Search Results For "mindset"

Additional ideas on feedback & feedforward:

In this Learner’s Mindset Discussion. Dr. Thibodeaux and I discuss the 5 biggest ePortfolio mistakes I have made over the years. Another way to look at these mistakes is from the context of what are the 5 things I wish I did sooner? If I were to start from scratch with what I know now what would I do?

  1. Switched to WordPress Sooner
  2. Stop playing the name game (i.e. website, blog, digital portfolio, ePortfolio, etc.)
  3. Create a domain of my own
  4. Post sooner and smaller
  5. Digital dump drawer

Bonus Mistake – 5b. or 6. Effective navigation structure

The following is a short summary of the highlights from the discussion:

1. Switched to WordPress Sooner
I started teaching fully online in 1995 and I started my first ePortfolio or started keeping a weblog what we refer to as a Blog at the same time. Unfortunately, I don’t have a fully functional record going back to 1995 because I kept on chasing the next best platform. I had learned HTML (hypertext markup language) and quickly realized that this wasn’t an efficient way to post quickly and often so I started using an early content management system what are commonly called CMS back in the late 90s. Unfortunately, many of these systems like XOOPS, Hyperwave, and Mambo no longer exist and many of the CMSs like Joomla and Drupal that are still around today are not the best tool for an ePortfolio. I have lost over a decade of my posts because of this. I have many archived versions of my earlier sites exported to HTML but these archives are just too difficult to use. In early 2000 I also started posting for the institutions that I was working for and when I left those institutions all may work remained and in most cases is no longer available. From 2006-2009 I posted almost daily and while I do have an archive it isn’t easily accessible online. In 2009 I finally stopped shopping around and realized that WordPress was going to be around for the long haul can I committed to this platform.

2. Stop playing the name game
My ePortfolio is the same as my blog or as my website, or my net presence. Regardless of what you call it…this is my space on the internet that I fully control where I can share my voice, insights, ideas, and resources with others… or not. This issue also contributed to my search for the ideal platform. I know I wasn’t just blogging so I actually stayed away the early WP because it really just focused on 90% of what I wanted to do. It wasn’t long before WP matured to the point it did everything the early CMS did and much more. But I still waited for too many years to move to it and also to create my own domain.

3. Create a domain of my own.
I own many many domains which I have parked and don’t use and in 2009 I finally registered my own name and have been using this as my only website, ePortfolio, blog, or whatever you want to call it. I wasted so much time, money, and resources moving from platform to platform or trying to copy the work when I was working with a number of different educational institutions. If you are using your school or institution’s platform for your website, blog, ePortfolio, etc. you never really own it and it will stay with the institution when you leave. Once again I have lost so much of my work over the years because I made this mistake.

4. Post sooner and smaller.
Seth Godin posts almost daily and sometimes it is just a matter of 2-3 sentences. Some of these best or most memorable and useful posts have been 2-3 sentences. It has taken me WAY too long to realize that my posts don’t have to have every detail or that they need to be perfect. It is much better to get your ideas out and in the process, you start to make those meaningful connections as you reflect on your experiences. You can always go back and edit what you have written or add a Part B or follow-up post.

5. Digital dump drawer
If you want your ideas to be useful to others you just can dump all your digital content into your site and treat it like people treat a dump drawer–you know that drawer or shelf or cabinet that you just dump things into and that you can never find again. Rather than just dump assignments, essays, or other digital content into your digital container you need to create a context for this information and connect it to that context. This is an integral part of making that meaningful connection.

Bonus
5b. or 6. Effective navigation structure
Just because you know what rabbit trail to take to your information doesn’t mean others will. Building an effective navigation structure, using tags and categories, and having a functional search engine will help others find your information…so will sending your audience an accurate URL. Having a fully functional search engine will also help you and your users to find things that haven’t been titled or categorized well. When you have several hundred or thousand posts/pages on your site a search engine is a necessity not only for your user but for yourself.

