No Child Left Behind: Friend or Foe?

Posted August 13th, 2007 by Marli

A few weeks ago I found an interesting article on the renewed, and slightly altered, No Child Left Behind bill.  The article looked promising.  As the vote draws near, more and more is being written about it, and everywhere I look I find more stories, many from teachers, about the affects of the bill on technology and creativity, and therefore hands-on learning.

 This morning I read an article concerning a tech teacher. When I was in school, we spent tech class drawing blueprints and building spice racks, but not these days!  According to Bob McDaniels, a tech teacher in Pennsylvania, tech now ALWAYS means technology - even when building a spice rack, students start with the computer.  This struck me for three reasons.

1. It’s immensely practical - a word all too seldom used in school.  It combines the joy of building with research, and in Bob McDaniel’s case, scientific research (he says the students, for example, research birds in order to build the apropriate bird house for the species they select).

2. It’s an odd, and perhaps therefore GOOD, marriage of intelligences.  Tech class (the old form) relied on being good with your hands, and being spatially able to visualize and create.  Technology class (the new form) still holds onto that, but adds research and reading (for an authentic task) and categorizing the information.

3. McDaniels said that according to NCLB, technology education is mandatory - which means that NCLB is what is causing this practical, odd, and good combination of multiple intelligences.  Since when does the NCLB inspire creative classrooms?!

The second article I saw today seemed to me cause for optimism, though wary.  George Miller, a democratic representative in California, plans to propose “more rigorous standards that reflect the needs of 21st-century learners.”

The optimism?  21st-century-learners are hands-on learners, creative, analytical, collaborating learners, requiring multiple froms of assessment.  Every school should be incorporating 21st-century skills in their lessons; FableVision’s North Star Inspiration for the Classroom is currently being revised to that end.

And yet, I’m wary.  The term “more rigorous” is triggering this.  What training are the teachers receiving to help them completely revamp their classrooms?  When will the school districts be given enough government funding to buy new supplies, technology, software, and all the rest to support these advanced standards.  I’m not sure we’re ready to change the standards yet.  First the tools and strategies need to be put in place.

It will be a great day when schools have all the money they need, and the military has to hold a bake sale to buy a bomb.  Not sure who said it, but it’s very true…

What have your experiences been with NCLB?  How has it affected your school?

To Serve the NS Community Better . . .

Posted August 6th, 2007 by Paul Reynolds

As we rebuild the North Star Community of Practice site, I’d love to hear fromNorth Star Child Holding Star folks who may have used the beta and alpha sites. What did you like on those sites that you’d like to see on this site? What features - in general - would you like to see here to make the site more useful? What would you need to make you more comfortable joining in the discussions - or posting a blog entry? Don’t hold back - we have teams of designers, programmers and creative folk who are ready to “build to suit.”

We’re all ears - and ready to make this a site that takes good care of you. Our goal is to keep you inspired, informed and ready to keep fighting the good fight as your reach and support ALL learners. (Remember - your comments can be short - any feedback is great!)

Paul

P.S.  If you have any trouble logging in, just email me directly and I’ll take care of it - paul@fablevision.com.   : )

Stars in Struggle

Posted August 2nd, 2007 by Marli

The tragedy of the bridge collapsing in Minneapolis last night is a horrifying event - almost too large and frightening to process.  All morning I watched interviews with survivors, each looking more traumatized than the last, each unable to comprehend what he or she had lived through.

But the beacon of light and hope through this was the bus of 52 children and 9 adults, all of whom exited the bus and escaped with only 8 injuries among them, and no casualties.  It certainly makes you stop, take a moment, and think.

For me, it made me remember how unique and special each of those children are, and it made me wonder what effect this tragedy had - is still having - on each of them.  How does such a rescue, such a lucky chance, affect your North Star?

I think this is true of teacher’s as well; sometimes a specific event changes everything, the way we see life and ourselves, the way we prioritize.   Please, share your stories.  Have you experienced anything that moved your North Star?  Have any of your students?

North Star Constructivism

Posted July 30th, 2007 by Marli

I have just returned (and am still recovering!) from the 2007 Constructivist Design Conference in Grand Island, New York.  It was my 15th conference, and every year - from my first summer attending as a student, to this year representing FableVision and working with a team of student teachers, I leave the week feeling refueled and energized.

 What struck me most this year was the vocabulary I heard (and not just from Get A Clue!).  Constructivists refer to student-centered classrooms, hands-on learning, and teacher-as-guide… certainly sounds like the North Star to me!

 But the most amazing moment for me was watching an 8-year-old teach five teachers how to create a rubric.  After a week of writing (and rating her own) newspaper articles for the “Daily Constructivist” with other students aged 8-13, she felt confident enough to explain the concept to the (rather amused, and very awed) teachers.  I introduced her to Stationery Studio soon after, and maybe next year she’ll be writing her rubrics on that!

Expeditionary Learning

Posted July 20th, 2007 by Maribeth Bush

Reading about the inaugural public event of the Constructivist Consortium brought back memories of the middle school where I completed half of my internship back when I was getting my certification for school counseling.  The school was King Middle School in Portland, Maine, and King’s school wide model is Expeditionary Learning… which is very much a constructivist model.  From the King MS website:

Our school wide model is Expeditionary Learning. Our students engage in eight to twelve week experiential learning expeditions. These expeditions are in-depth and interdisciplinary in nature and require students to engage in sophisticated research, use the community in authentic ways, and represent their knowledge with high quality products which are presented to legitimate audiences.

