Showing posts with label mark_pesce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mark_pesce. Show all posts

Friday, March 6, 2009

The Invention of Air, PLNs, and School Transformation

I just finished reading Steven Johnson�s The Invention of Air. It�s the story of Joseph Priestley�s scientific discoveries, religious and political thoughts, and his influence on the founding thinkers of the United States. But it�s also a history of his Personal Learning Network (starting with �The Club of Honest Whigs,� which included Benjamin Franklin and Richard Price), and, combined with Richard Florida�s work, has me thinking again about the optimal conditions for learning at our point in history.

Consider this quote from page 51:
Ideas are situated in another kind of environment as well: the information network. Theoretically, it is possible to imagine good ideas happening in a vacuum . . . But most important ideas enter the pantheon because they circulate. And the flow is two-way: the ideas happen in the first place because they are triggered by other people�s ideas. The whole notion of intellectual circulation or flow is embedded in the word �influence� itself (�to flow into,� influere in the original Latin). Good ideas influence, and are themselves influenced by, other ideas. Different societies at different moments in history have varying patterns of circulation: compare the cloistered, stagnant information pools of the European Dark Ages to the hyperlinked, open-sourced connectivity of the Internet.
This describes nicely how I think about my Personal Learning Network, and how social and professional networking in general can help circulate, discuss, and refine ideas. Ideally, this would also describe schools; places that were not defined as much by prescribed curricula, but by a climate of intellectual curiosity and a culture of ideas, where good ideas influere other good ideas.

He continues on page 52:
The idea of proprietary secrets, of withholding information for personal gain, was unimaginable in that group. . . .But Priestley was a compulsive sharer, and the emphasis on openness and general circulation is as consistent a theme as any in his work. . . No doubt Priestley saw farther because he stood on the shoulders of giants, but he had another crucial asset: he had a reliable postal service that let him share his ideas with giants.
The label �compulsive sharer� describes quite a few of the folks in my PLN, and tools such as blogs, delicious, Twitter, rss feeds and Skype help enable that compulsive sharing. Priestley�s aversion to proprietary secrets also seems to apply to the folks in my PLN, where the ethos is �the more you share, the more you learn� � and the more we all benefit. I think Priestley would also appreciate Creative Commons. But I wonder how many of our schools � and the educational processes we have in place - really encourage compulsive sharing, either in-person or virtually?

Johnson continues on page 53:
The open circulation of ideas was practically the founding credo of the Club of Honest Wigs, and of eighteenth-century coffeehouse culture in general. With the university system languishing amid archaic traditions, and corporate R & D labs still on the distant horizon, the public space of the coffeehouse served as the central hub of innovation in British society.

. . .You can�t underestimate the impact that the Club of Honest Whigs had on Priestley�s subsequent streak, precisely because he was able to plug in to an existing network of relationships and collaborations that the coffeehouse environment facilitated. Not just because there were learned men of science sitting around the table � more formal institutions like the Royal Society supplied comparable gatherings � but also because the coffeehouse culture was cross-disciplinary by nature, the conversations freely roaming from electricity, to the abuses of Parliament, to the fate of dissenting churches.
Again, sounds like PLNs, and specifically tools like Twitter � �conversations freely roaming� and a �network of relationships and collaborations.� And I wonder if our current education system might be �languishing amid archaic traditions.�

Later he returns to the idea of compulsive sharing and documenting not only the product, but the process (page 63-64):
Part of this compulsive sharing no doubt comes from the fact that one of Priestley�s great skills as a scientist was his inventiveness with tools. He was a hacker, not a theoretician, and so it made sense to showcase his technical innovations alongside the scientific ideas they generated. But there was a higher purpose that drove Priestley to document his techniques in such meticulous detail: the information network. Priestley�s whole model of progress was built on the premise that ideas had to move, to circulate, for them to turn into better ideas. . . . It was a sensibility he shared with Franklin:

