Friday, October 8, 2010

Musings - Expanding the Walls

I don't know if anyone is reading this, but I needed a place to voice these thoughts. So here goes. This year, I have taken on a new adventure in the Powerful Learning Practice program, and it's fantastic. The focus is on connected learning. I think it's just what I needed. In the initial phases of the program, we're instructed NOT to think about changing our teaching. We're supposed to focus on our own learning. And I'm doing that pretty well. But everything I'm learning is reinforcing my belief that the walls of the classroom have to come down. And I can't help pointing the finger at myself.

What I'm learning through PLP is that networking - social or professional - is where the world is headed. This is the way our children function, and they are the future. So like it or not, we're not going back. So I'm thinking about the way I am working now; networking online with people I have never met face to face, and I realize more than ever how disconnected our classrooms are. The vast majority of teachers - even those who network in their personal lives - still shut the door when the bell rings and class takes place within the four walls. Disconnected from the rest of the world.

More and more this model is alienating our students. Just in the last week, I have spoken with two different students whose ideas for presentations at the TEDx Youth Conference have to do with redesigning the educational system. They're not exactly sure how to fix it, but they recognize the need for a shift.

So as a technology coordinator, it's my job to recognize this - which I have - and to help implement this change. And sure, we're taking baby steps. We're videoconferencing and skyping. But I take a look at my own classroom, and I don't see any walls tumbling down. And I'm a French teacher. One might think, well that's a natural fit! Your students should be working regularly with students in a francophone country. But I'm sad to say they're not.

This is where the hard work comes in. As leader of our PLP team, I have thought many times that I would like for the focus of our team's project to be expaning the walls of the classroom. But I need to make it more personal. I have to fix my classroom first. This is now my goal. I have to figure this out for my own teaching before I can think about influencing other teachers.

Now it's in writing. No turning back. :-) Wish me luck!

6 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  2. Jane Roe said...
    I think "shift" is the key word here...we don't have to reinvent, nor do we have to always be the show-stopping trailblazers. Perhaps awareness of the compelling reasons to shift is fundamental to beginning the process. I think a methodical evolution is acceptable...baby steps are good! One doesn't need to make severe radical changes to be a catalytic inspiration to the masses!

    October 8, 2010 5:57 PM

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  3. Luck Gail. Remember, Shift happens.

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  4. Schools have existed more-or-less in the same form for over a century and change in the way it works will not be quick or easy.

    Each time a teacher connects and collaborates outside of the small circle within a school building another brick is removed from the classroom wall. This is a process that will accelerate as social networking grows. The attempts to block social networking are the last gasps of the old guard trying to hold back the reformation.

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  5. Are you familiar with Wendy Drexler and her videos on The Networked Student and A Seventh Grader's PLE. You should take a look. They will provide you with a great deal of support.

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  6. Thank you. Reading this post and its comments has been inspiring to me. I found you through my twitter PLN, to whom I own almost everything I've learned about removing classroom walls and empowering students.
    I surely wish you luck, Gail.
    Ines

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He likes it! Hey, Mikey!

So you're trying to develop student-centered lesson plans. You're trying to get your inner "sage" off the "stage....