Archives For Learning

The Wired article by Brian X. Chen points to ACU’s Connected program in which all incoming freshmen get iphones. Now in it second year Freshmen and Sophmores have iphones as do move than 97% of faculty. Unlike many of the other articles highlighting the ACU program this article includes interviews with students and reveals that many student believe that ACU in onto something really good. The following quote confirms that the student believe ACU is on the right track:

At ACU it’s like they see [the iPhone] is the way of the future and they might as well take advantage of it,” Stratton said in a phone interview. “They’re preparing us for the real world — not a place where you’re not allowed to use anything.

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I was looking through the ISTE NETS Implementation site and while I get excited about these initiatives and look forward to seeing a move toward student centered learning realized in education I am reminded just how much of a challenge it will be to make this happen. When I watch video clips like “Progressive Education in the 40s” and consider the work of icons like Dewey, Kirpatrick, Gagne, Bruner and many more who all advocated forms of teaching and learning that we only see small glimpses of,  I am motivated to stay the course and do my part to ensure that the work they started is carried on. We can create active, engaging and dynamic learning environments that focus on real world activites that will encourge critical and analytical thinking but this will take a great deal of work.

We are not there yet but there are many who are working to make this happen. The Partnership for 21St Century Skills are the the latest group to advocate and promote change in education. This group advocates for the integration of skills such as critical thinking, problem solving and communication into the teaching of core academic subjects such as mathematics, reading, science and history. The primary focus of ISTE NETS and the Partnership for 21st Century Skills is primary education but there is work happening in higher education which parallels the same priorities.

ACU’s new Core is designed primarily to help learners to think. Classroom activity will not focus on the professor as presenter and the learner as the audience, but on the learner as an engaged participant with faculty as guides. Professors will assist learners in examining, critiquing and assessing information, solving problems, and making decisions in order to prepare ACU grads for the 21st Century.

You can’t mention ACU without talking about ACU Connected. ACU is the first university to announce distribution of Apple iPhones and iPod touches to all incoming freshman, allowing ACU to explore a new vision for mobile learning. Looking at how to use mobile learning to engage the learner forces instructors and the institution as a whole to revisit the teaching and learning environment and consider learning from a non traditional perspective. The focus on mobile learning at ACU should be very transformative. Unlike what has happened with online learning, where the traditional classroom has simply been digitized and content is delivered online, mobile learning should forces a significant change in the way learning will work because mobile devices work best with connection and engagement.

It was very refreshing and also disconcerting to read through Thomas Bartlett’s post The Puzzle of Boys in The Chronicle of Higher Education. Refreshing from the sense that there is a growing body of academic research that recognizes that boys have unique learning needs that must be addressed. The article was also disconcerting because it reveals that some view this research as a negative reaction to the Gender Equity in Education movement and that they view the “boys crisis as bunk”.

While I don’t want to weigh in on this debate, I want to point out that fact that when we strive to understand boys and girls as unique learning groups with unique needs–this is a good thing. Gender, race, social economic status and many other factors need to be taken into account when we look at our learners preparedness. Identifying and striving to understand that uniqueness will help us all to engage our learners. We should heed Niobe Way’s warning:

If you don’t understand the experience of boyhood, you’ll never understand the achievement gaps.

Barletts list of books cited is excellent but he missed what many would argue is one of the best works on understanding boys–Dr. James Dobson’s Secrets of Bringing Up Boys

In the New York Times article A Library to Last Forever Sergey Brin the co-founder and technology president of Google explains Google’s position on the Authors Guild and the Association of American Publishers settlement and also attempts to dispel a few myths. Brin’s most poignent point clearly identifies the potential we have for loosing an enormous amount of our intellectual property if something like the Google Books project is not allowed to move forward:

Today, if you want to access a typical out-of-print book, you have only one choice — fly to one of a handful of leading libraries in the country and hope to find it in the stacks.

Brin also points out that the Google settlement does not limit other organizations from doing the same thing and he hopes that Google efforts will blaze a trail for others to follow. The bottom line is that if Google or some other organization doesn’t make these out of books available we will eventually loose them. History doesn’t have to repeat it self.

Helen Barret offers an eportfolio solution based on a Google Apps mashup. While this option may not be for everyone it is a viable option.