Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Changing What We Teach






Changing What We Teach: Shifting From A Curriculum Of Insecurity To A Curriculum Of Wisdomby Terry HeickIncreasingly, the idea of ​​computer coding is being pushed to the forefront of "things."In movies, on the news, and other digital avatars of ourselves, coders are increasingly here. In Hollywood, computer coders are Characterized as aloof and spectacle in green army jackets geniuses who solve (narrative) problems in a kind of deus ex machina fashion.Hack the mainframe, change the school grades, save prom, etc. In the news, they are painted as an eclectic mix of cutting-edge vigilante and terrorist binary, with secret documents, scary viral threats, and national security all a part of Reviews their tools and struggle. Combined with the recent surge of priority positively Torrid digital technology plays in our daily lives, coding sits at an awkward intersection-misunderstood by most, but tangent to almost everything.So we should totally teach it in schools, right?Teaching Skills Teaching vs. ContentToo Often bits and pieces are tacked onto the curriculum as yet another perfectly-reasonable-sounding-thing to teach.Yet in the ecology of a school, they behave differently in the classroom where the rubber hits the road. I was taught basic computer coding in the 1980s in elementary school. It was forced out by a push for foreign languages, as I recall (or that's what teachers told us), foreign languages ​​Themselves recently pushed out by "reading" classes or other periods of academic remediation.There is nothing wrong with changes in priority. In fact, this is a signal of awareness and reflection and vitality. But when education-as it tends to do-continues to take a content and skills-focused view of what to teach rather than how students learn, it's always going to be a maddening game of what gets added in, and what gets taken out, with the loudest or most emotionally compelling voices usually winning.To try to address this problem, let's Consider a more macro question: What is school? From the big picture down, it looks are relatively simple.

   -
Education is, more or less, a system of teaching and learning.
   -
Teaching and learning are, more or less, concerned with knowledge.
  
-And that knowledge can be broken down into two separate but connected parts: skills and content.Skills are things students can "do" -procedural knowledge that yields the ability to do something. This could be revising an essay, solving a math problem, or decoding words to read.Content can be thought of as a second kind of knowledge-a declarative knowledge Often that makes up the face of a content area. In math, this MIGHT be the formula to calculate the area of ​​a circle. In composition, it could be a writing strategy to form a sound and compelling paragraphs. In history, it may refer to the geographic advantages of one country versus another in a conflict.Should schools focus on content and skills, or should they focus on habits and thinking? Does that answer change as the culture does its students come from? And should it change faster or slower-ahead of the curve, or far enough behind for cautious perspective?Whether or not schools should teach coding is a question that can not be answered the responsibly by itself. Against the backdrop of rapid technological change, cultural mass adoption of technology, and the mediocre performance of our current education system, the question Becomes just one of many that deserve our attention.Without this kind of critique, coding will suffer alongside chemistry, music, and other miracles of knowledge that have had the life Tortured out of them by a well-intentioned but brutal infrastructure. It will be halved, then halved again, diced, packaged, and served at room temperature day after day after day until no one remembers what they're doing or why they're there.





When Standards Are not Standards

Literacy has been at the heart of teaching and learning since the very beginning of, well, everything.Not only is it a goal in and of itself, but It also is a prerequisite of other goals. Without the ability to read and write well, students struggle everywhere. But instead of placing reading and writing at the core of all content, as it functions, it is segmented into a class of its own, where teachers in the United States struggle with as many as five sets of the Common Core Standards, each with dozens of standards.

