If your organization requires success before commitment, it will never have either.Seth Godin, Tribes, p. 132.
Showing posts with label seth_godin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label seth_godin. Show all posts
Saturday, May 30, 2009
Thought for the Day 5-30-09
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Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Create A Movement
This TED Talk by Seth Godin is worth 17 minutes of your time. After you watch it, some thoughts are below the embed.
Here are a few semi-random thoughts that were generated by this talk. I�m not saying that he�s necessarily right about everything, but he raises some interesting questions that are worth thinking about.
What do I do for a living? Seems like a simple question, but � as Seth Godin points out � perhaps it�s not. I used to answer, �I�m a math teacher� or �I teach math.� Over time that shifted to �I teach students math� and then simply �I teach students.� But I find myself agreeing with him that perhaps that�s too �narrow� of a definition of what we in education try to do: we try to change everything.
Every day we should at least try to step on that light bulb, clearly indicating that there was �before,� and now there�s �after;� that at this moment in time we changed something in our students� lives. If we don�t aspire to that, if we accept a too-narrow definition of what we do for a living, then we relegate ourselves to mediocrity.
Godin says that the way we make change is by leading, and that leading is simply helping to connect people and ideas. And, at this moment in time, we are at a tipping point (dare I say a moment of �shift�), because the technology allows us to connect in ways that previously were unimaginable or impractical (see Shirky�s Here Comes Everybody). And we can find others that are interested in and passionate about the same things, not by forcing them, but because we want to be connected. We need to be connecting as educators and, just as importantly, we need to be helping our students connect.
He goes on to say that we need to find folks that are disconnected, but already have a yearning; people who are just waiting for someone to lead them. (Sound like anyone you know?) We need to be heretics, who look at the status quo and say, �I can�t abide it.� (What�s wrong with the status quo? Unless you don�t see any need in the world, any disaffection, any hurt or disconnectedness, then we must try to improve on the status quo.) Is this in your curriculum? Perhaps not in so many words, but it should be, so I�m asking you to add it. Right now.
Godin then says there are three questions to ask yourself if you�re trying to lead something. If educators are leaders, then we need to ask ourselves these same questions.
Here are a few semi-random thoughts that were generated by this talk. I�m not saying that he�s necessarily right about everything, but he raises some interesting questions that are worth thinking about.
What do I do for a living? Seems like a simple question, but � as Seth Godin points out � perhaps it�s not. I used to answer, �I�m a math teacher� or �I teach math.� Over time that shifted to �I teach students math� and then simply �I teach students.� But I find myself agreeing with him that perhaps that�s too �narrow� of a definition of what we in education try to do: we try to change everything.
Every day we should at least try to step on that light bulb, clearly indicating that there was �before,� and now there�s �after;� that at this moment in time we changed something in our students� lives. If we don�t aspire to that, if we accept a too-narrow definition of what we do for a living, then we relegate ourselves to mediocrity.
Godin says that the way we make change is by leading, and that leading is simply helping to connect people and ideas. And, at this moment in time, we are at a tipping point (dare I say a moment of �shift�), because the technology allows us to connect in ways that previously were unimaginable or impractical (see Shirky�s Here Comes Everybody). And we can find others that are interested in and passionate about the same things, not by forcing them, but because we want to be connected. We need to be connecting as educators and, just as importantly, we need to be helping our students connect.
He goes on to say that we need to find folks that are disconnected, but already have a yearning; people who are just waiting for someone to lead them. (Sound like anyone you know?) We need to be heretics, who look at the status quo and say, �I can�t abide it.� (What�s wrong with the status quo? Unless you don�t see any need in the world, any disaffection, any hurt or disconnectedness, then we must try to improve on the status quo.) Is this in your curriculum? Perhaps not in so many words, but it should be, so I�m asking you to add it. Right now.
Godin then says there are three questions to ask yourself if you�re trying to lead something. If educators are leaders, then we need to ask ourselves these same questions.
- Who are you upsetting? If you�re not upsetting anyone, then you�re not changing the status quo. (Note that this is not upsetting people just to upset them, but rather with a purpose, with a goal, with an important change in mind that�s necessary to improve things for someone. Editor�s note: I�ve got this one nailed. Unfortunately, I don�t think it stands on its own.)
- Who are you connecting? (Think outside your classroom walls for a moment here. Nothing wrong with connecting inside your classroom, but some of those students have yearnings that don�t match up with others in their classroom, so help them find their tribe.)
