Friday, September 21, 2012

Live Blogging the Debates

The presidential election that comes around every four years is a gift for social science teachers. While I'm not teaching government this year and student interest is not nearly as intense as it was four years ago, it will still play a big part in our discussions.

This year I have organized live blogging sessions to take place during the presidential debates. A few of my colleagues and myself will be moderating the sessions on Edmodo while we watch the debates on TV. We will provide interesting tidbits through out (pop-up video style), point them to fact checking resources, and supply context to the dialogue that plays out. Students can ask questions and debate the candidate responses with each other. We will also be able to gauge opinions about some of the points brought up by inserting polls into the discussion thread. Students will be able to earn extra credit and custom badges for participation.

It is important that we model civil discourse and stress the importance of fact checking with the increasing amount of hot air that passes for news these days.

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Flipping the Classroom

As a nerdy, tech-head who spends a significant amount of his sparse free time reading education blogs and journals, I consider myself pretty well connected to the pulse of education and up to date on the latest trends. So the idea of flipping the classroom is certainly not new to me and I have been on the fence about it for quite some time. I have met several other teachers during my travels over the past few months that have told me how transformative it is and how it is going to change education. While I am generally regarded as being fairly creative and innovative in the classroom (mostly very undeservedly so), I am also a historian. So I know that transformative ideas in education are; (1) common, and (2) not transformative 99.99% of the time. 
This all looks pretty good.
The basic premise of the flipped model is that lectures and direct instruction are recorded for students to watch at home and activities generally regarded as homework are done in class where the teacher can assist and become a facilitator. The appeal of the flipped classroom model is that it allows for differentiation of instruction and removes the teacher from the “sage on a stage” role. In theory the activities done in class then will all be student centered and constructivist. That sounds great. So great in fact, I’m pretty sure that student centered instruction was thought of a long time ago and is considered to be good teaching practice. For the most part, the technology for capturing and disseminating videos is the only new (albeit important) piece.

Given that context, I have been working with Learning Sciences International for the past year as a human guinea pig that is being filmed while teaching to produce coaching videos in which other teachers can observe and make fun of me. Part of that process is working with their instructional coaches to refine my teaching and track improvements over time. This week it was suggested that I experiment with the flipped model of instruction. While I have been moving towards an all PBL and technology enhanced, student centered model already, I have now been motivated to implement the “flipped” aspects of it. I am all for anything that can improve the experience for students and am always open to trying new things.

Over time I will use my blog to report on the implementation of the flipped classroom (and perhaps even to tell you how transformative it is).


Great place to get started on the flipped model for anyone who wants to follow: Edutopia: Five Minute Film Festival on the Flipped Classroom

Monday, September 17, 2012

Screenr: Ridiculously Easy Screencasting

I often have the need to create short screen casts for courses and professional development workshops to illustrate key points or processes. The go-to tool that I use is Screenr because it is ridiculously simple to use and it is free. You simply need to sign up for an account, choose the area of the screen that you want to record,  then publish your recorded video to the Screenr site or YouTube.

You are limited to 5 minutes recording time but best practice would suggest a 2-3 minute clip would be optimal. I use these to go over key processes that I may otherwise have to repeat many times in class or even to explain assignment directions that the sub can play for students when I know that I am going to be out.

This is a screencast that I recorded today using Google Presentation and Screenr. I will put this in a folder in Edmodo so that when students have questions about completing their DBQs in class or at home they can refer to it.

Monday, September 10, 2012

Chicago: It's About Due Process and It's Important

While it pains me to know that the education system in one of the world’s great cities has come to a standstill, I am observing the CPS strike with rapt attention. The conflict of course involves pay, but there is really a Pandora’s box of other issues seething beneath the surface that impact all of those in public education. At the core is the removal of long standing due process rights from the profession. Those rights in recent years have been scapegoated and villainized as the dreaded “tenure” system that is supposedly responsible for keeping horrid educators in the classroom with union protection. The truth though is that there is already a system for giving non-performers the boot (I’ve seen more than a few shown the door). Removing due process rights and replacing them with things like unfunded merit pay programs actually harms the amazing educators that we want to keep.  