Links to some of the people, sites, or tools I mentioned in LMD and this post

Levi Bikes
http://levibikes.com/

Seth Godin’s Blog
https://seths.blog

WP – CMS Market Share
https://w3techs.com/technologies/overview/content_management/all

WordPress history
https://codex.wordpress.org/History

Mambo history
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mambo_(software)

Joomla History
https://cms2cms.com/blog/hyper-speed-joomla-history/

Evolution of the CMS
https://cms2cms.com/blog/evolution-cms-platform-caveman-homo-sapiens/

Drupal History
https://www.drupal.org/about/history

History of blogging
https://blog.hubspot.com/marketing/history-of-blogging

History of EduBlog
http://historyofeducationsociety.blogspot.com/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edublog

This video is our response to the Disruptive Innovation hype that is all too often publish by too many mainstream organizations. The following infographic is what Dr. Thibodeaux and I discuss in this week’s episode of our Learner’s Mindset Discussion.


Source: http://www.govtech.com/education/higher-ed/Documenting-Disruptions-Infographic.html

Nuremburg Funnel – the idiomatic expression started back in the 17th century that conveys the notion of pouring in information.

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuremberg_Funnel

En Lan 2000 – A 19th-Century Vision of the Year 2000

Source: https://publicdomainreview.org/collections/france-in-the-year-2000-1899-1910/

Personalize Learning GrantWhen educational issues hit the evening news it is very important that you understand how to move past the hype to see what is really happening. The announcement of Chicago Public Schools and nonprofit Leap Innovations receiving a $14 million grant from Chan Zuckerberg Initiative to expand personalized learning to 100 schools is definitely worth investigating. Without fully understanding what personalized learning means within the educational context, on its own merits, it sounds like a great idea. If we look to the recent confession from Larry Berger, CEO of Amplify about what personalized learning actually is. Berger’s company Amplify creates products and curriculum that are supposed to “truly personalize learning” (https://www.amplify.com/curriculum) and since he and his company has spent over a decade using big data algorithms to promote this model, his insider knowledge is useful.

Berger argues that when most people refer to personalized learning they are referring to the engineering model of personalized learning. His explanation of the model is worth repeating verbatim (link to the full confession):

You start with a map of all the things that kids need to learn.

Then you measure the kids so that you can place each kid on the map in just the spot where they know everything behind them, and in front of them is what they should learn next.

Then you assemble a vast library of learning objects and ask an algorithm to sort through it to find the optimal learning object for each kid at that particular moment.

Then you make each kid use the learning object.

Then you measure the kids again. If they have learned what you wanted them to learn, you move them to the next place on the map. If they didn’t learn it, you try something simpler.

If the map, the assessments, and the library were used by millions of kids, then the algorithms would get smarter and smarter, and make better, more personalized choices about which things to put in front of which kids.

I spent a decade believing in this model—the map, the measure, and the library, all powered by big data algorithms.

Here’s the problem: The map doesn’t exist, the measurement is impossible, and we have, collectively, built only 5% of the library.

To be more precise: The map exists for early reading and the quantitative parts of K-8 mathematics, and much promising work on personalized learning has been done in these areas; but the map doesn’t exist for reading comprehension, or writing, or for the more complex areas of mathematical reasoning, or for any area of science or social studies.

If the CEO of one of the leading personalized learning companies is willing to confess that – The map doesn’t exist, the measurement is impossible, and we have, collectively, built only 5% of the library – then perhaps we should listen to him. Especially when he points to the fact that if we really want our kids to learn how to learn then we need to take a look at what “your best teachers and coaches do for you—without the benefit of maps, algorithms, or data—to personalize your learning?”

Chances are these great teachers and coaches created significant learning environments in which they gave you choice, ownership, and voice through authentic learning opportunities. Learning has always been personal because until you take ownership of your own learning by making meaningful connections you do not learn. Effective teachers have always known that learning is the responsibility of the learner and their role was to create the environment in which this could happen.

These types of teachers have always used the latest technology to enhance the learning environment and recognized that technology, big data, and algorithms as simply tools that can be used to help make this happen. Unfortunately, we have the tendency to look to the tools to solve our problems. We need to head the warning or confession of the foremost tool maker and remember that: The map doesn’t exist, the measurement is impossible, and we have, collectively, built only 5% of the library

Instead of looking to technology to solve the personal component of personalized learning we need to look to the great teachers who have been doing personalized learning all along by giving their learners choice, ownership, and voice through authentic learning opportunities. These people have also been using technology in those authentic learning opportunities to help their learner explore, create, collaborate and communicate.