- Who are you leading? (Don�t limit this to the students in your classroom, or the adults in your building/department; leading is not limited by proximity or geography anymore. Also some folks will protest that they don�t want to lead or that�s not in their job description. I say it should be, and I�d ask you to add it now.)
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Sunday, February 1, 2009
What's the Purpose of School?
While I've certainly blogged about and around this topic before, I've run across a couple of interesting posts in the last few weeks that both address this question directly. I'm going to quote liberally from both posts, because I think it's useful to see them both on the same page.
First, David Warlick wrote after watching - and participating - in our videoconferencing with Daniel Pink:
First, David Warlick wrote after watching - and participating - in our videoconferencing with Daniel Pink:
On several occasions, lately, when working with teachers and administrators at independent schools, I�ve been asked, �What is the purpose of education?� It�s not a question that comes out of public school conversations very often. We already know what education is for. The government told us.Then yesterday Seth Godin wrote:
Education is about:We don�t even ask any more � and even in this season of Change (http://change.gov/), we�re still not asking that question.
- Covering all the standards
- Improving performance on government tests
- Meeting AYP (Adequate Yearly Progress)
- Producing a competitive workforce
Now I generalize when comparing different types of schools, and to be sure, independent schools are also governed by testing, as many of their students attend so that they can get into Harvard, Yale, or Duke (Go Blue Devils). But, again, there is a palpable sense of confidence in the conversations I witness when away from public schools � a willingness to ask tough questions.
I�ve had a ready answer to the question.
�The purpose of education is to appropriately prepare our children for their future.�
There are some implied, but essential questions in that answer:Today, I have a new answer. My old one is still good. I�ll continue to use it. But if you ask me, �What is the purpose of education?� today, I�ll say,
- What will their future hold? What will they need to know?
- What are appropriate method, materials, environment, activity?
- Who are these children? What is their frame of reference?
"The purpose of education is to make the world a better place!"
What drew me to this answer was Karl Fisch�s teleconferencing activity last week (see A 2.0 Sort�a Day: Part 2). As I thought more about the experience, it occurred to me that this was an almost singularly unique activity � beyond the fact that students were interacting with an internationally renowned writer, exchanging thoughtful insights, and the really cool use of technology.
What struck me in hindsight was that these students were earning respect. They were respected by each other, by their teachers, by the instructional support professionals, and by the internationally renowned figure, Dan Pink. Their engagement in that activity will continue to be respected by people, young and old, who will read the archive of those multidimensional conversations.
Those students were full partners in their learning, and they were entrusted to go beyond just what was expected. They were encouraged to freely extend and develop their own thoughts, skills, and knowledge, building on their own frame of reference, pushing and pulling through conversation, and being responsible for their part of the endeavor.
So, a starter list. The purpose of school is to:Both David and Seth, coming from different backgrounds, have some fairly negative views of what some folks think school is for, as well as some more positive views of what school should be. If you've read my blog for any length of time you most likely know the general trend my thoughts take on this, so I'll spare you my own ranting and raving (for now, anyway). But I thought these were worth posting on the same page as a good starting point for discussion, as Seth suggests:
- Become an informed citizen
- Be able to read for pleasure
- Be trained in the rudimentary skills necessary for employment
- Do well on standardized tests
- Homogenize society, at least a bit
- Pasteurize out the dangerous ideas
- Give kids something to do while parents work
- Teach future citizens how to conform
- Teach future consumers how to desire
- Build a social fabric
- Create leaders who help us compete on a world stage
- Generate future scientists who will advance medicine and technology
- Learn for the sake of learning
- Help people become interesting and productive
- Defang the proletariat
- Establish a floor below which a typical person is unlikely to fall
- Find and celebrate prodigies, geniuses and the gifted
- Make sure kids learn to exercise, eat right and avoid common health problems
- Teach future citizens to obey authority
- Teach future employees to do the same
- Increase appreciation for art and culture
- Teach creativity and problem solving
- Minimize public spelling mistakes
- Increase emotional intelligence
- Decrease crime by teaching civics and ethics
- Increase understanding of a life well lived
- Make sure the sports teams have enough players
If you have the email address of the school board or principals, perhaps you'll forward this list to them (and I hope you are in communication with them regardless, since it's a big chunk of your future and your taxes!). Should make an interesting starting point for a discussion.Please leave a comment or do as Seth suggests and contact a school board member, superintendent, school administrator, teacher, student, parent, state legislator (Colorado), community member, congressperson (Senate, House, or possibly this link for both), or President Obama and ask them for their thoughts, without the spin.
What's the purpose of school?
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