Ben Wilkoff hung out with 1 person.Michael Wacker
A Teacher's Value
For all of the talk about how teaching is a professional vocation where skills and contributions are valued outside of schools and districts, the movement toward actually valuing the work of teachers has been slow in coming. In many ways, we value what we pay for or at least what has a cost associated with it. When you get a public education for “free,” the value proposition doesn’t become real for many learning consumers.
This may sound overly crass or belittling to the amazing work going on in schools that benefits the society as a whole, and it is. We create a morally ambiguous space by placing a dollar amount on instilling a love of learning in a child. But innovation can come from this grey area. Teachers can find their own ways of valuing their time, ones that do not make the transaction of learning a crass one.
One such teacher playing in this arena is Susan Powers of Brown International Academy. She has recently set up a blog that both reflects upon her practice and values her work by creating a marketplace for her ideas. In her 3rd grade classroom, learning is held in high esteem when students have “the eye-opening realisation that our instructions are missing several key details when our [partner], gets a mouthful of toothpaste as they are directed how to brush their teeth…..and all around, kids are falling over in fits of laughter.” This comes from a section she describes as “my favorite lesson of the week.” It places both instructional practice and student outcomes at the forefront, without compromising a 3rd grader’s need to have a kinesthetic and memorable experience with ill-worded instructional prose.
Susan advocates for using Open Educational Resources in addition to paying fellow teachers for their work. It is a dynamic shift from a closed-door classroom, where work is neither shared nor iterated upon. By putting her resources out in the open and encouraging other teachers to use them and change them, she is asking for the world’s teachers to be her collaborators. She is simultaneously making the case that the work she does has value.
The innovation here isn’t in finding a new way of asking to be paid more as a teacher, but rather in asking to be valued and supported for creating best practice within her classroom. While learning may still exist somewhere in the ambiguous space between Open Source and Proprietary information, by sharing and reflecting upon her craft on a regular basis, Susan Powers is helping to start a new conversation about teachers. And I, for one, believe that is a story of Good.
Ben Wilkoff hung out with 2 people.Dan Lucas and Mark R.
Ben Wilkoff hung out with 2 people.Dan Lucas and Mark R.
I just set up http://openspokes.com to redirect to the YouTube channel for the project. It should be easier to share…
I just set up http://openspokes.com to redirect to the YouTube channel for the project. It should be easier to share than the youtube link.
I just set up http://openspokes.com to redirect to the YouTube channel for the project.
I just set up http://openspokes.com to redirect to the YouTube channel for the project. It should be easier to share than the youtube link.
Listening to what Learners Want: Autonomy, Mastery and Connection #edchat
Listening to what Learners Want: Autonomy, Mastery and Connection #edchat
Listening to what Learners Want: Autonomy, Mastery and Connection
I absolutely love the work of Amy Burvall and the Theory of Knowledge course. I pulled two of my favorite excerpts from the Student Voices video (http://youtu.be/SU72SpObYKY). Listening to learners is so essential, especially when they are saying things like this. I encourage you to watch the whole video from Amy and then react to it in your own authentic way.
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Ben Wilkoff hung out with 3 people.Erin Luong, Susan Spellman Cann, and Trish McCluskey
Ben Wilkoff hung out with 3 people.Erin Luong, Susan Spellman Cann, and Trish McCluskey
It is finally here:
It is finally here:
The call to action for The Fellowship of Open Spokes. If you would like to take part in this Collaborative YouTube Channel, please fill in your name and email in day you would like to reserve. This window of opportunity will be open until the end of the week, so hop on your favorite day (it is okay if we have more than one person per day). At the end of the week, I’ll send out further instructions for taking part.
Thank you to Sheri Edwards for drafting this document.
I will now tag folks that have already expressed interest:
Gallit Zvi Zac Chase Joe Dillon Erin Luong Brendan Murphy Jeremy Inscho Eportfolio Keith