Wednesday, February 22, 2012

I'm just sayin'...


"I can get a hell of a good look at a T-Bone steak by sticking my head up a bull's ass, but I'd rather take the butcher's word for it." - Big Tom Callahan (Tommy Boy, 1995)
Instead of telling me what new directive we are taking this week, it would be nice to be asked given my position each day in the classroom if there are suggestions for how we can revamp the education of our students. Hence the quote, if new directives are going to be given, give classroom teachers a voice.

The discussions that I have with like-minded colleagues are exciting, but hamstrung by a system that doesn't necessarily allow our voice to be heard. Increasingly, I wonder if putting the ideas that we have conjured up together is worth searching for potential support somewhere to create a school using ideas of schools like High Tech High and Science Leadership Academy in Philadelphia.

Previously being in an official capacity as a school leader hasn't intrigued me, however working in a redesigned school created and driven by teachers would be a unique and fun adventure. The next question to ask about embarking on a search to make this a reality then comes from Jerry Maguire "Who's coming with me?"



Saturday, February 11, 2012

The Game of School

The old adage about how everyone can be knowledgable of schools because they attended one is quipped quite often in the comments from parents at Parent-Teacher Conferences about "how school was when they were students". Such comments are funny because if we always did things the way it was once done, there would be no innovation with students sitting in rows, hands neatly folded.
Breaking down walls of the traditional classroom environment at the high school level doesn't come with resistance from other adults both in and out of the education field, but includes the students that consume the learning.  As @schneidermf and I have found with the redirection of our classroom, many students are pretty good at playing "the game of school" in that they have always come in, absorbed the information, drilled the information on worksheets, then took a quiz and a test to demonstrate that they could regurgitate said info/skills.  
Talking to parents about the game that school is/has been for many of their students is eye opening.  Many are bewildered by the idea that the students are actively pursuing their learning, that we don't have spelling tests for vocabulary and offer many opportunities to collaborate even on exams! When the connection is made to making school more applicable to real world conditions is when the light bulb switches on and the chaos that we have described to them begins to make sense.  
Emphasizing the process of learning has been one of the paramount topics in class this year and continues to be an uphill battle.  Trying to stop the obsession with grades is like any habit that has been formed it is hard to break and taking our students outside of those comfortable settings has made them uneasy, but as they begin to find their bearings the demonstration of skills and knowledge has been rewarding to see.
The next step in the process is building upon the conversations with colleagues about how they too can/need to rethink how they are delivering their instruction to students.