Tag Archive 'Bud Hunt'

Jan 25 2009

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Jan Smith

Reflections on a Conference I Didn’t Attend

Filed under Learning, Uncategorized

This weekend I was in Philadelphia. I met amazing people, had great conversations, and attended inspiring professional development sessions. All from the comfort of my office swivelly chair. And yes, I watched most of it in my pj’s.

I was at Educon 2.1 via Mogulus, a broadcasting platform that allows for video streaming and simultaneous chat. I really do wish I had been there in person, but to attend virtually was a great second-best. Maybe next year? I’d probably have to take a week off to get there and back! There were 350 physically attending. I wonder how many took part like me. Chris Lehmann, the faculty and students at Science Leadership Academy did a great job of bringing in a wider audience.

The conversations in the chat room were fascinating–at times a lot of “push back” on my own thinking (a term new to me in the last six months–not all heads nod, respectful disagreement, alternate points of view). I wish I could find the chat logs to see what I read and said.

In Bud Hunt’s presentation he used a tool called Ether Pad. Looks like an amazing tool for synchronous collaboration. One chat room discussion was about the true value of blogging. Someone contended that most blogging was essentially drivel, and not worth an audience. (I hope I am being fair, because I don’t have the transcript). I guess blogging either finds an audience or it doesn’t, like any other form of publication. Think of those bins outside bookstores with deeply discounted stuff that won’t be read. At least dead blogs don’t clog the landfill.

Another discussion was about whether books belong in school anymore. I really want to read the chat log on that, because I was a bit incredulous. This is not about textbooks, but any book. The chatter said they were inefficient. Can’t get my head around that. Maybe I was feeding the trolls on that one.

Alec Couros’s session on open learning was lively and satisfying. I wish I had thought to change browsers to Internet Explorer from FireFox as it was really choppy. They talked about online identity, sharing and the “gift economy”, who owns data and more. I actually recognized a dozen faces in the room, which in itself is quite amazing to me. Again, can’t wait to see the encore presentation.

I could not have pictured on-line learning being this engaging and inspiring a year ago. I have been taught so much by so many in such a short amount of time. It’s remarkable and humbling.

How has learning on-line through such virtual conference experiences affected you? What is missed? And does it matter?

Image: Grace’s Ghost by Pickadillywilson

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Aug 30 2008

Profile Image of Jan Smith
Jan Smith

Might As Well Jump! High Expectations, High Efficacy

Filed under teaching

Three more sleeps until school starts. Four until the students arrive, actually. I am feeling a bit jumpy, but still ready to bounce into a new year.

Teacher Beliefs

I have been reading a lot about student engagement and motivation as I prepare for my master’s degree action research, and the school year generally. I keep re-sifting theĀ  research, and many interesting ideas are getting stuck in the sieve. My attention is being drawn to the idea of teacher beliefs. Two big ideas: a teacher’s sense of efficacy–my confidence about how effective my teaching will be to bring about student achievement, and a teacher’s expectations–my beliefs about my students’ ability to learn.

Our Identity, Our Mission

Here’s inspiration for a good beginning:

Each student’s heart must be caught up in the passion and enjoyment of learning and reading. This attitude is a mindset that must be nurtured daily. Time for this cultivating of spirit is set into every day’s lesson plans. It is imperative that I teach each student that they can learn, regardless of whatever they believe hinders them…Teaching students to know they can learn requires that I couple an academic sense of identity with a sense of mission. This begins the first moment I meet my pupils. (A. Isennagle in At-Risk Students: Portraits, Policies, Programs, and Practices, 1993 pp. 373-74)

Intention

Bud Hunt wrote An Open Letter to Teachers reminding us of the essentials; it’s going up on the wall in my classroom this week. It’s rich and full of encouragement–please read it. Here’s the part that gets stuck in my throat:

I wish you well. I ask you to be brave and humble and kind and tenacious and wise and caring and gentle and fierce. We so need you to do well… Do good stuff.

That’s what I hope for my students too, because we so need them to do well. And I hope–I intend–that my expectations and efficacy will show that I believe to the core that they will.

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