working on.... not doing ourselves in.
story 1:
situation: 
ed conversations tend to always lean toward achievement/success.
noticeable observation:
connotations invariably mean... comparison of test scores on content
response: 
none really. we keep on having them. wasting valuable time and money on what we're used to doing rather than questioning what really matters.
wondering: 
what if we could realize the sabotage we are doing ourselves... (no one intentionally.. i honestly believe everyone wants good)... and walk away from the verbiage we keep blindly using. 
what if we zoom out and start to see that the hard work we keep on doing is frighteningly similar to a stationary bike.
story 2:
situation: 
Cathy Davidson is offering a course.. that will obviously require committed  kids and will obviously get a rigorous run from them. 
noticeable observation:
the kids are receiving  no credit.
response: 
that  can't be fair... we need to get them credit
wondering: 
is  this outcry for fairness actually a disservice.. compromising the act  of learning. do we need to get them "credit" or do we need to give  credit up and let this project validate itself. we assume an injustice  when we hear no credit. perhaps it's the credit that is the cause of the  disjust. why must we mark a learning with a grade or a credit or a  degree. why can't it be more like real life. and the action that comes  to fruition is the reward/record/whatever of  success/validation/accountability_______________________________________
