Archives For Learning

The EDUCAUSE Top Teaching and Learning Challenges Project – Debate the list, join the community and collaborate with colleagues

The EDUCAUSE teaching and learning community has identified their “Top Teaching and Learning Challenges.”

  • Creating learning environments that promote active learning, critical thinking, collaborative learning, and knowledge creation.
  • Developing 21st-century literacies among students and faculty (information, digital, and visual).
  • Reaching and engaging today’s learner.
  • Encouraging faculty adoption and innovation in teaching and learning with IT.
  • Advancing innovation in teaching and learning (with technology) in an era of budget cuts.

The folks behind the EDUCAUSE Top Teaching and Learning Challenges Project have setup the tlchallenges09 ning which links to the five challenges wikis as well as provides a forum for discussion.

In this Edutopia article Geoff Ruth reveals that his students in a general chemistry class seldom open their textbooks because:

the less they do the more they learn.

Geoff explains that after taking three years to wean himself and his classes off the textbooks and satisfy the concerns of his Principal and parents he has found that his students are:

  • more engaged,
  • understand more,
  • act out less,
  • and develop a much deeper comprehension of the subject matter.

The downside to teaching without textbooks other than convincing administrators and parents that it is still effective is that is that it:

  • take more prep,
  • requires mapping of material to current school and state standards,
  • and requires amassing and adapting curriculum from a wide assortment of sources.

Perhaps the responses of some of Geoff’s students provide the best incentive for teaching with out textbooks:

You don’t learn stuff from textbooks,you just memorize for a test, then forget it.

Read the full article…

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Prepare them for the future and not your past…

In the book Out Of Our Minds, Ken Robinson makes and thoroughly supports the argument that creativity, and the subsequent innovation that is spawns, is fundamentally hindered by our educational system.  Robinson refers to septic focus of education and the fundamental problem and develops the following four points to effectively support this position:

  1. For historical reasons, education is preoccupied with academic ability. This is based on the deep seated assumptions in Western culture about intelligence.
  2. Academic ability promotes particular forms of intellectual activity. They are important, but they are very far from being the whole of human intelligence.
  3. The results have been beneficial in many areas and disastrous in many others. There is a tragic narrowing of intelligence, divisions between arts and sciences, and a profound waste of creative capacity. Very many people leave education never realizing their real intellectual capacities.
  4. In the new world economies, this waste of human resources is potentially disastrous. The abilities that are now most needed are being left to waste despite the massive expansion of education and the pressure to raise standards. Organizations and communities are paying the price.

Robinson isn’t just critical of the system–he provides many worthy recommendations. Most of these recommendations take into account the following three priorities:

Identifying – providing systemically for the identification and development of creative strengths and abilities of all individuals in the organization.

Facilitating – providing for the conditions with the organization as a whole through which creative processes are actively supported and encouraged.

Employing – harnessing creative outcomes to the core objectives of the organization.

Clearly, we have a long way to go.

Over the past several years I have collected many links to some exceptional videos that challenges us to rethink education, teaching and learning. Each Wednesday I will post a link or embed one of these videos in the main blog page as well as add it to the Wednesday Watchlist in the sidebar in hope that it will stimulate thinking and discussion on how we can improve our learning environments.

I will be starting this weekly post with what I believe is one of the best videos on creativity and learning. Sir Ken Robinson makes the argument that Schools Kill Creativity and offers several suggestion as to how we can correct this problem. The original video was post on the TED at a much higehr resolution site but I have chosen to use the re-post on Youtube because of if Youtube’s broader accessibility.

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