Personalized learning is one of the many educational technology quick fixes that we have a tendency to hope will solve our learning challenges. There are many more ideas, issues, and topics that need clarification and we are looking to you and our Digital Learning and Leading students to join us in exploring these significant issues.

  • Consider the following list as a starting point and let us know if you would like to write an article, post or other publication that will bring real clarity to the learning environment:
  • Never been a better time to be a learner and/or teacher
  • Growth mindset & Grit criticism
  • STEM instruction is mostly delivered via lecture
  • The much-needed shift to mastery learning
  • Personalized learning problems & benefits
  • Individualized instruction
  • Differentiated instruction
  • Additional names for competency-based education
  • Why technology isn’t a Quick fix
  • Silicon Valley’s failed promises with edtech
  • Problems with SAMR and related quick fix methodologies
  • Learning styles and related educational Zombie myths (bad ideas that just won’t die)
  • Problem-based instruction that isn’t
  • Shift from passive to active learning
  • Choice
  • Ownership
  • Voice
  • Authentic learning opportunities
  • Why all elements of COVA must co-exist
  • COVA from a student perspective
  • The issue with taking ownership and agency – why folks don’t do this
  • Creating significant learning environments
  • Future of education
  • Connecting the dots – making meaningful connections
  • Why – go & show rather than sit & get
  • Digital leader vs digital manager
  • Design thinking for designed learning
  • Confronting the Myth of the ‘Digital Native’
  • Decades of evidence…but where is the change? Translating educational research to practice
  • 18 years into the 21st century – how are we doing with 21st Century learning
  • Communities of Practice (CoP’s) and their impact
  • Problems with STEM/STEAM initiatives
  • Importance of Learning How to Learn
  • Importance of asking good questions vs finding right answers
  • Reality of Thorndyke vs. Rhetoric of Dewey – more to be said
  • Failing forward
  • Feedback to Feedforward
  • How to Avoid the Hype/Getting Caught in the whirlwind of day-to-day processes

Please contact either Dr. Thibodeax or myself (Dr. Harapnuik) if you would like to research, write, and publish on one or more of these topics. This list is also just a starting point so if you have other ideas with which you would like to collaborate write, just let us know.

What I am Doing Now

Dwayne Harapnuik —  March 6, 2018

What I am Doing Now

I am currently home with my family in North Vancouver which is the home of some of the best Mountain Biking in the world, it is early spring.

My Primary Professional Focus:

I create significant learning environments (CSLE) by giving learners choice ownership and voice through authentic learning opportunities (COVA).

CSLE+COVA Discussions Youtube & Podcasts:

  • Dr. Thibodeax talk almost daily about ways to enhance the learning environment. Since most of our discussion happen over a Zoom connection (we live thousands of miles apart) we have decided to hit the record button and let you all in on our musings, speculating, and dreaming up new ways to enhance the learning environment by giving learners choice, ownership and voice through authentic learning opportunities.
  • You can access these videos from the CSLE2COVA Youtube channel and our podcast versions of these discussions from CSLE+COVA SoundCloud.

Collaborative Writing Opportunities:

  • Are you getting tired of all the hype related to educational reform, educational technology, or the next big thing that will revolutionize education?  If so, then I would encourage you to join Dr. Thibodeax and I in looking at ways to cut through the hype of so many of these educational promises.  Take a few minutes to review the post How to cut through the hype of educational promises, review the list of topics near the end of the post, and let us know what you would like to write about and we will explore the best place to publish these insights.

COVA Professional Development Series:

  • Learner’s Mindset Workshop
  • Online/blended Learner’s Mindset PD courses

Articles in Progress:

  • COVA as Threshold Concepts
  • Research into Video Feedback/Feedforward
  • Student Perceptions on Authentic Learning
  • Moving from Constructivist Rhetoric to Practice

Books I am working on:

  • COVA eBook updates
  • Learners Mindset – editing stage

Research I am exploring:

  • COVA Communities of Practice (CoP) as a way to Promote STEM
  • COVA PD as a way to promote CoP effectiveness
  • 3rd phase of ePortfolio Persistence research
  • Exploring the use of Deliberate Practice in DownHill Mountain Bike Racing and Freeride

Revised December 07, 2019
I will be updating this page as things change or at a minimum on or around the first of each month.