Thursday, December 11, 2014

Tanith Carey;Tiger Parents - and Tiger Schools! Relax and have more fun!

Great book for anxious parents
I happened to listen to an interview on National Radio with Tanith Carey about the negative effects rise of the 'tiger parent'.

I couldn't resist buying her book   'Taming the Tiger Parent' via  NZ internet suppliers Fishpond.

The book, although primarily aimed at parents, has a strong message for schools as well. Although written with the UK market in mind as we move along similar educational  ( more political) approaches it provides a warning for us in New Zealand.. In the UK children are not helped by  the 'increasingly narrow focus on targets and league tables in schools'.

As part of the current 'winner takes all society' , Tanith writes, there is less opportunity for children to learn through play and creative activities. Children are now 'constantly measured to assess their chances of success in every area'. Children in the UK are now  the most tested on earth and as a result many feel stress and anxiety ( as do their patents) they might fail worrying that in  a 'toxic' competitive environment not all can win..

Tanith and daughters
Although  society has created this self centered environment Tanith writes  that this is not helped by 'pushy education ministers'. Couldn't but not think of our own minister in this respect!

Ambitious middle class parents feel the stress to ensure their children are 'winners' while at the same time children from economically deprived families has even less chance of success, through no fault of their own, - the 'achievement tail.'  At one end of the social scale  high- stakes testing is turbo charging an elite class of alpha children who have been on the hamster wheel from birth'  and at the other extreme children who have no chance of catching up. In the UK this has resulted in a 'two-tier education system with a huge achievement gap.' Sounds familiar?

The tiger mum
It is obviously important, Tanith writes, that we must help children reach their potential but that this ought to be based on their individual strengths and not be set by 'the standards of schools intent on boosting their reputations on league tables - or the economic goals of governments'.

The competitive society is changing childhood.  Children are increasingly being seen as consumers of education  and in the process we are depriving 'kids of the experiences that create resilience and emotional balance'. Tanith  is asking parents ( and schools ) to   value childrens'  individual strengths and talents. Parents ( and schools) 'must tread the line between supporting our children and stifling them.'

In her book Tanith explains how children have been seen over the ages.  In recent times it has been the influence of Swiss developmental psychologist Jean Piaget  that had made the most impact, According to Piaget ideas children should be viewed as 'little scientists' learning through open ended play but this has been supplanted  by an overriding need to get ahead - as seen by achievement on tests.

The beginning of this need to compete was sparked at first by the Japanese and later other Asian success in seen in international testing results.

 The first 'tiger parents' were the 'kyoika mama'  - Japanese mothers who based their own worth by their children's success. Tanith  describes the downside of such intense pressure. It is now China that scares the West these days. Ironically both Japan, and later China , realising the  negative effect of the intense pressure to succeed,  are now encouraging their schools to focus on sparking children's curiosity.

The tiger mum
Shanghai ( not China) in 2009 topped the PISA tests; Shanghai is an affluent city where 80% of the children go on to university but this has not been without its costs and like the Japanese the Chinese are calling their education system a failure.. They have found their children are lacking in initiative, self discipline,  a passion for learning for intrinsic reasons, and are looking to the West for answers. At the time we are moving into a standardized test  driven culture  sidelining  talent development and  creativity. in the process.

 Finland:A better model
Tanith favours  another country that does well in international league tables - Finland.

Finland is a country where  schooling does not start until seven children are thirsty for knowledge and where there are no formal tests until the age of 16. It has taken Finland forty years to transform their system In the process they scrapped private education, streaming and school inspections. and  now students
work cooperatively in mixed sets in the classroom and,as a result, they have a culture which puts high value on the independence and individuality of pupils. As a result they have no 'achievement tail'.

In contrast in the West children have no time to work out their own strengths and, instead, are judged in  comparative contests ( literacy and numeracy) they didn't ask to compete in.  Parents  now try to give their children every opportunity to succeed after school leaving no room for children to play. At primary schools  children are tested and schools told that their reputation of teachers and schools rides on the results.
children need real play to learn

In the UK children's stress levels, anxiety and mental health is increasingly put at risk.

 Parents are overly concerned with 'how their children do rather who their children are'. Children ( parents) now compete to gain access to kindergarten and  their children's progress is tracked by checklists and documented 'learning journeys'.

Here in New Zealand we haven't yet had official league tables as in the UK.