These thoughts, my dear Friend, are many of them crude and hasty, and if I were merely ambitious of acquiring some Reputation in Philosophy, I ought to keep them by me, �till corrected and improved by Time and farther Experience. But since even short Hints, and imperfect Experiments in any new Branch of Science, being communicated, have oftentimes a good Effect, in exciting the attention of the Ingenious to the Subject, and so becoming the Occasion of more compleat Discoveries, you are at Liberty to communicate this Paper to whom you please; it being of more Importance that Knowledge should increase, than that your Friend should be thought an accurate Philosopher.
This resonates for me in relation to my own blogging, where I often think of blogging as �rough draft thinking�, or �thinking in progress,� and where I count on commenters and linkers to help me refine my own thinking. I believe one of the big hurdles for getting folks in my building to blog professionally is their fear of not having a polished piece of writing, or of being not completely correct about something. (These are both things I�ve obviously overcome!) But that seems to fly in the face of how so many of the scientists and philosophers that we revere in this country did their own thinking and sharing and, with the amazing ability we have to share today, it saddens me to see how few of us are really taking advantage of this capability (both professionally and with our students).

Further into the book, on pages 73 and 74, Johnson takes up information networks:
The true shape of an idea forming looks much more like this:
That network shape is one of the reasons why external information networks (the coffeehouse, the Internet) are so crucial to the process of innovation, because those networks so often supply new connections that the solo inventor wouldn�t have stumbled across on his or her own. But the long life span of the hunch suggests another crucial dimension here: it is not just the inventor�s social network that matters, but the specific way in which the inventor networks with his own past selves, his or her ability to keep old ideas and associations alive in the mind.
To me, this describes tagging and the digital archiving (and sharing) of thoughts, so that not only can you learn from others, but you can go back and reflect on and learn from your own �past self.� I believe we miss so much, and our students miss so much, because we view so much of what we do as transitory, and not worth keeping or revisiting. What is it about self-reflection (again, both professionally and with/by our students) that worries us so?

Toward the end of the book, on pages 204-206, Johnson makes the connection again to modern information networks:
More important, though, the values that Priestley brought to his intellectual explorations have never been more essential than they are today. The necessity of open information networks � like ones he cultivated with the Honest Whigs and the Lunar Society, and with the popular tone of his scientific publications � has become a defining creed of the Internet age. . . . An idea that flows through society does not grow less useful as it circulates; most of the time, the opposite occurs: the idea improves, as its circulation attracts the �attention of the Ingenious,� as Franklin put it. Jefferson saw the same phenomenon, and interpreted it as yet another part of nature�s rational system: �That ideas should freely spread from one another over the globe,� he wrote in an 1813 letter discussing a patent dispute, �for the moral and mutual instruction of man, and improvement of his condition, seems to have been peculiarly and benevolently designed by nature, when she made them, like fire, expansible over all space, without lessening their density at any point, and like the air in which we breathe, move, and have our physical being, incapable of confinement or exclusive appropriation.�

, , , Building a coherent theory of the modern world without a thorough understanding of [the Internet] would have struck Priestley as a scandal of the first order.
This speaks to me so much of our often misguided Internet filter policies, the idea that by restricting the flow of ideas we are somehow protecting our students. And, again, it reinforces the concept of openness, and the sharing of student and teacher work, and that through this sharing, this cross-pollinating of ideas, we progress and improve not only as teachers and students, but as a society (see Mark Pesce�s Capture Everything, Share Everything, Open Everything, Only Connect)

He brings it home at the end of the book on pages 213-215:
The faith in science and progress necessitated one other core value that Priestley shared with Jefferson and Franklin and that is the radical�s belief that progress inevitably undermines the institutions and belief systems of the past. . . . You could no longer put stock in �the education of our ancestors,� as Jefferson derisively called it. Embracing change meant embracing the possibility that everything would have to be reinvented. . . .One thing is clear: to see the world in this way � to disconnect the timeless insights of science and faith from the transitory world of politics; to give up the sublime view of progress; to rely on the old institutions and not conjure up new ones � is to betray the core and connected values that Priestley shared with the American founders . . . How can such a dramatically expanded vista not make us think that the world is still ripe for radical change, for new ways of sharing ideas or organizing human life? And how could it not also be cause for hope?
I think this is one of the huge struggles we�re facing as we try not so much to reform education, but to transform it. Schools as we know them are comfortable, and safe. But if �progress inevitably undermines the institutions and belief systems of the past� and we should �no longer put stock in �the education of our ancestors,�� then we will have to face the uncomfortable and deal with disruptive innovation.

