Question 30 of 365: What is my innovation in education and why does it matter? (Educon 2.2 Session)
I dig down deep in the ground, finding a root of a living tree and pull at it like rope until I can hold it in my hand and see what it is that is helping the tree to grow. And then I do the same with another root, pulling and pulling until I can feel the rough texture and earthy smell. Then I tie the two roots together, tight and fast. I replant the two roots and watch as the trees start to intermingle, germinating new fruit, different then when they were alone.They are better for having made the connection. They are better for having the ability required to expand into one another’s space, and better for being allowed time to find a single wish to inch up toward the sky. The trees soon are so intertwined that no one can tell the difference between them and their fruit is so delicious that people who eat it can hardly believe that they ever knew a world without. I eat the fruit too, but I also gather as much of it as I can and I share it with others. I gladly cut it up and serve it with fruit from other trees. I make whole meals with this fruit or allow everyone to simply help themselves to pick it right off the tree. And then I move on to another set of trees, where I must dig and pull and tie and watch, in the hopes of creating something new. I must find these roots, the essence of these towering wonders and join them together. It is my innovation, but perhaps not singularly mine.
As things come together
As we meet to talk about bringing all tools under one roof, as we
start to work toward a single solution, as we start to use the same
language to discuss learning, as we get on the same page with
professional development models, as we create in the same formats, as
we pull from the same information and databases, as we get into the
same ganntt chart and project plan, as we start to realize the same
vision…
As we begin to all of these things more and more, I feel as though we
may lose some of what makes pushing boundaries seem so right.
I believe that there is value in scope creep, so long as it is
reflective of the needs of learners.
I believe in not choosing a final solution.
I believe that disruptive innovation comes when fast moving ideas are
allowed to move fast.
I believe in knowing whose shoulders we are standing on and whose feet
we will support.
The educon 2.1 opening panel.
Idea one: The purpose of school is not to churn out a finished product. Innovation doesn’t come from a place of completion.
Idea two: If we mean 99 percent of the places that we call school, I would say there is no purpose.
The purpose should be to be THE place to go and create, learn, and build real things.
Idea three: The purpose changes. Does the purpose take into consideration of all cultures and ideas. It can’t just be the transmission of values, other than inquiry.
Idea four: The purpose of school is to create community.
The best thing you might be able to do in a day is getting the students to talk to one another.
Idea five: The purpose of school is to learn how to communicate.
You have to be able to present arguments and convince people that you know what you are talking about.
Calibrate what students know as important, difficult, and original.
Idea six: The purpose of school is to expose kids to people who are actually doing what is possible.
Perhaps it is in finding out how things really work. Perhaps it is in not knowing everything. Perhaps it is in knowing exactly what you want to do with your life.
Idea seven: The purpose of school is to be the great equalizer. But the system can’t keep up.
We need to fix it so that schools are what they should be.
Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry
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