Archives For Video – Wednesday Watchlist

“There’s a saying which says, ‘If you don’t build your dreams, someone else will hire you to help build theirs.’ Redefine how you view education. Understand its true meaning. Education is not just about regurgitating facts from a book or someone else’s opinion on a subject to pass an exam.” [4:13]

Thanks to my wife Marilyn for passing on this wonderful and inspiring video.

“Ali Carr-Chellman spells out three reasons boys are tuning out of school in droves, and lays out her bold plan to re-engage them: bringing their culture into the classroom, with new rules that let boys be boys, and video games that teach as well as entertain.”

The 3 Reasons boys are tuning out:

Zero Tolerance – school culture is out of since with boy culture because schools restrict anything that can be perceived to be violent like: toy guns, pen knives, rough housing, writing games, wars, fighting or anything else that hints at violence.
Fewer Male Teachers – 93% of elementary school teachers are female which means our young boys are not getting enough positive male influence in their school days.
Kindergarten is the Old Second Grade – boys mature slower than girls and the compressed curriculum and demands that young boys are expected to sit down, be quite, follow the instructions and do what you are told when they are not ready to do so.

Ali Carr-Chellman suggests we need to meet boys where they are at and accept them for who they are. We can specifically do this by;

Designing Better Games – Educational games are fancy flash cards and don’t the depth and rich narrative or popular games.
Talk to teachers, parents, school boards members and politicians – to find ways to change the culture to decompress the curriculum and make the learning space more acceptable of boys.
Find more money for game design – it cost money to create good games
Change teachers attitudes – need to help teacher become more open and accepting of boy culture in their classrooms.

The goal is to have the boys leaving elementary school thinking they are smart. Unfortunately, most boys are not currently feeling this way.