We are going to have to seize on the current crisis to make transformative change and conjure up new institutions � or least new learning paradigms. One of our core values must be to seize these "new ways of sharing ideas or organizing human life," to be compulsive sharers and utilize these tools and our learning networks to transform our schools, our communities and our world.

Will that be difficult? Sure, but it�s necessary and it�s time. And, while perhaps difficult, �how could it not also be cause for hope?�

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Take Me to Your Leader(s)

I recently had the opportunity to help Will Richardson with a breakout session at the CASE Winter Leadership Conference. CASE is our statewide school administrator organization, with membership including superintendents, central office administrators and building level administrators. While Will�s keynote was the following day, our goal with the breakout was to hopefully initiate some conversations that administrators would take back and continue in their schools and/or districts.

We used Mark Pesce�s Fluid Learning blog post to spur discussion, and created some essential questions and a graphic organizer to go along with it (thanks Ben Wilkoff, Bud Hunt and Mike Porter for help with all that). We also created a wiki page with some additional readings and essential questions, to hopefully spur even more conversations among administrators, teachers, and all stakeholders about the �shifts.�

Hopefully the fifty or so folks in the room felt it was worthwhile, and with a little luck many of them will use what we did � or the additional readings and questions on the wiki � to help continue the conversations in their schools and districts. But I also got to thinking that perhaps I should share out that work here, since it�s unlikely folks would stumble upon that page on the Learning 2.0 wiki by chance.

So, in case anyone can use it, here is both what we used in the session, and the additional eleven sets of readings paired with essential questions. Please consider taking some or all of these to an administrator near you.

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Read Mark Pesce's blog post.

Essential Questions
  • Capture Everything: What's worth capturing in my classrooms? My building? My district? Audio? Video? Text-based assignments? Student work? Writing?
    .
  • Share Everything: Where can I share it? With whom? What audiences is our organization working to serve? How will they benefit from these shared items? Who needs to see what�s going on?
    .
  • Open Everything: What are the closed silos of information in our schools that shouldn't be? What things outside of our schools have we closed (blocked)? What can we do to open both of those up?
    .
  • Only Connect: How can I help my students and teachers connect with content, with each other, and with others outside the classroom (students, teachers, experts, mentors, the community, etc.) in a meaningful way?
    .
  • What questions do I have for my administrators/curriculum staff? Teaching Staff? IT Staff? Students?
Graphic Organizer for this activity (Word, PDF). Feel free to download and use.

Online, editable pages for each of the questions above: (Capture Everything, Share Everything, Open Everything, Only Connect, What Questions Do I Have). As you have these discussions at CASE, at CoLearning, in your schools, and in your communities, please share out the results on the appropriate wiki page. It might take a few minutes to get the hang of editing a wiki, but you'll figure it out - give it a shot. And, don't worry, there's a history page so if you accidentally delete something, you can get it back.

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Here are some additional resources and recommended activities for administrators to continue their learning about - and sharing of - network literacy.

Additional Recommended Readings and Questions

The following is a long list of thought-provoking blog posts, articles and videos that can help administrators start or continue conversations in their school districts, schools, and communities. Each one is accompanied by a set of essential questions that can guide you as you read the article and can help further spur discussion.

      1. Essential Questions
        What literacies must educators master before we can help students make the most of these powerful potentials? What�s one thing you are going to do in the next six weeks to help you begin to master these literacies? How does "authentic" assessment change when the student's audience is the world?

        Read Will Richardson's Footprints in the Digital Age from the November 2008 issue of Educational Leadership.
        .
      2. Essential Questions
        We know that good teachers existed before the current wave of technology, but can a teacher today be the best teacher they can be and truly meet the needs of their students without using technology? What implications does this have for professional development and teacher evaluation? What implications does this have for the technological literacy levels of administrators?

        Read Karl Fisch's Is it Okay to be a Technologically Illiterate Teacher? blog post (including comment thread) and National Educational Technology Standards for Teachers (NETS-T).
        .
      3. Essential Questions
        What does it mean to be literate in the 21st century? Are we as educators currently literate? If not, what implications does that have for our students, and what proposals can we put in place to get all educators to a basic level of 21st century literacy in a reasonable amount of time?