    -
Reading: Informational
   
-Reading: Literature
    -
Reading: foundational
   
-Writing
   
-Speaking & Listening
    -
LanguageSo then, Hundreds of standards. Hundreds! This places extraordinary pressure on educators-Reviews those who develop standards, Reviews those who create curriculum from Reviews those standards, Reviews those who create lessons from that curriculum, and on and on-to make-numerous-and critical-adjustments to curriculum, assessment, and instruction on the fly.At some point, the word "standards" have come to mean something different.Imagine an over-worked kitchen struggling to make-130 versions of what people outside the kitchen Recognize as the same sandwich. The influence of digital technology in our lives has forced education-already bursting at the seams with standards, assessment forms, data, mandated standards, accountability measures, instructional hours, and scores of other concerns-into the awkward position of believing it needs to fit in "more" when it already struggles with less.And in response, rather than Rethink or even add to, instead we swap-foreign language and humanities for STEM, and, presumably, coding. Tomorrow, something else will get our attention that students "need to know" that sounds important.This reminds me of the Coen Brothers' Raising Arizona. After hearing a long laundry list of things every baby needs from her friend Dot, Ed (Holly Hunter) turns to Hi (Nicholas Cage) in panic. The quick context is that they're new parents that've just "-adopted" a baby and the stress of being a good parent is washing over them.Ed (The new mom): Who's our pediatrician anyway? We is not exactly fixed on one yet, have we Hi?Hi (The new dad): * stunned silence *Ed: No, I guess we do not have one yet.Dot (The well-meaning-but-manic spreading her friend mania): What ?! Well, you gotta have one this instant!Hi: * stunned silence *Ed: What if the baby gets sick, honey?Dot: Even if he do not, he's gotta have his dip-tet.Ed: He's gotta have his dip-tet, honey.Hi: * stunned silence *Dot: You started his bank accounts yet?Ed: Have we done that? We gotta do that. What's that for, Dot? His orthodonture and his university!Hi: * stunned silence, eyes like broken portals *
 


Changing Nature of SkillsWhy not try a different approach-one that not only decenters curriculum, but reimagines it completely?Change causes uncertainty, and uncertainty can understandably cause insecurity and even panic. Take coding for example. Let's say that one definition of digital literacy MIGHT be "the ability to interpret and design nuanced communication across digital forms." Students need to be Able to do this, yes?Coding is just another collection of symbols. It's the new reading and writing! And speak a foreign language too, right?And paint and dance? Yes, yes.And play an instrument and make-things and manage projects through sustained inquiry Reviews their own and learn to be entrepreneurs?Yes, yes, yes.But a more apt question MIGHT be, how should schools-and the curriculum they seek to "deliver" -Be Reconsidered in light of prevailing local technologies and values?What are people for, and how can schools help?What is the relationship between a good school and good work and good living?What's worth knowing, how is that different for every person, and how MIGHT schools reconceive Themselves in response?How does a renewed impact the global consciousness "local"?How does a connected planet change the kinds of things a person needs to understand? (It has to, right?)Building A Curriculum Based On PeopleIn the past, we've Sought to add-to and revise. Add Reviews These Reviews These classes and drop. This is not as important as this. To make knowledge an index that Reflects the latest thinking is that Reflects our most recent collective insecurities and misunderstandings. This does not seem like the smartest path to sustainable innovation in learning.As the pace of change quickens through jolting connections, fresh priorities, and newly visible (and overlapping) inequities and opportunities, it's time to Rethink curriculum and its role in the learning process. In a fixed curriculum with set boundaries that is based on content, start with "Want to add coding? What are you willing to give up? Let's trade. "The idea of ​​new skills and ideas being relevant in a changing world has been a core currency of ed debate since the 1990s (at least), manifesting as "21st century skills" and "the 4 Cs," and so on. A few years ago, we created a graphic that helped to capture what a modern academic learning environment MIGHT look like. And an Inside-Out School. And two dozen other models we've developed trying to etch out-and then Illuminate-how learning is changing, and what MIGHT be coming next.It's difficult, to lead from behind, and schools have stayed far behind the curve, in part, by the mechanic of Reviews their core-curriculum design. They start with something slippery and opaque and Subjective and endlessly problematic-content.They take that content and package it as curriculum. They then study the "best practices" of delivering that curriculum that yield the Reviews largest gains as measured by the common assessments. A common curriculum and common assessments. They-or rather we-celebrate pie charts instead of people. The curriculum and its mastery is central. The schools and teachers and students are peripheral and entirely anonymous.What if we took a different approach-something-less content and human-ful? Something fluid? In a fluid curriculum that is based on something other than chronologically-sequenced opaque "understandings," there is a new possibility-learning that is not based on the content and is not driven by teaching. In this case, it is no longer restricted by either, so content and teachers can seek new roles.Give me a curriculum based on people-based on their habits and thinking patterns in their native places. One that helps them see the utility of knowledge and the patterns of familial and social action. One that helps them ask, "What's worth knowing, and what should I do with what I know?"Then let's work backwards from that.Shifting From A Curriculum Of Insecurity To A Curriculum Of Wisdom; image attribution susanfernandez flickr user; The handsome kid in the featured image is the author's son 

No comments:

Post a Comment