Thursday, September 29, 2011

My Thoughts From Education Nation

Crossposted here on Huffington Post

I just returned from attending Education Nation; an invitation-only summit where educators, parents, students, business leaders, politicians and other decision-makers came together for a few days to have some conversations about the state of education today, and to share ideas on how to improve our schools for tomorrow.

This was NBC's 2nd go around with Education Nation and I was not in attendance last year but its no secret that last year's summit was quite contentious, as NBC seemed to have built the "conversation" around the highly controversial documentary, Waiting For Superman. The panelists and discussions seemed mostly in favor of charter schools and privatization of public schools, which enraged huge numbers of very vocal educators who rightly felt they were underrepresented.

It was very clear this year, that NBC listened to the feedback and learned from their self-acknowledged mistakes. This year, it was pretty clear that everyone was there to join in the conversation; regardless of political beliefs or stance on private/charter/public education or whether the belief is that poverty is to blame or not, or if increased salaries/merit pay for teachers will save education.

The panel discussions were fulfilling and in some cases, not long enough. Of particular note was the debate between Diane Ravitch and Geoffrey Canada that could have gone on all day and not have become boring. Ravitch and Canada remained very cordial to each other while seriously tackling their ideas on Reform.

Another session of note was on assessment and accountability. The session, Who's Getting Graded? Putting Accountability To The Test, was of particular interest to me as so many of us struggle to make sense of our current teacher evaluation systems and overuse of testing. It seems that everyone agrees with teacher accountability. The issue, however, is how to manage that in a fair manner when the only structured system we have uses students' test scores that only assess content; and on a low level at that. With the current emphasis on testing, teachers are forced to teach strategies that focus on what is known about the tests and to test often. All of this takes valuable time away from real instruction. Just as "texting while driving" creates a dangerous distraction, so does "testing while striving." How do we strive for true learning that encompasses the whole child while being forced to over-test and spending all non-instructional time evaluating the tests? How do we account for population, demographics, family support, poverty... oh yeah. We can fire the bad teachers and hire really good ones. A really good teacher can overcome all of those things.

File that one under: Don't Get Me Started...

What was interesting to me were the repeated references to Finland's education system. In this blogpost, Kari Louhivouri jokingly attributes Finland's success to "highly trained teachers, short school-days, lots of playtime, not too much homework, long holidays, no testing, no competition between schools, and trusting in teachers and schools."

But it's not a joke.

The transformation of the Finns’ education system began some 40 years ago as the key propellent of the country’s economic recovery plan. Educators had little idea it was so successful until 2000, when the first results from the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA), a standardized test given to 15-year-olds in more than 40 global venues, revealed Finnish youth to be the best young readers in the world. Three years later, they led in math. By 2006, Finland was first out of 57 countries (and a few cities) in science. In the 2009 PISA scores released last year, the nation came in second in science, third in reading and sixth in math among nearly half a million students worldwide. Source

The students in Finland don't take standardized tests until their last year of high school and other standard tests that are made available to their middle schools are given at the discretion of the teachers. Teachers must have a Masters degree, they are well paid and well respected. All the teachers are unionized and the country provides every service possible, including taxi service, to get their kids to school. I'm sure there is much we can learn from Finland. I recommend you watch this panel discussion on "Global Influence: What Can We Learn."

All of the recordings are online now. Below is a clip from the closing session that includes a really nice montage of soundbites and visuals from the event.

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Sunday, September 18, 2011

How Would You Revise The Children's Online Privacy Protection Rule?


Mashable recently published a post that caught my attention about the FTC's interest in gathering public comments and suggestions for revising the Children's Online Privacy Protection Rule. Read the Mashable post for details on the changes being proposed.

I know COPPA can be a sensitive topic with many educators because it seems to be the third wheel standing in the way of the instructional technology conversation between educators and their school district's legal and IT departments. Frequently it's the rigid interpretation, misinterpretation, personal-bias interpretation, or lazy interpretation of COPPA (and often how it relates to eRate funding) that becomes a huge barrier to instruction. (Having said that, I'm happy to say that in my district, although we still continue to face many battles and barriers, we are making great progress with some very forward-thinking administrators in top-level positions. I'm optimistic about our direction and the speed in which we'll get to a good place.)

For many though, it appears to be losing battle. Is this our chance to be a part of a change (however small)?

I encourage you to post your suggestions on the FTC's site. The FTC will accept no anonymous comments and, probably by design, there's no discussion forum on the site, so I'd like to start that discussion here.

Keeping in mind that there IS a place for online protection (or is there?), how would you revise the rule?

Saturday, September 03, 2011

QR Codes in Education

In July, I had the great pleasure of being one of the judges for the Microsoft Partners In Learning 2011 U.S. Innovative Educators Forum. Judging the projects was a true challenge since they were all of such high quality. It was such an honor to be among so many enthusiastic educators and to see them be recognized for their efforts, which many will agree does not happen often enough. One of the projects that really stuck with me, that can easily be replicated in any classroom is the project from Melanie Wiscount (@mwiscount on Twitter), who won the Educator's Choice award. Her project involved using QR codes:
"Students create a video podcast about an attraction, business, or organization of their choice within a 15-mile radius of their school. They research the history of their choice, plan the podcast (including media, prose and narration) develop a storyboard in Microsoft Word and then create their podcast using Microsoft Movie Maker. The students then put on their marketing hats and generate a QR code (or “tag”) for the “customers” of their chosen establishment, so people are able to access their video podcast on-demand for their PC or mobile device, while also including the podcasts in their class wiki."
To view one of Melanie's student's projects, download a QR reader for your smartphone and scan this code:
History Of The Hershey Factory
You can make your own QR code with Google! Go to http://goo.gl/ and enter the URL where you want your QR code to go. Click SHORTEN, then DETAILS and there you go! You can even track using Google's analytics. Try mine! 
GeekyMomma's Blog


If this is too geeky or you're wondering what's the big deal with QR codes, I recommend you watch this new video from Common Craft on QR codes:



What are some innovative ways you've seen QR codes used in education?