Sunday, February 16, 2014

Inquiry Learning

Questions are the center of all learning.  In a traditional classroom, the teacher is often the questioner and the purpose of the questions are usually to assess whether or not the students have learned  specific information. The big idea behind inquiry learning is less about textbooks and spoon-feeding information and more about allowing students to explore and guiding them through engaging hands-on experiences that allow for deeper understanding.  Inquiry learning is less about teaching concepts in isolation and more about combining the disciplines to allow for authentic, real-word connections to be made.  The role of the teacher needs to change from one that is telling information and questioning only to assess to one that is guiding and asking exploring questions.  I think it is very important to provide teachers with professional development on questioning strategies.  Asking questions is somewhat of an art form.  Learning how to ask the right types of questions to help guide students to think rather than just regurgitate information is key.  The system in which I work has spent the last few years providing professional development in just this area to a handful of teachers from each school.  As a system, we are moving forward and slowly but surely shifting away from the traditional type of learning to inquiry learning.  

I've created a taxedo with Inquiry Learning as the topic.  I included words that came to my mind when thinking about what inquiry learning is.  Here it is:

   

I've mentioned before that much of my experience has been in the gifted classroom.  For the past 8 years, I've had the opportunity to work with 1st-5th grade students during an ELT (extended learning time) of the school day.  During this time I've been able to work on my questioning skills and I've become so much more comfortable in this learning environment.  I've learned to "let go" and embrace failure as a learning experience.  Over the years, my students have learned that mistakes are good and we reflect on them to learn and do better next time.  In my new position of media specialist, I am taking all I've learned as a gifted teacher and using it to try and help teachers and students at my school get comfortable with inquiry learning and embrace failure for the sake of learning.  I've made it my mission this year to get students in the media center for so much more than simply checking out books.  It took until December, but I'm proud to say that I have groups of students from all grade levels (K-5) coming into the media center regularly to work on all sorts of projects and activities.  

Through working with all grade levels, I've come to notice that I am least comfortable with the primary grades, so I've chosen to write my mini-lessons for a group of high achieving first graders that I work with.  They come to me during math, so my focus will be problem solving which is one of the standards they are currently working on.  It is my goal to have them produce their own teaching video to help other students learn strategies for solving word problems. I'm planning to bring in the other disciplines as well.  They will be writing their own word problems including researched information about topics they are studying.  When students are creating something, the 8 principles of inquiry are achieved.  Having them write and create their own word problems using real world information gained will help to make it authentic.  Having them discover their own strategies for solving word problems will give them a deeper understanding of those strategies. They will be working collaboratively to make decisions about what they should include in their teaching video to make it better. I've just recently discovered MozillaPopcorn in another class and I'm thinking I will have them incorporate this video editor to include pop-up text in their video lesson.  To bring in "experts" we might look at already created teaching videos to see examples of great video lessons. We will discuss digital citizenship and internet safety when it come to sharing our created videos.  

I know this seems like quite a bit for first graders, but I've come to find out that younger students are the most willing to play, explore, and learn without the fear of making mistakes.  I've made other teaching videos with older students and I'm really looking forward to helping some of my youngest and most eager students create their own.     

Sunday, February 9, 2014

Growth Mindset and Setting Goals

I've had the privilege of attending several conferences over the years.  One of the most memorable sessions I've attended was at the GAGC (Georgia Association of Gifted Children) Conference a few years back.  The topic was about nurturing the growth mindset in our students.  I think in some ways I knew about this, but having it presented to me in the way that is was really opened my eyes to how much what I say to my students really affects them and their growth.  I immediately brought back what I learned to my students and noticed a significant difference in how they began to tackle challenges.  In my gifted classroom, my students  heard me say so many times that they were not to use the word can't unless follow by the word yet, that they began saying it to each other when the word "can't" was uttered by another. I feel that nurturing the growth mindset of my students (and my own personal children) is the most important thing I do as a teacher (and a mother).