 In the UK the schools are as pushy as parents. Sadly, writes Tanith,,' there is no a box to tick for learning for the sake of it' as schools become more about testing than teaching'. When children first enter school they are happily unaware of how they compare with their classmates' but , kids soon learn to measure their achievements not in their own right, but in comparison to others. The more the winners win they get rewarded and conversely the more the losers lose they get dispirited and give up.



Schools are turning up the temperature in this competitive winner/loser society.

 Even when teachers disguise their ability groups with various colours, or names of animals, children soon become aware who are the winners and losers.. What schools value is measured and as personal qualities and individual talents are not as measured the wrong values are passed on to the learners.

Tanith provides several chapters to help parents resist the pressure, both at home and at school, and recommends a 'benign neglect' style of parenting giving  children time to play/learn and to explore ' - encouraging their children to compare their progress with their previews efforts not with others. She suggests encouraging things of interest to them.   She also recommends the ideas of valuing effort and perseverance as against intelligence or talent -   psychology  professor Carol Dweck's 'growth mindset'.

Tanitb advises parents ( and I would add teachers)  to help children to 'find their spark - a skill, a talent or interest which your child is naturally good at, and which genuine excites them'....  'A spark always draws on an innate talent because kids naturally like to do what they are good at.' I can think of many creative teachers who would like the freedom to do exactly this. 'If a child cannot do something it is usually because they haven't had the chance to learn or practice'. We are talking about an 'opportunity' not an 'achievement gap!'

Tanith concludes her book with a plea for parents( and schools)  to resist herding children into two camps - academic and non academic and introduces readers to the multiple ideas intelligence of Howard Gardner; that there are multiple ways of 'being smart'.

She also reconnecting children with nature and give them plenty of opportunities for unstructured play and makes the important point that play and learning are not two different things. 'Studies show  that all subjects are best taught through real life experiences'.

She recommends that parents find  schools with 'truly progressive teaching in place'  Difficult in am
Success at all costs
environment where schools are  increasingly obsessed with developing reputations based on their achievement levels in literacy and numeracy. Tanith worries that in schools continually assessing students that, for many, 'confidence in learning is easily shattered and can take a long time to rebuild'.

For teachers in New Zealand , where schools have not yet gone down the 'league table' path, it is not too late.

 There was a time when New Zealand  primary schools had a lot in common with the developments now seem in Finnish schools 'where there is a commitment to think, not just what to learn'.

The real challenge!
We have a curriculum that will do the trick for New Zealand schools but to be implemented National Standards need to seen in perspective. Time to get the curriculum of the shelf and start heading in the right direction again.

'We need to return to a childhood where children are  allowed to find the time to develop at their own pace through play and self discovery; and to move away  an education based on constant comparisons based on a narrow conception of intelligence.

It is not the parents fault  that society is organised along winner and loser lines nor 'the teachers fault  that they have to feed a monster
of an education system with high -flying exam results- or be considered failing themselves'. 'We must set standards', Tanith
writes, ' but they should be for effort and originality, not just attainment. Yes , we must help them reach their potential, but one that is consistent with their innate skills and personality.....there is point in seeking the same one size fits all.'.

Our future depends on developing the talents of all our children/students - not dividing them into winners and losers.

'We must set side our ideas of what our children are supposed to be- and let them be what they are' - or could be if we , both parents and teachers, gave them the opportunities.






Saturday, December 06, 2014

Education Readings- Hattie is wrong!/ Sam Neill/ the arts/ and the problem with ability grouping



By Allan Alach


I welcome suggested articles, so if you come across a gem, email it to me at allan.alach@ihug.co.nz.

This weeks homework!

Hatties research: egregious errors

Hattie - dubious research!
Distinguished New Zealand educator Kelvin Smythe has vehemently disagreed with John Hattie for many years. Heres his latest salvo that attacks the dubious basis of his research  and subsequent conclusions, which are then used to reinforce neoliberal education agendas.
Hattie does not really discuss, present, or defend his curriculum or education conclusions on the basis of the range of known arguments but on what his statistics demonstrate. In this age of the obsession with certainty based on numbers, Hattie has settled on a winning combination, and when presented by a professor of considerable standing, his conclusions are difficult to touch let alone challenge. And with Hattie it is not just numbers but numbers gigantism.

All artists have ADD, me included says Sam Neill
Sam Neill - good advice
Consider the points that Sam makes when considering the children in your class. Are you overlooking the artists?
If I could have your attention for just one minute please if you would all right, half a minute would be fine then, if thats all youve got. If I might ask, exactly how distracted are you? Do you have, like me, the concentration span of a mosquito? Can you get to the end of this article without wondering what leftovers are in the fridge, if QI is on the telly tonight, or if indeed it is Thursday at all? I ask this because we have some of what experts call Attention Deficit Disorder in my family.