It was exciting to learn about the Expeditionary Learning model while I was interning at this school… observing how students learned about and applied language arts, math, science and other subjects while cooperatively completing an “expedition”, or large project, over a long span of time.  How wonderful to be able to learn subjects while applying them in the moment to real-world experiences and projects.

Recently, a new public elmentary school was built in Portland which also integrates Expeditionary Learning into their framework for learning.  Looks like it’s catching on!

Does anyone else have any experiences with Expeditionary Learning schools, or other schools that model a constructivist approach?

Learner-Centered Technology vs Technology-Centered Learning

Posted July 16th, 2007 by Marli

 A few weeks ago, while still at NECC in Atlanta, Georgia, I had a fantastic discussion with an Australian teacher named Martin Levins.  Martin told me tales of the teachers he has encountered and the automatic first question they ask him:

“I have to use the computer, but I also need to teach [math, science, reading, geography, art].  How do I fit them both in?”

His response is brilliantly simple: “you’re asking the wrong question.  Use the computer to teach the subject!”  He gave me examples of using Google Maps to trace volcanos and earthquakes, and I have since discovered other examples, from the New York Times online lesson plans to FableVision’s own Stationery Studio program.

Today I was reminded of my conversation with Martin when I read a blog entry by Doug Johnson from Mankato Public Schools.  The piece, Survival Skills for the Information Jungle, enlightened me as to WHY teachers (and students!) can feel so overwhelmed by technology.  Once we had to search for information, afraid it wasn’t there at all.  Now we know it’s there… but everything is there!  I refer you to “Information jungle survival skill 4:”

Don’t just gather sticks. Make something with them.
And we have come full circle to Martin’s simple response.  Technology is not a separate piece to somehow fit into an already crammed curriculum.  It is a new tool, to aid discovery and lead to creativity.

 Using technology to create

Harry Potter’s North Star

Posted July 11th, 2007 by Marli

The latest Harry Potter film came out last night, and (according to MSN), hundreds turned out for the midnight showing.  I was not one of them, but reading the reviews this morning I felt a new connection to Harry and his friends.

Harry is following his North Star, and Hogwarts is a North Star school - hear me out on this!  Think of the muggle world as a traditional school model.  The Dursleys are afraid of what they don’t know, as so many people are.  (Granted, for the sake of literary drama they appear a little overzealous in their fear, but I’m sure we’ve all met with such opposition.)  But Harry has the memory of his parents as his guides, and the day Hagrid walks into his life and offers him a CHOICE, he begins his journey.

What makes Hogwarts different from the Muggle world?  Two things: first, Harry is asked to choose many of his own classes, with clear options of where these courses will lead him.  Nothing is theoretical in Hogwarts (particularly for Harry, who regularly finds himself in situations where he is forced to call upon history and practical magic just to stay alive).  Second, Hogwarts’ administrators make full use of every new magic they discover.

Replace the word magic with technology.  Suddenly, Harry is learning 21st century skills and utilizing those skills to develop his character and find his North Star.  YAY!

No Child Left Behind

Posted July 6th, 2007 by Marli

The No Child Left Behind act is up for reauthorization this year, and - surprise, surprise - there are some proposed ammendments.  Most of the ammendments are still very test-centric, but I read about one in the New York Times today that seems to be moving in the right direction.

 Several schools in New York state (and probably many other states as well) have shifted from comparing test scores to those of previous grades to comparing the scores to previous scores by the individual student.

What does this mean?  It means that even though this year’s 8th grade test score is not an accurate representation of Johnny’s ability to discuss politics or facilitate literary discussions, it may be an accurate representation of what special help he needs to excel within his current school.  Individual students are being moved into special education or advanced placement classrooms based on their individual progress, as opposed to their comparative progress.

It’s a start!

Nine Excellent Reasons for Technology in Education

Posted July 2nd, 2007 by Marli

Reason One: Expansion of Time and SpaceIn a typical high school a student has access to a teacher for one hour each day. That means she has access to the teacher approximately for 6% of a 16-hour waking day, and even that time is shared with 25 classmates. But she has access to the Internet 100% of the time. That’s a lot better — some twenty times better. Yes, technology is no substitute for an inspiring teacher. However, on-line materials are FAR more available. -John Page

Although a majority of these reasons are geared towards visual learners, Page’s reasoning is sound, particularly when he gets into the automatic emphasis on project-based learning and individual pacing the Internet provides. My only question is: how do we make the transition?

The rest of the article is available here.

North Star Resources

Posted June 28th, 2007 by Marli

I just got back from Atlanta, Georgia, where I went to my first National Educational Computing Conference with FableVision!

There were plenty of highlights, but my favorite part was speaking with teachers who introduced me to new “North Star” inspired lesson plans. One teacher told me about making North Star Constellations the first day of class, and asking students to introduce different topics over the course of the year, based on their interests. (So, to introduce a unit on wildlife, the student who wrote “birds” on his or her constellation might introduce it by sharing some information with the rest of the class).

I want to continue the discussion. What’s your favorite North Star resource? What would you like to add as a North Star resource?