        Read NCTE's definition of 21c literacy along with The Partnership for 21st Century Skills English Skills Map.
        .
      4. Essential Questions
        Do you believe schools foster inquiry and passion in students? If so, are your schools currently structured to do that? Are students regularly asked to research, collaborate, create, present and network in your schools? If not, what can you do to change that?

        Read Chris Lehmann's blog post Talking to 49 Superintendents along with his Ignite Philly 5 minute presentation.
        .
      5. Essential Question
        Of the 10 things the author thinks we should unlearn, pick the three that most resonate with you. Now, how are you going to foster �unlearning� those things for you, other administrators, and teachers in your school/district?

        Read Will Richardson�s Steep Unlearning Curve blog post.
        .
      6. Essential Questions
        In a rapidly changing, information abundant world, what should students know and be able to do? What should �school� or �learning� look like in a world where almost all factual information is literally a click away? How do we help students create their own Personal Learning Networks? What steps are you going to make to create your own PLN? Which of the suggestions in Shift Happens � Now What? resonates with you, and how can you go about implementing them?

        Read Stephanie Sandifer's blog post Shift Happens � Now What? and watch this version of Did You Know?/Shift Happens (Vision Remix, Fall 2007). Also explore the Shift Happens wiki for more information.
        .
      7. Essential Questions
        Do you agree that the culture of most educational institutions today is insulated, that it actively tries to block out the �outside� world? If so, do you believe that educational institutions can survive (and thrive) with that culture? If not, what are some steps you can take to open up the culture in your school/district?

        Read Bill Farren's Insulat-Ed blog post and we also highly recommend reading Here Comes Everybody by Clay Shirky.
        .
      8. Essential Questions
        Where do you rank yourself in terms of competency on the NETS for Administrators? What do leaders really need to know about this? What are you (your school, your district) doing to help your leaders grow in this area?

        Read the National Educational Technology Standards for Administrators (NETS-A) along with Scott McLeod�s An Absence of Leadership (pdf) article from ISTE's Learning and Leading with Technology magazine.
        .
      9. Essential Questions
        What kind of collaborative partnerships - physical or virtual - can you develop with folks outside of your school(s)? (universities, corporations, other schools, etc.) What steps can you take to engage with these collaborative technologies yourself, both to learn and to model for our students?

        Read Will Richardson's article World Without Walls - Learning Well with Others from Edutopia.
        .
      10. Essential Questions
        Take a look at the seven survival skills that Wagner postulates through the lens of a typical classroom in your school (or, if you�re at the district level, a typical elementary, middle, and high school classroom). How�s that classroom do on those seven skills? Pick three of the skills and brainstorm ways to work with teachers in your building to strengthen their presence in the typical classroom.

        Read Tony Wagner's article Rigor Redefined from the October 2008 issue of Educational Leadership, along with this post on the Google Blog.
        .
      11. Essential Questions
        Is it important to bring meaning and significance into the classroom? Do you think the way students portrayed themselves in these videos is fairly accurate for today�s student? How can we leverage the �networked� student, and the technological tools we have at our disposal, to empower our students to pursue real, relevant, and rigorous questions?

        Read Kansas State Professor Michael Wesch's blog post and watch some of his videos (A Vision of Students Today, The Machine is Using Us, and Information Revolution). Also watch Wendy Drexler's Networked Student.
Start Reading Blogs

The only way to truly begin to understand the literacy of networking is to participate. We would recommend subscribing to 3 to 5 blogs to begin with (ask your tech folks for help if you don't know how to subscribe). We would highly recommend that you subscribe to Will Richardson's Weblogg-ed and to LeaderTalk. Then find one to three more blogs that interest you, either by asking people you know, following links in Weblogg-ed and LeaderTalk, or by doing a Google Blog Search.

Read those blogs for two to three months, commenting when you're ready and have something to say. Then consider starting your own blog, either an individual blog or a group of educators in your school/district, to continue the conversations you're having about teaching and learning in the twenty-first century.

Consider attending Learning 2.0: A Colorado Conversation on February 21, 2009.