaching them all together, would we have as many doctors and engineers? At what point do we allow a student to say, “This is neither a strength nor a passion for me. I don’t care to pursue this subject further”?
Schank’s “throw it all out” position to me does more harm than good. I think we DO need to consider whether students should be required to take upper level Math and Science courses in high school, but I feel his post does not encourage conversation about curriculum reform and passion-based learning. It is extremist and calls what we do “ridiculous” and “beyond silly.” That confrontational language will not encourage the dialogue that is so desperately needed to bring about a truly student-centered, interest-driven education system.

The Innovative Educator: The Missing Group in Our Nation's Talk About Educa...

The Innovative Educator: The Missing Group in Our Nation's Talk About Educa...: Yesterday I had the great pleasure to join journalists from around the country to speak with  NBC News President Steve Capus and SVP of Ed...

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

how do you know?



monika shared from A New Earth (Oprah #61) by Eckhart Tolle
How do you know this is the experience you need? Because this is the experience you are having at this moment.
Note: how do you know...

Monday, September 10, 2012

simpler to go to the limit..

shorter, (seth) simpler (head straight to limits - bypass exponentiation even), truer (imagine trail vs credentialing - because our lives are that rich)

spurred on by -

this:
blurry-ness of photobooth on my laptop - clearer vision wasn't about searching the menu for a technical adjustment - i just needed to wipe the lens.


and this:
Bonnie Stewart (@bonstewart)
9/10/12 6:19 AM
MOOC effects...what will colleges sell? RT @deandad
Competing with "free," part one: insidehighered.com/blogs/confessi…“free”-part-one

imagine we bypass the whole credentialing idea - worrying about all that has been - just into what we all know, what we all are craving, for ourselves and our children... full lives
imagine we bypass exponentiation even... stacking credentials et al.. and jump right to the limit by incrementing so small - as to facilitate curiosities person by person... people so engaged in rich and full lives - swimming in perpetual beta - that the credentialing piece is no longer a part of the convo.. no longer eating up our time/money/people.
we do spend so much time on policy/proof - and it's killing us..
literally:

Hans Rosling (@HansRosling)9/8/12 4:42 AMWorld Health gets better. But as infections deaths falls suicides increases. Now 1 million die from suicides each year who.int/mental_health/…
no?


and this:



Seth's Blog: Shorter

Seth's Blog: Shorter

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Between the By-Road and the Main Road: Innovation: Play, Passion and Purpose and the Prob...

Between the By-Road and the Main Road: Innovation: Play, Passion and Purpose and the Prob...: Today I pulled out some paint, gel medium, gesso, photographs, altered pages from a notebook, and batik paper I had previously made and beg...



critical ambiguity:
Creating as we each did today required a large block of time, permission to spend that time as we each wished, and tools necessary to get the work accomplished. It also required not knowing the end when we each started and in fact, not really having a start that was formal.  Rather, the beginning was well over from the point when we might have been able to name it as such. There is an ambiguity here that is rather critical.

grazie Mary Ann

Seth's Blog: What to obsess over

Seth's Blog: What to obsess over

what are you tracking... up to you...

Saturday, September 8, 2012

redefining public ed



Worth doing?One reason to do something is because you get paid to do it.
But it's sad to think that this might be the only reason to do something.
Now that you've got a skillset and trust and leverage and a following and the tools to make something happen, are you going to invest your heart and soul into something that's important or selling something you're not proud of?


find the thing you can't not do. do that.




Hans Rosling (@HansRosling)9/8/12 4:42 AMWorld Health gets better. But as infections deaths falls suicides increases. Now 1 million die from suicides each year who.int/mental_health/…





because it really is that important.
our kids are at risk everyday.
7+ hours a day.
12+ years.
with this ensuing mindset...
that they are either good or bad at fitting in a box...
neither one sets well with my soul.. for my kids..

you?


redefining public ed.
you come too..

Seth's Blog: Worth doing?

Seth's Blog: Worth doing?


find the thing you can't not do. redefining public ed. you come too....

Friday, September 7, 2012

steve hargadon - hacking city by city

cool venture..
the-hack-your-education-city-by-city
definitely go to link above.. see what you think.. offer him suggestions.



it's made us think of doing a fri night open mic night:
youth (you to whatever degree) share fears, share curiosities by voicing them on stage, but also via something like this:
photo taken by Gabe at burning man, see
 http://www.gabekphoto.com/portfolio/bm/2006_45.htm 

as well as a similar board: your curiosities facilitated here daily/weekly..


then sat - steve's workshop ideas...
we take 5 or 10 ideas and model how we can facilitate curiosities..
do a walk through of what we see the app doing.

use the brain to create a kid, their curiosity, mock up the life in a week of the kid
ie:
monday talk into app, leaving trail of this curiosity..




app starts the above web trail for Joe, who is 15 and plays in a band, and seeks to find others in town with similarities.. like maybe this one from Sally, who is 52 and works for Avago technologies,..

they each get a notice to meet at the downtown maker space (or library or pie shop) at 11 on wed, which is a designate safe space (staffed by screen checked district volunteers),
or
if they chose to talk on line before meeting, get each others email or text #

this happens daily, so over time, people learn that meeting up and it not working out (ie: no desire to keep meeting up) is fine. the next day will bring more connections.