In week one I set the following goals:
  • It is always my goal to stay current with new technologies and resources that are available to educators.  I'm hoping that through this course I will be introduced to specific tools that I can take back to use with my students and other teachers I work with. 
  • It is also my goal to extend my professional network and keep it fresh.  I feel that it is very important to connect with others in the same field for the purpose of gaining new ideas and inspiration.
These goals that I have set for this course are on-going and will continue long after this course is through.  In the short-term, I wanted to learn about specific tools I can take back and use immediately.  I have already been introduced to many new tools and resources that I am now using that I did not know about or knew very little about before this course.  I also wanted to extend my PLN, which I have and will continue to do.  

One thing that I have always held true is that the more I learn, the more I realize how little I know!
 
I plan to use my PLN to help me and my students in becoming  critical consumers of online resources.  Through my PLN, I can stay connected with others who are facing the same challenges and have found ways to help students with information fluency skills as well as grow my own skills.  If I want my students to be life-long learners, then I must be the same.  Forever learning and growing! 

  








 

Monday, February 3, 2014

Letting Go

The idea of letting go of control in the classroom to allow for students to become the drivers in their own learning is not new to me.  In fact, it is a topic I am very passionate about.  I began my experience as an educator in a 5th grade classroom.  I cringe just thinking about how I ran my classroom back then.  It was a lot of scripted lessons from textbooks, subjects divided up into nice little time slots throughout the day, and lots of seat work with little student interaction.  YUCK!! My students must have been bored to death!  It didn't take me long to realize that teaching that way was not going to work and that is when my mind shift began. 

Fast forward to the present and my teaching looks completely different.  Since then I have had the great opportunity to become a gifted teacher and I've gained so much knowledge through that experience.  Learning about inquiry-based learning became my obsession.  I've had the privilege to go on several tours of schools that are inquiry-based model schools and I've been able to use so much of what I learned in my gifted classroom as well as share what I've learned with others I work with.

In the blog "Great Teaching Means Letting Go" Grant Wiggins uses the example of a soccer coach to explain how some teachers are teaching in a way that fosters dependence rather than independence.  I agree with the idea that it should be regular practice to provide students with tasks that they are unfamiliar with just to see how they work through it.  How will we know what the students really know until we see what they can do on their own?

The Chris Lehmann Inquiry webinar was full of great insight, as well.  He states that learning should not be about control, but about support.  Students need us to be their mentors and to help guide them,  not to spoon feed them information.  Through many of my own conversations with teachers on this topic, I've come to understand that some feel very uncomfortable with giving up the control that is necessary to truly have a student-centered classroom.  They are afraid of failing and this causes them to avoid changing how they teach.  The excuse I hear most often is that they don't have time for project-based or inquiry-based learning.  It takes too long and they have so many standards to cover.  It is a bit ironic that the teacher's fear of failing is actually causing them to fail their students.   

In my opinion, great teachers...
  •  understand that it is okay to let go of some control and put it in the hands of the students.   
  • know that it is okay to fail, because we learn from it and move on. 
  •  help students to understand that we are all learners and we ask questions that we can answer together.  
  •  create spaces that are conducive for learning and collaborating.     
  • use inquiry to guide student learning and bring in technology as a tool to engage students
  • teach kids, not subjects
 A great teacher cannot do all of this alone.  They need support from district and school leaders.  Too often, district or school leaders do not understand that teachers need a little flexibility when teaching through inquiry.  Too many districts have curriculum benchmarks which requires teachers to teach certain standards in certain time frames with little room for flexibility.  Structures like these are not conducive to inquiry or project based learning. This is where the shift need to begin for more teachers to feel comfortable with letting go.  




Sunday, January 26, 2014

Reflective Searching

Last year, my family and I went on a short trip to Washington, D.C.  As we were walking past the White House, my 11 year old daughter started asking questions about the house.  "How many rooms and bathrooms?" " When was it built?"  My 13 year old son asked for my iPhone and began to "google" it.  I stood back and watched and listened while they found their own answers and discussed cool facts about the house and the presidents that have lived there.  We continued our trip with somewhat of  guided tour through the city all with the help of Google!