The coverage today had the obligatory comments about educators not caring about the kids and if they really did care they would forego the money for raises and use it to repair schools or buy books. Given the timing of the strike, the discourse threatens to become more absurd and poisonous in the coming weeks but it distracts from the real issue which is the removal of due process rights from working class Americans. Nobody cares more about high quality education in this country than those who have devoted their lives to it and have made many sacrifices to do so. At the end of the day though, those educators are human beings with dependants, bills, and lives who deserve the basic protections that were fought for and won in the brutal battles to secure them against the unchecked greed of industry.

The unintended outcome of the federal meddling by both parties is that the nation’s educators are increasingly connected and galvanized with a reason to stand together. This is equally beneficial in terms of both performing the daily task of educating our nation’s youngsters and also in standing up against the continued assault upon those who do it. What happens in Chicago is important because it promises to set precedent for what will follow in other districts.

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Moving Beyond Cooperation: An Easy Activity Using Google Drive

At last year's EdmodoCon Live in Orlando, Dean Shareski shared some great reminders about the differences between cooperation and collaboration:

Cooperation: A group working together.

Collaboration: Each group member contributes a necessary element that is needed for an end product to be useful.

In the classroom it is easy to shoot for collaboration but really just be asking for cooperation. A few simple tweaks though can often make the difference.

This week my students completed an activity in class that I set up with Google Presenter. I created a presentation template Features of the 13 Colonies and had pairs of students complete the notes for the individual colonies using their books and internet resources. Once they were done with the organizers they were given a blank map that they had to label and annotate using the resource that they had created collaboratively. Breaking the task into individual pieces that need to be completed by individuals or pairs allows for accountability and prevents the social loafing that is often present in cooperative activities.

Choices Leadership Institute: Brown University July 9-13, 2012


The sedentary nature of being stuck in a classroom with a schedule dictated by bells all day was one of the major turn-offs that I had when I initially started teaching. However, over the past few years I have discovered that their are many opportunities to escape our own little spaces and connect with brilliant teachers from all over the country and world.

This summer I attended the Choices Leadership Institute at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island for an intensive week long workshop on incorporating human rights into the curriculum. We participated in a variety of sessions with top foreign policy and human rights scholars, curriculum specialists, and technology integration experts. The highlight of the week was a dinner that we had with a group of college students from 11 middle eastern countries. Most of them had been active participants and leaders in the Arab Spring movements in their home countries and it was fascinating to hear about the events from their perspective.

As usual with these types of workshops, the learning and inspiration that I got by talking and sharing ideas with the 22 other teachers from around the country was energizing and transformational.  I highly recommend applying for next summer's leadership institute.

I will be presenting about human rights and technology integration at the Florida Council for the Social Studies State Convention in Orlando this October.

Press Release




Count Me Out Too


Article: Texas Parent Says: Count Me Out of State Testing

“…when adults responsible for children’s well-being tell them they can’t go to the bathroom because the toilet flushing makes too much noise…”

I was a second year teacher working in my first year at a new school when I made a decision that has haunted me ever since. I was serving as a proctor when two-and-a-half hours into an FCAT testing session a girl asked me if she could go to the bathroom. I wanted to say “yes” but I was trying to be a good employee and follow the rules set by administration that nobody was allowed to leave the room for any reason short of nuclear war or natural disaster until the session was done. I told her “no”.

Ten minutes later I noticed her face was bright red and she had teared up a bit. Then I noticed that her uniform skirt was wet and I saw the urine dripping and pooling up on the floor beneath her desk. I knew that being anything less than extreme tactfulness at that point would attract the attention of all the other kids in the room. When I made eye contact with her I could instantly tell that was her biggest fear as well. I made a motion to her to let her know that I understood and to just stay put until I could figure out a distraction. Luckily she was in the back and there were only ten minutes left in the session. As it ended, I was in the front trying my best to keep the attention on me while shuffling everybody else out of the room as quickly as possible. It worked and nobody else caught on to the puddle on the floor that would surely would have made the situation infinitely worse.

I robbed somebody of their humanity, dignity, and decency on that day. It remains a low point for me but it also has been a huge catalyst in the development of my own philosophy towards what we do and how we treat our students in schools. Teachers make many decisions that impact others everyday, and since none of us have yet achieved perfection, its stands to reason that not all of those decisions are going to be good ones. When we allow ourselves to be led astray from what is really important though, the chances of making thoughtless decisions increases.

We need more parents and teachers who are willing to demand something better in a positive way.