The Myth of Multitasking And What It Means For Learning
Supported by research into how the brain functions, Dr Deak argues that the brain is only able to focus deeply on one task at a time. And not only that, trying to do too many things at once causes the brain to lose the capacity for deep thinking altogether.

The Rock Lady
Another essential read from Kelvin Smythe, this time describing REAL learning.
If you want to explain the holistic, holistic evaluation, an example of the structure of an holistic activity, an holistic question, the ideal of teaching as it used to be, how to be a great teacher, the antithesis of John Hatties philosophy the true story that follows is it. For me, this story from the 80s is an icon. If someone asks me: How could I be a better teacher? I say, read this, absorb this, now go forth and teach.



25 Things Skilled Learners Do Differently
Why some of us master them earlier than others is another topic, one that may have something to do with parenting, environment, and even genetics. But the point is, were all capable. The smartest, most successful people in the world wouldnt be where they are today if they werent skilled learners. So lets examine which strategies we should be perfecting and how they can serve us in the long run.




A therapist goes to middle school and tries to sit still and focus. She cant. Neither can the kids.
I can relate to this!
Except for brief periods of getting up and switching classrooms, Ive been sitting for the past 90 excruciating minutes. I look down at my leg and notice it is bouncing. Great, I think to myself, now Im fidgeting! Im doing anything I can to pay attention even contorting my body into awkward positions to keep from daydreaming. It is useless, I checked out about forty-five minutes ago. Im no longer registering anything the teacher is saying. I look around the room to see how the children a few decades younger than me are doing.

Seriously, Why Are You Still In Education?
Why are our reform voices not being heard above the clamor and strife of recent events? Not that
its pleasant or easy. No one relishes staring down racism, confronting poverty and calling out injustice. But this is the cancer eating away at society. Either we fight it aggressively or accept a terminal diagnosis. To beat it, we need a new kind of leadership in education; educators who have a seriousness of mind and commitment of purpose to push the profession past where its stuck.
  
This weeks contributions from Bruce Hammonds:

Why Learning Innovation Cant Come From Teachers Alone

Bruces comment: Who is right  -does an over focus on standards limit creativity?
When is the last time youve walked into a classroom and seen real joy for learning and understanding? Not simply a fun activity, or students enjoying working together, or even vague engagement, but rather resonating, engrossed, curiosity-driven and rigorous learning that changes kids from the inside out?

Arts Education Transforms Societies
Bruces comment: Importance of the arts.
Although many people may agree that arts (music, theatre, dance, visual, media, literary and more) are an important part of education, they may not realize the powerful trickle-up effect of arts education on a modern, innovative workforce. Indeed, arts education has the power to transform societies for the better.

Accountability: Do we mean the same thing?
Food for thought
So, the word accountability is thrown around a lot in education, but the more I hear the word, the more I think we are really saying different things…”



Bruce comments: Got a bee in my bonnet about ability grouping at the momentthe unintended consequences of ability grouping.

Research Spotlight on Academic Ability Grouping

Bruces comment: A taken for granted assumption underpinning most school is the unquestioned use of ability grouping or in some situations streaming. What are your views on the use of ability grouping. I see them as the most destructive element of traditional education. The trouble is with things taken for granted , as Abraham Lincoln once said, is that they're taken for granted!  Personalised programmes require rethinking about the use of ability grouping/streaming, setting etc. The trouble is as school are increasingly being compared by achievement results
Consequences of ability grouping
there is pressure to use ability grouping
.
The educational practice of ability grouping emerged around the turn of the 20th century as a way to prepare students for their "appropriate" place in the workforce (Cooper, 1996). Students with high abilities and skills were given intense, rigorous academic training while students with lower abilities were given a vocational education.

Is Ability Grouping the Way to Go -- Or Should It Go Away?

Bruce's comment: Should we untrack our schools? Does streaming within class ( ability grouping) or school wide  (division of students into specialised academies) do any good?
So is tracking a fair way for educators to deal with the wide disparity in students' abilities? Or is it a form of discrimination that has few benefits for students and ought to be outlawed? The issue hasbeen the subject of debate for many years---and will be for years to come. One thing is certain: Further research is essential for educators (and, perhaps, for the courts) charged with making informed decisions about the advantages or disadvantages of ability grouping.

