Tag Archives: persevere

Day 8: Feeling Off-Balance is Okay

Written and shared by
Julie Balen

Last week, we were asked as a staff to once again articulate what technology needs we  have. Like many schools and school districts, we are working hard to upgrade our infrastructure and our hardware. This is necessary work, to be sure. But as I listened to the ‘wish list’ that teachers have, I reflected on how this conversation about tools did not stem from the need to change practice.

And maybe it can’t. Maybe the process of the integration of technology and shifting practice has to happen at the individual level.

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 Photo Credit: Mark Hunter via Compfight

I have a class set of Chromebooks, and the impetus for acquiring them was not pedagogical. In the fall of 2013, I was asked to teach grade 10 communications technology, and the Chromebooks were purchased to support that course. But I had them, so why not use them in all of my classes? This could be a bit of a pilot program, we (the principal and I) told ourselves. Let’s see how these devices work out in the non-tech classroom.

The Chromebooks worked marvelously.

I didn’t.

Sure, I knew how to use the machines and the apps. I knew how to set up student blogs and wikis. I knew how to organize documents and folders, to comment, and to share. What I didn’t know how to do was to integrate the devices into the teaching that I do.  Let me try that again. What I didn’t know was that I needed to see the curriculum (English) in a completely different way. What I didn’t know was that ‘changing my practice’ meant reconsidering every aspect of my practice from how I structured the course (traditionally thematically) to what essential skills I believed my students needed to have and how they would/could demonstrate them.

Here’s an example: Senior students need to demonstrate their ability to research, organize ideas, write, revise, format for publication, and cite sources appropriately. For many teachers, this translates into a research report or essay that is produced in Word or Google documents and that is printed or shared. Is that traditional research report/essay format still valid? Do I need to teach them how to produce their thinking in this manner because that’s the format required or expected in higher ed? Or can students research, curate, embed, link, write, and cite in a wiki? Or is the conversation really about choice?

This past February, I had a conversation with Steve Anderson (@Web20Classroom ) about content curation, in which I raised these same questions. His response? We need to understand that “there is no final solution when it comes to [student] learning.”

No final solution. No one way. No program. No script.

What I learn a bit more each day is to be okay with feeling off balance as I figure out what to hang on to from how I taught before and what to let go of. And this, I think, is not something that anyone else can do for me.

Julie Balen has worked for the Wikwemikong Board of Education on Manitoulin Island for the past 13 years, mostly as a high school English teacher, but also as a system-wide literacy coach.

Julie Balen

Blog: http://connectingtolearn.edublogs.org/

Twitter: @jacbalen

About Me: http://about.me/julie.balen

Day 4: The Power of Perseverance

(Thank you to Aviva Dunsiger for sharing this learning)
What Did I Learn Today?
Today, I learned about the power of perseverance. Yes, I’ve heard many times before that we should persevere, keep on trying, never give up … but how many times have I done the opposite of that?

 

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The funny thing is that my learning happened in the strangest of ways.  Our Board is launching a new email system beginning tomorrow. I email my parents all the time through a group mail list, and I needed to get things up and running so that I would be ready for tomorrow. I could access our new system today, so I was going to try and move my contacts over.

 

Quickly I got frustrated. I couldn’t figure out how to add a mail list. I eventually saw that I could create a group, but as I tried to type in a parent’s email address, it wouldn’t work. So frustrating! At this point, I was about to tweet one of our 21st Century Learning Consultants for help, but I decided that I wasn’t going to give up so easily. Since making a group wouldn’t work the way I thought, maybe I needed to try a different way.

 

I decided to add each of the parents to My Contact Folder. Then I was able to add the contacts to the group. That was until I got to one of the contacts that had a name before the email address: I couldn’t find him in my email directory. Why? Okay, I exited from the group and added the contact with just the email address. Then it worked!

 

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The whole process took me over an hour, but in the end, I was able to send my parents a group email, and yippee, they got it! How does this relate to education? If I’m going to ask my students to search out the answers to their own questions, problem solve, and try again, then I need to model this as well. I need to be willing to make mistakes. I need to be willing to try something, see how it works, make changes, and try again. I need to experience this same feeling of joy that comes from perseverance, and today, this is exactly what I felt!

 

What are your own tales of perseverance? Why is it important for educators and students to persevere? I’d love to hear your thoughts on this!

 

Aviva Dusiger is a Grade 5 teacher at Ancaster Meadow School in Ancaster, Ontario.

 

Twitter: @avivaloca
Blog: Living Avivaloca: http://adunsiger.com/

 

Photo Credits:
Hooray: mherzber via Compfight cc