New Minds for a New Millennium
Readings June 9th 2019
For a
number of years, we have published our blog which often includes a set of
readings that we hope teachers might find worth reading. We know that teachers
are far too busy to spend time searching but we also know that keeping up with
reading about new ideas is an important part of being a professional.
We
appreciate that only a few will read our blog but as someone once said there is
nothing like a hopeless cause – climate change comes to mind.
Our Vision – a view from the edge
Our
Vision is for schools to create learning environments to develop the interests,
gifts and talents of all students. Our Vision relates back to such writers suchas John Dewey and in New Zealand to the philosophy of Dr Beeby who, as Directorof Education of the First Labour Government, introduced progressive ideas into
the New Zealand educational landscape.
Communities of scientists and artists
Communities of scientists and artists
Holistic education
More recently holistic ideas about developmental holistic progressive education were championed by the late KelvinSmythe who fought the fight against the mechanistic, formulaic and technocratic approaches imposed on schools over the past three decades.
.
All
forgotten history, we guess, for many teachers today.
Our
view is possibly from the edge but it is the edge where new ideas evolve.
Signs
of creative growth
It seems to us the centre of progressive education has shifted to a few new innovative
secondary schools. Currently their creativity is under threat with the possible
introduction of literacy and numeracy requirements for all students rather than
these areas integrated into meaningful contexts. You would’ve thought that with the current
focus on testing, assessment and documentation in these areas in primary
schools, this would not be a problem?
Innovative
secondary schools are experimenting with new organisations while most primary
classroom timetable have changed little over the decades, if anything, have
become more traditional than ever with their over emphasis on literacy and
numeracy (with their shameful ability grouping).
There
are also signs of progressive growth in the primary area. Such things as ‘play
based learning’ (1950/60s developmental teaching), ‘place based learning’ (earlier
environmental education), ‘project based learning’ (John Dewey lives on), and
integrated learning. Then there is, of
course, the introduction of Modern Learning Environments (70s open plan schools
revisited) and the use of modern information technology which is still ‘over
promised and underutilised’; used properly it can amplify student
research.
research.
Literacy
and numeracy still, it seems, reign supreme along with oppressive testing,
assessment and documentation requirements – often self-imposed by the schools
themselves.
Time
to develop communities of learning
Time
now to focus on developing classrooms as creative learning communities with the
overriding aim of developing the gifts and talents of all students and to see
literacy and numeracy as foundation skills necessary to achieve this end. We
imagine modern classrooms as ‘mini Te Papa’ where students answer questions
that are relevant to them, digging deeply into such areas to create
exhibitions, displays, demonstrations and portfolios of based on their
researching and, in addition, making use of all the creative arts to express
their ideas. This aligns with the NZC which asks teachers to ensure students
are able ‘to seek use and create their own knowledge’ – personalized learning.
Back to creative teachers like Elwyn |
Teaching
as the most creative career of all
Time for new thinking |
It is
this Vision that keeps us posting – even if most teachers are too busy to
notice. As Elwyn Richardson used to quote, ‘It’s hard to remember you came to
drain the swamp when you are up to your backside in alligators’.
Bruce Hammonds and Allan Alach
Bruce Hammonds and Allan Alach
Readings
‘Anthropologists
have long known that Native Americans reared courageous, respectful children
without using harsh coercive controls. Nevertheless, Europeans colonizing North
America tried to “civilize” indigenous children in punitive boarding schools,
unaware that Natives possessed a sophisticated philosophy that treated children
with deep respect.”’
How
One Colorado Art Teacher Inspires Kids By Leaning Into Chaos, Not Control
‘Research and reflection
led her to the realization that she was usually following a set plan: Her
students all made the same thing as she instructed them on how to do it.“There was no room for creativity,” she said. “Everything was preplanned for them. There was a moment where I realized, ‘Oh, these are my ideas and not my students' ideas.’”
students all made the same thing as she instructed them on how to do it.“There was no room for creativity,” she said. “Everything was preplanned for them. There was a moment where I realized, ‘Oh, these are my ideas and not my students' ideas.’”
Going
for Depth: How Schools and Teachers Can Foster Meaningful Learning Experiences
‘For
Mehta and Fine, “deeper learning” consists of three interrelated conditions:
mastery, when students fathom a subject; identity, when they connect the
knowledge of the subject to their own sense of self; and creativity, when they
can apply that understanding to another endeavor in what Mehta calls “the next
layer of learning.”'
Dylan
Wiliam: Teaching not a research-based profession
‘Classrooms
are just too complicated for research ever to tell teachers what to do,' says
Dylan Wiliam In many ways, teaching is an unusual job. It shares with other
professions the requirement that individuals make decisions with imperfect
knowledge, but, unlike other professions, there is no shared knowledge base – no
set of facts that all involved in doing the job would agree on.'
Why We Should Stop Segregating Children by Age
‘One of the oddest, and in
my view most harmful, aspects our treatment of children today is our penchant
for segregating them into separate groups by age.’
Making
Progress on Progressive Education: First Empower Teachers
‘At the heart of
progressive pedagogy are questions about student motivation: How can teachers best
motivate students? How can schools best motivate teachers?. Research tells us
that for this to happen, schools must first maximize the intrinsic motivation
of their teachers.’
Rethinking
“Student Achievement”
‘When
it comes to “student achievement,” I hardly know where to start. Literally.
Should I begin with trying to define it? Or should I start with the fact that
hardly anyone defines it? Or that whatever definitions do exist suggest a total
lack of consensus and coherence?’
A Child’s Brain Develops
Faster With Exposure To Music Education
‘A two-year study by researchers at
the Brain and Creativity Institute (BCI) at the University of Southern
California shows that exposure to music and music instruction accelerates the
brain development of young children in the areas responsible for language
development, sound, reading skill and speech perception.’
The
Hidden Meaning of Kids' Shapes and Scribbles
‘Your
child’s quirky art isn’t just cute—science suggests that even the most bizarre
depictions can have deep creative intention.’
What
we think we know -- but might not -- pushes us to learn more
‘That's
because our doubts about what we know pique our curiosity and can motivate us
to learn more, according to new research from the University of California,
Berkeley. The findings, just published online in the journal Psychonomic
Bulletin & Review, challenge a popular belief that curiosity in general is
the prime driver of knowledge acquisition. They also give new meaning to the
Montessori approach to learning readiness, which encourages children to follow
their own natural inquisitiveness.’
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