From Bruces oldies but goodiesfile

More on ability grouping

Against ability grouping
Ability Grouping - unintended consequences for learners and teachers.-   A need for a new transformational mindset for teaching to develop the talents and gifts of all students.
When I taught I chose, against advice of the school, not to use ability grouping instead choosing to help students individually, or in small groups skills required and then returning students back to whatever they were studying. The teachers who were advising me seemed to spend most of their day worrying about reading and mathematics whereas I wanted to focus on inquiry studies, language and the creative arts.

Dr Rubie- Davis NZ
Teachers using ability grouping contributing to growing inequality in schools!!

Bruces comment: And some NZ research about teachers with the highest expectations of students who choose not to use ability grouping. This research shows that the use of ability grouping is adding to the growing achievement gap in schools. Time to change.
Several studies have shown that high expectation differ from low expectations in three key areas: they do not  use ability groups, they create a warm class climate, and they set clear learning goals with their students. At the heart of these difference, in my opinion is the use of flexible groupings rather than ability grouping.



Thursday, December 04, 2014

It's a creative culture that counts - time schools and teachers created such a learning culture

At this time of the year teachers are busy writing their reports and placing their students in the various National Standards level - above, at, or below. Schools in turn will be compiling data to 'prove' that their students have gained in achievement against the standards over the year.

Current assessment a waste of time!
The trouble is  is that the standards are neither national or standard. Schools and teachers make use of a range of tests and  then add to the mix their 'TOJ's ( teacher objective judgments). That the standards sort students by their achievement in literacy and numeracy, bi-passing many students whose areas of interests are in other areas of the curriculum, is quietly ignored. At the secondary level schools have to achieve Ministry of Education targets  in NCEA which places the emphasis on  getting students over the hurdles.

Developing the  diverse gifts and talents of many students is lost in such procedures and is not helped by the inevitable narrowing of the curriculum by teaching to the standards. The only saving grace is that, so far,  we do not have standardized national tests and with them comparative  league tables which have been put in place in the US, the UK and Australia.

There are a number of voices that share my concern about National Standards. Ironically introduced to ensure  success for the 'one in five students failing'   they themselves are failing far more students by the neglect of other areas of learning other than literacy and numeracy. Ignored in the process is the obvious fact that most of the so called failing students are to be found in low decile schools- the  unintended ( one would hope) consequences of government policies that have created the inequality gap in our country.

I feel sorry for all the teachers and schools  who seem to have no choice but to comply with such nonsense.

An excellent book
In contrast if we look at our most successful innovators we find that many of them have gained their success in spite of school.

A recent book by Tony Wagner did exactly this in the United States. He was looking for common factors that such innovators shared. Firstly he found that schools were not a strong contributor to such individuals development.  Most, however, were lucky enough to have had a mentor ( some, but not all, were teachers) who encouraged their area of interest. The second factor was that they enjoyed collaborative work with like minded students in their areas of interest and, finally, they had parents who gave them both encouragement to follow their interests and allowed them plenty of time to play around with their ideas - or just to play.

Pink Floyd and school
Wagner writes that kindergartens offer the best model for later schooling. Create the environment, it seems, and they will learn. It is a creative  culture not  obsessive testing and formulaic teaching that is the answer - culture counts. As Pink Floyd sang, 'teacher leave that kid alone - we don't need your mind control'.

Creative teachers, and parents have always known this.  New
Elwyn Richardson
Zealand pioneer creative teacher Elwyn Richardson created, in his small rural school, a  'community of scientists and artists' busy exploring and expressing their ideas. Today teachers, in the current hyper assessment and surveillance culture, have a hard time to achieve such positive learning cultures.


Innovative adults, if the right environment is provided, gain a positive learning identity though achieving what motivates them. Success is its own reward;  their risk taking mentality allows them to continually learn through enlightened trial and error.

Schools could be transformed  to become similar creative environments  but to do so will mean that teachers will have to change the way they teach. Teachers  need to challenge such things as: the focus on literacy and numeracy ( and to 're-frame them as foundation skills'); do away with corrosive ability grouping and streaming; the obsession with narrow accountability data; and develop a relevant ( to the learners) integrated and collaborative curriculum.

 One thing New Zealand Schools could well do is to dust off the 2007 New Zealand Curriculum and place it centre stage ; to develop a personalized learning environment to replace the increasingly  standardized one.

