Third Class Jan 21st
Two topics from class really stuck with me over the weekend and I have been chewing on both of them for a while. First, the Kaiser Report on Media Use. The numbers that we looked at in class were a little surprising. I suspected that media use was certainly up, but for kids to pack over 10 hours of media use into everyday seems staggering. Reading a little bit of the report reveals that this number does not include time spent texting on their cells phones (1.5 hours) or talking on their cell phones (33 minutes). Given that many students are involved in other activities (sports, clubs, etc) I wonder where these kids are finding time for anything else. Sleep seems to be the area where most kids cut back, but studies and homework also takes a hit. We saw in the video profile of the 3 kids that homework was either not a priority (xbox boy), or something that must be done in order to avoid punishment (losing media privileges). There is little or no intrinsic value associated with getting the homework done, just that it needs to be done so that I can play. While this attitude with students is nothing new (I often would have preferred playing, I still do sometimes), the opportunities for and level of distraction seem to be greater. The world is merely a click away, friends are sending constant messages. How are we, as teachers, to compete? I try to make grade 11 physics as interesting as I can, but there is only so much that I can do. Should we even be trying to compete? That is a whole other argument for another day.
I had a rather long draft saved where I talked about Grierson. I found his comment about picking the teachers of teachers being the job that he would most want. My original comment was rather long and meandering, so I will attempt to revise. Grierson obviously felt that having this position would afford him great influence over teacher training and in the long run some influence over students in general. Shaping their attitudes and skills, much like that of his film proteges. Alas, Grierson either was wrong or again just thinking a little differently. (The many different styles, beliefs, and methodologies that I have witnessed from professors over my many years of university training lead me to believe that there is no grand plot to have us all under one influence, so no one has caught on to this idea....yet). I do wonder what someone with his vision would have done in this day, with all of the technologies out there to allow people to get their message out to everyone else. I imagine that he would, much like talking to the film crew at the party, ask us if we don't find it incredibly boring having to sift through so much junk, the boring stuff, the random musings of millions.
Sunday, January 24, 2010
Friday, January 15, 2010
When reading Cave for the first time I felt that the analogy was that of students fumbling around in the dark, brought up into the blinding light. I originally thought that we, the teachers, were the ones that were trying to expand the vision of our students, bring them into the light. It even worked on the level that the student that begins to understand what the teacher is trying to say, who embraces the teachers reality and becomes enlightened (the keener student), often faces ridicule and exclusion from the group that they originally belonged. Even how the prisoners competed with each other over who could guess the shadow, similar to students who compete for marks. What this had to do with educational technology I did not know. For the moment I forgot the theme of the course and just went with the picture in my head.
However, after going through the reading in class the picture in my mind transformed. Bringing in the themes from class, the freed prisoner went from the students to the teachers. My journey through the Faculty of Education sometimes felt like being trapped in the cave. I knew of this "teaching thing" that I was training for, but really had no idea of the reality that was coming. Within the first couple of years of my career I already feel like I am in the blinding light, fumbling around and trying to get my bearings. I am starting to see that some of the things that I once held as realities or truths are not valid, while others have morphed into other realities, much like the shadows that become real objects. I am trying to find my way, and I am the one that is the student. There are many that are helping me to form this new reality. The main difference between Plato's story and mine is that I will not (hopefully) travel back to the cave. It does feel sometimes that the other prisoners have escaped and have brought the negative attitude to me. The can not attitude, those that dismiss any view or practice other then their own, who resist change of any kind, are the prisoners in the cave that never see the light and are comfortable in their own realities because it is all they know.
How does technology fit into the story? As I try to grow as a teacher I am trying to incorporate practices that enhance the learning of my students, of which technology is a major part. Embracing change in this age means that we must embrace technology at least in some form. I have still seen those that argue that the calculator should not be allowed in school. I have to remind myself that they are still in the cave, it is all they know.
However, after going through the reading in class the picture in my mind transformed. Bringing in the themes from class, the freed prisoner went from the students to the teachers. My journey through the Faculty of Education sometimes felt like being trapped in the cave. I knew of this "teaching thing" that I was training for, but really had no idea of the reality that was coming. Within the first couple of years of my career I already feel like I am in the blinding light, fumbling around and trying to get my bearings. I am starting to see that some of the things that I once held as realities or truths are not valid, while others have morphed into other realities, much like the shadows that become real objects. I am trying to find my way, and I am the one that is the student. There are many that are helping me to form this new reality. The main difference between Plato's story and mine is that I will not (hopefully) travel back to the cave. It does feel sometimes that the other prisoners have escaped and have brought the negative attitude to me. The can not attitude, those that dismiss any view or practice other then their own, who resist change of any kind, are the prisoners in the cave that never see the light and are comfortable in their own realities because it is all they know.
How does technology fit into the story? As I try to grow as a teacher I am trying to incorporate practices that enhance the learning of my students, of which technology is a major part. Embracing change in this age means that we must embrace technology at least in some form. I have still seen those that argue that the calculator should not be allowed in school. I have to remind myself that they are still in the cave, it is all they know.
Thursday, January 7, 2010
Set up the blog.
I really found the McLaren Opening Speech tied in to many of the experiences that I have had within education. I have seen presenters struggle through technology issues and, like in the video, these struggles become the message that the audience holds onto rather then the content. McLaren's character could have finished his simple message at any point, but instead repeatedly starts over with "ladies and gentleman". The technology becomes the show and his content is lost. When he gives up on the microphone and uses the screen for the animated welcome, his content is nicely displayed and delivered.
An interesting aspect in that he became one with the technology, jumping into the screen. We sometimes see technology as becoming extensions of ourselves (or taking over). I am not sure which view to take: Was he the master of the screen, or did the screen take over. Was his content (welcome) enhanced enough by the screen to warrant the use of it? Or would he have been just as well off to simply shout out his welcome to the audience? As with technology in the classroom, I feel that it is the presenters ability to use technology to enhance rather then to distract, which I think was achieved by McLaren's character at the end.
I hope that I am not too far off the iceberg.
I really found the McLaren Opening Speech tied in to many of the experiences that I have had within education. I have seen presenters struggle through technology issues and, like in the video, these struggles become the message that the audience holds onto rather then the content. McLaren's character could have finished his simple message at any point, but instead repeatedly starts over with "ladies and gentleman". The technology becomes the show and his content is lost. When he gives up on the microphone and uses the screen for the animated welcome, his content is nicely displayed and delivered.
An interesting aspect in that he became one with the technology, jumping into the screen. We sometimes see technology as becoming extensions of ourselves (or taking over). I am not sure which view to take: Was he the master of the screen, or did the screen take over. Was his content (welcome) enhanced enough by the screen to warrant the use of it? Or would he have been just as well off to simply shout out his welcome to the audience? As with technology in the classroom, I feel that it is the presenters ability to use technology to enhance rather then to distract, which I think was achieved by McLaren's character at the end.
I hope that I am not too far off the iceberg.
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