and the app - gathering curiosities/noticings daily... keeps adding on to each person's web, crafting, by default (ie: not by the person waking up everyday and deciding what nodes or badges they want, focus on just being curious/noticing), a non-linear portfolio-ish in perpetual beta.

the brain allows you to the search via tag words, and nodes from that person relating to your search come forefront.

will craft a better post on just this soon... and link it back here..


so then.. by the end of the sat session..
we have walked through several different scenarios... for day 1, week 1, to 1 yr later, 5 yrs later..





be you web

the pleasure of finding things out.. that's how this sustains itself..
imagining a happy feynman.

guiding question




via
Scott McLeod (@mcleod)
9/7/12 6:00 AM
What should be my (our) guiding questions? bit.ly/ROG0c7 @willrich45 @dwarlick @MindShiftKQED@audreywatters @courosa @chrislehmann


hmmm.
imagine - if our guiding question was..
what are you curious about today, right now?

asking ourselves...  others...


seems we might get to what matters that way -
puts everyone is in this perpetual beta..  experimental mode.. aliveness learning/being mode.

being - as guide..


life is rich and full enough. no?
learning is natural. no?


pyramid - has a foundation, linear
network - no foundation, non-linear - start anywhere, follow it everywhere -myron
perhaps the best place to start - curiosity within - be you web - ish

loocs and moocs

Sidneyeve Matrix (@sidneyeve)
9/7/12 6:00 AM
Say hello to LOOC, MOOCs' little brother. Small scale, high touch, open courses at U. of Maineow.ly/dxbw5 Thx @dwicksspu

graphic is interesting...



to me - even more interesting -  how much time we spend on defining things..
and then arguing about the defintions [ie: who invented them and should get credit for them - don't we realize we're a tiny dot.. nothing new really]

if we didn't have all the policy, if we shared more, would we really need all the definitions and policy and definitions of policy and policy for the definitions...?

what if - we found we have all we need - once we gave up.. all these things that we don't really need..




and more...

Bonnie Stewart (@bonstewart)
9/7/12 6:03 AM
curiouser & curiouser - xMOOCs & credits. MT @markgr
Udacity: US University Will Accept Transfer Credit for One Coursechronicle.com/article/A-Firs…

interesting csu global

more on swimming - ness



Michelle Holliday (@michellehollida)
9/7/12 5:59 AM
Dylan also says: "Tell Daddy he should sing a song in his head while he's swimming."


always.

innovative behaviors modeled

Martin King (@timekord)
9/6/12 6:35 AM
"leaders of innovative companies consciously set the example by modeling innovation behaviors"goo.gl/C1XVf



For example, Fabrizio Freda, CEO of Estee Lauder (# 23 this year; #44 last year) excels at challenging the status quo by “playing the outsider.”   He learned this lesson early in his career, as he moved fromProcter & Gamble to Gucci SpA and back to P&G.  “The experience outside [P&G] gave me a lot more authority in challenging the status quo,” says Freda, “I stayed the challenger forever.”

What we do know as we wait is that if company leaders don’t “get” innovation by doing it themselves, the rest of the organization doesn’t stand a chance.

Benioff’s skill as an innovator has helped Salesforce generate a high innovation premium but if he doesn’t unleash the creative capacity of his employees through innovation processes Salesforce will be unable to sustain its high premium.

everyone has to be swimming in it.. for sustainability.. but also for quality of life.. no?

the vulnerability of innovating.. taking old things into a new space.. is the moving part, the movement, the keeps you in this aliveness...
this perpetual beta.

to optimize.. everyone gets to swim...
 
 

wordpress

Don Tapscott (@dtapscott)
9/7/12 5:55 AM
Great story on how #WordPress democratized online #publishingow.ly/dxfUA

the forbidden ed






via
Michel Bauwens (@mbauwens)
9/7/12 5:55 AM
The Forbidden Education: documentary on alternatives blog.p2pfoundation.net/the-forbidden-…

Thursday, September 6, 2012

be.app: facilitating curiosity















Our recent post on the be app has gone live on DMLCentral. In it we share 
our vision of a means to ground the ensuing chaos as we attempt to 
redefine public ed. Click here to view the post: dmlcentral.net

clay christensen - tedxboston



Wednesday, September 5, 2012

brent cameron




the emperor has no clothes.. no?
years of stripping away our authenticity.
something was missing.. something had gone to sleep.
you don't change society by tearing things down, you change society by building something different.
the absurdity that adults perpetuate even though you know it's not true
9:36 - the curriculum totally emerged...
kids hire mentors 
12 min in - virtual high 1995 - 7 teenager write about their vision.. in vancouver
learned about learning.. how to learn
when young people start finding out about themselves.
2002 - started offering online
2009 - 85 educators.. learning consultants
k-12 learning experience that isn't about curriculum
if ed was enterpreneurial - ed would be knocking down our doors
8 kinds of learning.. when free to learn
leave school and get in touch with designing self

http://selfdesign.com/

thank you Gina