I like the idea of imaging schools as multidimensional  science/ creative arts/technology workshops  continually creating an endless and diverse  range of exhibitions,  performances, demonstrations and displays as is now best seen at science , art and technology fairs. Successful exhibits at such fairs require both design and inquiry skills to be in place. In a school setting finished work could be added to each child's  electronic  portfolios for all to see; in the process taking care of assessment. Teachers would obviously have a creative role in such environments and would work best in diverse teams able to focus on understanding every students' strengths and talents ;educational talent scouts!

Many innovative school already do this - but they are the exceptions. There are ideas available how to transform even  the most resistant of all organisations - the secondary school; schools from year 7 to 13 . As well there are no shortage of encouraging books to inspire action.

What we require are environments where students are given apprenticeships in learning that  to develop powerful life long
learning habits through the activities they undertake. They would also through  the encouragement they get from each other  and from their transformed teachers. Human brains are  programmed through evolution to absorb what is around them -  for better or worse. Culture is, and always has been, the key.

Through the positive learning opportunities innovative teachers place in front of them, students learn to create a world of personal significance and appropriate learning behaviors ; simply by being part of a exciting environment.  Educationalist Jerome Bruner wrote, decades ago, that, 'teaching is the canny art of intellectual temptation,' and added, 'people get good at what they get good at'. Brains are hardwired to learn  through curiosity, excitement and fascination.

Culture counts; teachers need to work replace the current sterile audit culture with a truly creative one. 

When students have the opportunity to develop their interests they are then in a position to pick up on what attracts their attention - what is personally relevant to them.They are, in sense, primed to learn. As one of Tony Wagner's innovators said, 'they know how to learn by themselves', or, in the words of the 2007 New Zealand Curriculum, they are able to 'seek, use and create their own knowledge.' Students in an ideal learning environment  are  continually
 shaping their minds and  amplifying their imagination. Unfortunately this enlightened view of learning is light years away from the current audit and surveillance culture which limits both teachers and students. By working with others students are able to call on the knowledge of their fellow learners. In such environments ideas become communal with learners building on the ideas of others  - a default mode of learning process one hard-wired  from birth but  unfortunately all too easily crushed at school.

This is open ended learning - where students, as artists and scientists, discover as they go along. What students learn  then informs their future choices. Who they are, and who they will
become is woven out of their learning experiences

It is obvious  currently we  are not developing  all our students as future innovators - which was the theme of Tony Wagner's book. If we want to develop New Zealand as an innovative country then the only place to start is in our schools.

So far schools are failing in this responsibility losing wisdom in the pursuit in mere cleverness. No wonder, when their interests and views are ignored,  that many students simply disengage, or worse  leave wounded or alienated

As John Dewey wrote a century ago, 'education is not a preparation for life'.... 'they grow into tomorrow as they live today.' It is the culture that counts not the endless measuring of irrelevant teacher pre-determined objectives.







Saturday, November 29, 2014

Educational Readings-looking ahead/John Hattie/creativity and dysfunctional schools




By Allan Alach



I welcome suggested articles, so if you come across a gem, email it to me at allan.alach@ihug.co.nz.

This weeks homework!

Playing Video Games Is Good For Your Brain Heres How
One to challenge any preconceived ideas you may have
However there is now a wealth of research which shows that video games can be put to
educational and therapeutic uses, as well as many studies which reveal how playing video games can improve reaction times and hand-eye co-ordination. For example, research has shown that spatial visualisation ability, such as mentally rotating and manipulating two- and three-dimensional objects, improves with video game playing.
 
Looking ahead
Yet another article by UK academic Steve Wheeler - youll be starting to think that I have a high regard for him

This quote from Swiss psychologist Jean Piaget in 1988 reveals a deep truth that all teachers should apprehend. School is not about teaching subjects, it is about teaching children - and education is not simply about preparing them for a world of work, it is a preparation for life. “


Half of the Statistics in Visible Learning are wrong (Part 2)
An educational rock star?
If theres anyone out there who still thinks John Hattie is the rock star of educational research (actual phrase used in an Australian newspaper) this may disillusion you.

Again we are left with two options to choose from
1.   John Hattie is a genius who is doing things that even Mathematicians dont understand.
2.   John Hattie is a well meaning man with a Social Sciences degree who has made a mistake in using statistical techniques he didnt realise were unknown to Mathematicians and incorrect.
The choice is yours.

Teaching neoliberalism: time to replace Ofsted
Ofsted is the English school inspection agency, reputed to cause nightmares wherever they go.
Ofsted has become a political tool of the GERM project not merely because of senior staff links with academy chains, the recently appointed chair is a trustee of the AET academies chain, but through its judgements on schools being used by the DfE to force academisation of local authority schools, often against vehement parent opposition.

