July
27

School 1.0

  • Rituals, rules, and routines
  • Focus on the right answers
  • This is okay.

School 2.0

  • Engaged
  • Self-directed
  • Project-driven
  •  Independent problem solvers
  • Teachers and students are empowered
  • Learning community

Meaningfulness + Significance + Connectedness =  Contribution

EXAMPLE:

Conrad calls the school during summer vacation, wants to come to school to work on his video project.  He won’t take no for an answer.  The school secretary forwards the call to Principal Tim Tyson.  The principal explains that it is too late to make your class grade better, the report cards have already been printed.  “But Dr. Tyson, I got an A”, Conrad explained.   “You said if the project was perfect, you would put it on the school website and into the iTunes Store for the whole world to see”, he continued.  The next day, Conrad showed up at 9am with two of his partners to get back to work on his project.

For the first time, schools can have access to true global distribution.

MabryOnline & iTunes

  • School website serves up 1.5 million files per month on average.
  • In June 2007, it served up 4 million files.
  • People can subscribe to school content via iTunes.

The deal that Dr. Tyson put forth to his students:

  • Your work has to be the best of the best
  • Ask yourself: “What is it about your work that is so great that it needs to be out there for the entire world to see?”
  • Students from New Dehli, Tasmania, Beijing, Shanghai, Peru, Georgia, Australia, UK are viewing their work.
  • Students feel a great deal of satisfaction when their work is globally relevant.
  • This is authentic assessment: when an A is not good enough for a student.

When does meaningfulness start?

  • First job?
  • Graduate college?
  • Right now!
  • We need to have a meaningful activities for students right now.

Project on Human Embryonic Stem Cell Research

  • The students approached Dr. Tyson with their topic.
  • Two weeks later, the students (on their own) had already scheduled a field trip to Emory University to spend two hours with Dr. Chetta in her research lab.  She presented one of the same intro presentations that she does for her doctoral students and physicians.
  • Produced a movie that Patrice Weaver said was the best thing she’d ever seen.  Won the film festival.

Students wanted to make a difference, not just report:

  • Commercialization of Drinking Water
  • Human Embryonic Stem Cell Research
    • Shot everything but the video of the sonogram.
  • Child Slave Labor on the Ivory Coast
    • “Social studies, but more grown up.”
  • Saving African lives from Malaria
  • Captivity of Elephants
  • Poverty in China
  • Organ Donation
    • Done like the series 24.
    • Students created every scene except for two that were recorded in the operating room by Emory University.
  • Immigration in United States
  • Genetically Modified Food
    • Students changed the way their principal buys his food.

Not all about technology and connectivity

  • “I wish we could get away from this argument in our profession.”
  • The effective educator is the one who bridges the gap between technology and meaningfulness.
  • Students want to go beyond preparing for the next year, they want to make a contribution today.
  • School 1.0 = Taking it in
  • School 2.0 = Giving it out
  • We need to stop simplifying our students’ education into tiny little segments.

Dr. Tyson’s closing keynote video/slides can be found here.

Link to session information page here.

June
25

Monday 8:30-9:30
Cristian Rizzi

What kinds of skills will our children need in 20 years?

  • problem solving
  • metacognitive skills
  • able to use technology
  • teamwork
  • empathy & passion
  • ability to find & filter information

21st Century Learning Skills Initiative

Students are being well-prepared academically, but not prepared for the work force. Group of corporations & educators got together to figure out what we need to teach our students to make them employable.

What they came up with:

3R’s

  • Reading
  • Writing
  • Arithmetic

Also 7 C’s

  • Critical Thinking & Problem Solving
  • Collaboration, Teamwork & Leadership
  • Cross-cultural understanding
  • Communication & Media Literacy
  • Computing & ICT Literacy
  • Career & Learning Self-Reliance
  • Creativity & Innovation

There is a difference between learning something and understanding something. If you understand it, you can use it. Collaboration and project-based learning helps students understand.

Think Quest - Project-based learning competition. Website building competition, challenging students to create innovative and educational websites to share with the world.

eDivide - gap between people with access to technology and those without increasing.

  • Physical Barriers
  • Digital Barriers
  • Human Barriers
  • Socioeconomic Barriers

Website was created by students working together in a project-based environment, one of the group winners of the Think Quest competition.

What is 21st Century Project Learning?

Students working in teams to experience and explore relevant, real-world problems. The teacher’s role is to be a coach, facilitator, guide, adviser, mentor, or conductor. They should not be directing and managing all the student work.

Key Features of Project-Learning:

  • project-centered
  • learner-centered
  • question/problem
  • real-world
  • relevant
  • open-ended
  • focused on Higher Order Thinking Skills
  • Collaborative
  • Creative
  • Multiple Perspectives
  • Communication-driven

Oracle Education Foundation (behind Think Quest and Think.com) will be at the vendor fair booth 2232. A team of students involved in the Think Quest competition will be there at 1:15.

Link to session page here.