That is my idea for a district slogan--Inquiring Minds Want To Know. It's funny and it means something. We should be cultivating inquiring minds that want to know, not apathetic, disillusioned ones that don't really care about their future or other people. I think it's a lot better than AISD's "Every Child Can Learn," or another district's (can't remember which one) "Whatever It Takes." Those are stupid, pedantic, desperate-sounding slogans that I just can't stand behind.
So I've made the point several times that anyone who thinks they have all the answers and knows everything is probably someone you don't want to listen to, and how I sort of like ambiguity and the unknown at times, so hopefully I'm not contradicting myself with this post. What I'm really trying to do is create a framework for holding all the information I've gathered. Brian and I were talking about how we've read so much by so many people about so many things that it's hard to remember who's who and what's what, so I've started a list of applications--things we know about how people are and how they learn. I like school, but I sometimes feel lame sitting around talking about all the various theories I know about--I wanna see them in action, doing something. I'm going to come back and fill in the blanks later, I'll even hypertext relevant links, but here's what I've got so far, in no particular order:
1. curriculum should be structured around authentic questions and conversations, with the aim of helping students enter into these conversations, rather than just trying to figure out what the teacher is after.
2. smaller classes and smaller schools. This lessens the culture of school violence and allows teachers to develop more personal relationships with kiddos, so they will trust them more.
3. real teacher development--not powerpoint slides and boredom. Stuff about motivation, mentoring new teachers, some yoga exercises, something other than what I've had to sit through and never use.
4. community support--we should be bringing in community leaders and
old people. In ancient times, those were the people who did the teaching. Today we leave them in nursing homes and government offices. Also, by using the community as a classroom, we're getting kids to see what they learn in action, in the real world.
5. arts integration. Studies show that kids involved in any kind of arts--music, drama, painting, sculpture, dance, whatever--do better on their college entrance exams. Plus it gives them a place to experience and show passion. But even more than taking an art class, we should integrate the arts into other subjects as often as possible--we all know about Gardner's Multiple Intelligences.
6. PORTFOLIO ASSESSMENTS. I won't even launch into my diatribe about standardized testing, you've all heard it. Portfolio assessments give kiddos a chance to have a voice in how they're assessed, show works in progress as well as finished products, and give a much better picture of what they've learned than does a multiple choice and culturally biased test administered on one day in complete silence.
7. apprenticeship/mentoring. Kids know when they're forced to learn something they'll never use in real life, and they have every right to demand why. Let's let them try on different vocations, learn from people who are doing it so they can see how that life might be.
8. statesmanship--I don't know who said this, but if we really want to safeguard our future and the future of democracy (and here I'm trying not to roll my eyes), we should be educating kids to be statesman, to participate in their society and government. As is, politics are set up as a discourse the normal dude can't enter into, so no one votes because no one thinks it will matter. By and large, that might be true unless we start teaching responsibility. This goes beyond your average civics course.
9. draw on "funds of knowledge" and students' cultural backgrounds. There are still some members of the Old Guard who buy into that tabula rasa, empty vessel bullshit. No. Kids know lots of things. They don't come to school to be filled up with knowledge by middle-class white folk. When we impose a school culture (which to some is rather foreign and silly) and ignore the culture they come from and their home knowledge, we do them a disservice. Read some Moll.
10. improve teacher education programs. Pre-service teachers need to be aware of the hefty import their words and attitudes have on students, and need a better understanding of the cultural discourses and diversity that they will face in their rooms. They need to safeguard against becoming jaded and cynical, especially in low-performing schools--the average shelf life of a new teachers is 3-5 years.
11. define literacy and intelligence. It's not doing well on a test. It's not getting an A. Actually let me rephrase that, it's not just doing well and getting A's. We all know people who are brilliant that didn't really do well in school, and we know plenty of people who are not so bright and also didn't do well. If you determine literacy is reading and writing well, you'll dismiss those who are poor spellers but write beautiful songs. If intelligence is knowing how to use cultural, social, and professional tools, that opens up the pool of who we accept as valuable to society. I totally believe there should be standards and accountability, I'm just saying we could reevaluate how we judge.
12. higher pay and more incentives for teachers. Enough said.
13. technology training and integration. Teachers and students need to be aware of the implications and possibilities of all technological artifacts available. Equity needs to be given to students in terms of using said artifacts. 45 minutes every two weeks in the lab to type a paper or make a powerpoint presentation is not enough when we could be learning about so much more, if we just weren't so scared they'd watch music videos and download porn.
a blog for class.
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1 comment:
Jen, I stopped by here after you posted that very deep comment about my monster cupcakes. :) And I agree about Halloween and Christmas. (And thanks for visiting my site.)
That said... your site is great, this post particularly. It's stuff like this that has me considering (almost every day) whether to homeschool my daughter or not. I could do a much better job than they are.
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