On October 25th, 2013, I spent the day listening to
Will Richardson speak about “Learning in a Networked World”. The theme of the
day was for us to consider how the world is changing and how we can best
prepare our students for their futures. And to do this how we as educators can learn,
unlearn, and relearn how to teach the youth of this fast-paced, globally
networked world.
The following quote has been taken from the
flyer advertising this event, “A parent of two teen-agers, Will Richardson has been
thinking and writing about the intersection of social online learning networks
and education for the past 12 years at willrichardson.com and in numerous
journals, newspapers, and magazines such as Ed Leadership, District
Administration, Education Week, New York Times and English Journal. He is an
outspoken advocate for change in schools and classrooms in the context of the
diverse new learning opportunities that the Web and other technologies now
offer.”
Will, frustrated with the education his children have been receiving,
feels we need to stop wanting the same education for our children as the one we
had. This is an amazing time to be a learner! There are so many ways for
learners to connect with others, pursue their learning passions, and apply the
knowledge that they learn. He likened traditional learning vs. modern learning
to delivery vs. discovery. And emphasizes that the key shift to be made is from
institutional learning organizations to self-organized learning opportunities.
When we were asked to reflect on the
traditional notions of school and what our biggest confusions/questions are
right now, the educators at the table that I was sitting at had many. How
do we tap students’ curiosity in our schools? What kind of steps do we take to
channel their curiosity? How do we address both students who are overly plugged in and those who are “underly” plugged in?
How do we teach kids to be learning tech savvy rather than socially tech savvy?
What does it mean to be educated these days?
I appreciated reading and reflecting on the NCTE 21st Century Literacies. I
have listed below the ones that I would like to focus on developing in myself
over then next year.
- Design and share information for global communities to meet a variety of purpose
- Manage, analyze, and synthesize, multiple streams of simultaneous information
- Create, critique, analyze, and evaluate multi-media texts
Later in the day the focus shifted more towards the idea of us as
educators “being a learner first and teacher second”. Will covered a number or
technology tools that could be useful to us as educators. The following are the
ones that caught my attention. I’ve had a Twitter account for a while but
rarely use it. He helped me understand how Twitter could be used more
effectively for professional development. I will definitely look into using
Evernote to save articles and notes, rather than saving links in a Word
document as I have been doing. I am also going to use Feedly to aggregate
news sites, searches, and blogs. Later, as I develop more of an online presence
I think Flipboard and IFTTT could be quite useful.
All and all I consider the day well spent. I left feeling inspired
and motivated to become more of a networked learner myself! I feel better
prepared for the changes that are happening and should be happening in my
profession.
Having the opportunity to be there myself, I too had much to reflect on. I went onto flipbook Friday night. This is something I will probably use and will challenge some of my older students to try.
ReplyDeleteI think that you really help your students at TLA find ways to learn in this "networked world" and make use of lots of the technology available!
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