Creativity is the key to education, so why aren't we pursuing it?

Creativity can provide this trend with a home in education; teachers who are able to determine their own teaching methods in response to what children want and need. School is a notoriously divisive experience for people, with many disengaging entirely with it. Surely if the way in which they were taught was responsive  and creative, students will respond better to education.

Experiential Learning
Good article by Grant Wiggins.
I always ask all kids when I visit class the three questions at the heart of this caution:
          ▪         What are you doing?
          ▪         Why are you doing it?
          ▪         What does this help you do thats important?
Alas, many kids do not provide adequate answers. And thats why we need to worry about merely hands-on learning even as hands-on learning is vital for making abstractions come to life.

5 Creativity Myths You Probably Believe
Lets start with a fact: We are all capable of conceiving new, useful ideas. Unfortunately our chances of doing this are hampered by a few stubborn myths.These misconceptions cloak creativity in mystique and they foster elitismthe idea that the potential for innovation and imagination is a rare gift enjoyed by only a select few creative types.Here we debunk five persistent myths that misrepresent the true neuroscience and psychology of creativity.

Schools will start teaching typing instead of longhand
Whats your opinion about this?
Teaching children to write is transitioning to a computer era, as traditional cursive writing and calligraphy will not be taught at Finnish schools after the autumn 2016 and will be replaced with the study of typing skills …”

This weeks contributions from Bruce Hammonds:

Whats Our Vision for the Future of Learning?
Referred by Bruces colleague Wayne Morris:
A new Vision for the future
The new landscape presents a significant upheaval. Inventors and researchers are increasingly working independently outside academia, finding collegial collaboration in the Global Learning Commons. Learners also find themselves in the driving seat because formal education is no longer the only game in town for those eager to learn. How colleges and universities adapt to the customization and personalization of education will largely determine their survival.

Creativity its place in education
Following on, heres an article by Wayne Morris that lays out his vision for education.

Creative students lead richer lives and, in the longer term, make a valuable contribution to society. Surely those are reasons enough to bother.




Noam Chomsky: Independent Thinking Comes Through Discovery
Noam Chomsky sums up the purpose of education in just over one minute!
"It doesn't matter what we cover, it matter what you discover" - In an exclusive interview to WISE, Professor Noam Chomsky speaks about the importance of interaction and participation in the classroom, and what needs to be done to build the future of education.

How a boy became an artist
TED Talk: How I become an artist. Importance of art in the life of a young boy who was inspired by two words about his drawing by a visiting author of a picture book. The speaker worries about the lack of imagination in todays test orientated schools.

Doodling: A Teachers Secret Weapon for Unlocking Learning
Another TED Talk on the importance of doodling in school.
Despite centuries of teaching otherwise, researchers and thought leaders alike are increasingly rebranding doodling as a source of creativity, engagement, and yes, even keeping students on task. Its something Sunni Brown, author of the book The Doodle Revolution, articulates well in her 2012 TED Talk, which emphasizes the importance of looking at doodling as something to embrace rather than shame.

How to tame your inner tiger parent
Tanith and her daughters
Bruces comment: I have just listened to Tanith Carey author of How to Tame Your Inner Tiger Parent  on National Radio and felt inspired to buy her book. She gave some very sensible advice about parenting and was very critical of the test culture in the UK a culture we seem to be heading into. The book was inexpensive and I wait eagerly to read it. Schools do feel pressure from parents eager to ensure their children get ahead and ironically their children are suffering anxiety and stress as a result. Learning is the loser.


From Bruces oldies but goodiesfile:

Dysfunctional Schools
Bruces comment: An oldie but a goody is it time for teachers to face up to the idea that schools actually harm some students / Shouldnt the first rule of teaching be to do no harm?
I don't think teachers like to face up to the fact that schooling actually harms many of their students but it is clear, reading Kirsten's Olsen book, it does. Obviously this harming is not done intentionally but it is all too easy to blame failure on dysfunctional students.

Self managing learners
Bruces comment: Some questions to ask about your students now the end of the year draws near.
If students are to become 'active seekers, users and creators of their own knowledge' then self managing skills need to be 'taught' deliberately as an important goal of any classroom. The best way to see if students are self-managing is when the teacher leaves the room . As Art Costa says, if you do , on your return, 'what intelligent behaviours would you hope to see?’”

What did you steal from your students today?
What do we steal from our kids?
Bruces comment: Poem from John Edwards what do schools steal from kids?
I guess the real question is, what do we want our students to leave with so they can continue their learning journey?