It is pretty clear that we are living in a time of information abundance.  Over recent years, I've become more and more comfortable as a searcher.  I "google" just about anything I need.  I'm looking for a recipe, google it.  Need to get a stain out of something, google it. Can't remember what movie I know an actor from, google it!   I find it quite interesting that the term Google meant to describe a company has quickly become a verb.  I actually looked it up and here is what it says:

 goo·gle
ˈgo͞ogəl/
verb
verb: google; 3rd person present: googles; past tense: googled; past participle: googled; gerund or present participle: googling
search for information about (someone or something) on the Internet using the search engine Google.
"I recently googled my 7th grade teacher and found his current e-mail address"


In recent years, I've  become fascinated with all the Google search tools available.  Every time I attend a conference, I look for sessions where the presenter is a Google Certified Teacher and try to gain any many new tips as I can.  Tools are being added and changed so often!  One of my favorites that I always teach my students is the ability to search in Google by "Reading Level".  When conducting a search in Google, you can click on "Search Tools" and then you can select the reading level under "All Results".

I do consider myself part of the Google generation, even though I was not born after 1993.  The more I have learned about how search engines work, like Google, the better searcher I have become.  I think about what I'm entering into that search bar.  When I can't find what I need right away, I think about what I am doing and why I have gotten certain results.  I rethink what to put in the search bar.  When I'm helping my students develop their own search strategy, I try my best to explain to them my thought process when searching, hoping that it will lead some of them to stop the habit of typing the entire question.

After watching Eli Pariser's TED Talk on The Filter Bubble, I was a bit concerned about how I can avoid this happening to me. I began doing a little searching on that topic.  I found this article about 10 things you can do to pop your filter bubble. http://www.thefilterbubble.com/10-things-you-can-do
It's an interesting read.  I'll be using some of these tips to make sure I avoid the filter bubble and have access to ALL information.



 





   

Monday, January 20, 2014

Information Overload! (Post #2)

The idea of information overload is something that I think so many of us can relate to.  The amount of information at our fingertips in quite overwhelming at times.  The short video "InfoWhelm" puts this into perspective.  The amount of digital output is 500 Exabytes.  I had no idea what an exabyte even was.  Learning that 500 exabytes would be the equivalent to 13 stack of book from the earth to Pluto is hard to comprehend!  No wonder we are overwhelmed!   This number is growing exponentially.  It is important for us to learn and teach our students how to access the information we need as well as think critically about the information we encounter. 

Learning how to organize all the information we encounter, or information wrangling as Bryan Alexander calls it, can also be quite overwhelming.  I have a tendency to want to "input" as much as I can about all of the new technologies and tools out there that teachers are using and sometimes it feels like I'm going in circles.  I have to remind myself that sometimes more is just more.  It is my goal to find a few things I feel would benefit me or my students and get comfortable using those before I move on to something different. 

Education is changing.  At one point in history, a school was the only place students went to get information.  This is no longer the case.  Students can access information 24/7 from numerous sources.  The article "Creating Classrooms We Need: 8 Way to Inquiry Learning" provides great insight on how to guide students through their own learning paths.  Teachers need to be ok with letting go of some of the control and putting it in the hands of the students. Help students learn how to ask good questions and where to find good answers.  Kids of this generation are "digital natives" and in order to teach them, we need to speak their language.  

The amount of information out there can be quite overwhelming, but it is also liberating as well.  Anything I need or want to know is right at my fingertips any time I want to access it. Learning how to access and organize this information for my own learning will also help me to teach my students how to do the same.      

Blog Post #1

A little bit about me...

I've been in education in some form or another for 20 years.  I am currently working in an elementary school as the Media Resource Specialist.  It is my first year in this position and I am learning so much each and every day. 

My learning goals for this course:

It is always my goal to stay current with new technologies and resources that are available to educators.  I'm hoping that through this course I will be introduced to specific tools that I can take back to use with my students and other teachers I work with.

It is also my goal to extend my professional network and keep it fresh.  I feel that it is very important to connect with others in the same field for the purpose of gaining new ideas and inspiration.