ctrl-shift AT lists.mste.illinois.edu
Subject: Social discussion of CS in K-12
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- From: Martin Wolske <mwolske AT illinois.edu>
- To: "Reese, George Clifford" <reese AT illinois.edu>, Todd Lash <lashtodd AT champaignschools.org>, "Smith, Kathleen Rapp" <smithka AT illinois.edu>, Charles Schultz <sacrophyte AT gmail.com>
- Cc: "ctrl-shift AT lists.mste.illinois.edu" <ctrl-shift AT lists.mste.illinois.edu>
- Subject: Re: [Ctrl-Shift] What will education look like in 50 years?
- Date: Tue, 10 Feb 2015 16:56:35 -0600
- List-archive: <http://lists.mste.illinois.edu/pipermail/ctrl-shift>
- List-id: Social discussion of CS in K-12 <ctrl-shift.lists.mste.illinois.edu>
Your mentioning of Chip is a good reminder. For those interested in
learning more about Inquiry-based Learning, Chip is planning to do a
two week intensive course the beginning of this summer. See
<http://chipbruce.net/teaching/inquiry-based-learning-class/>
for more information about that class, including the details at
<http://chipbruce.net/teaching/inquiry-based-learning-class/details/>.
Chip's still working out details and welcomes input on it. I highly
recommend this opportunity to students in LIS, Education, and all
other interested majors. As George notes, and he's not kidding, Chip
can recite from memory, including book and chapter, much of Dewey's
works! -- Martin On 2/10/15 11:27 AM, Reese, George
Clifford wrote:
Just now catching up on some of these conversations, and I look forward to pursuing them more tonight at 6:30 at the Blind Pig.
Personally, I think the worry of 50 years is something of a trap. It’s good to plan, to prepare, to ponder, but we can get caught in the snare of preparation and not actually address what’s in front of us. Our group has very particular concerns with classrooms, students, teachers, and curriculum. Those concerns are present now and even urgent. The joys, successes, and collegiality are coming from watching those being addressed in the here and now. Martin mentioned Experience and Education. Here is one of my favorite quotes from that book. Chip Bruce would recite it from memory. "We always live at the time we live and not at some other time, and only by extracting at each present time the full meaning of each present experience are we prepared for doing the same thing in the future. This is the only preparation which in the long run amounts to anything.” Dewey, J. (1938/1963). Experience and education. New York, NY: Collier Books. (p. 49)
-George
From:
ctrl-shift-bounces AT lists.mste.illinois.edu
[mailto:ctrl-shift-bounces AT lists.mste.illinois.edu]
On Behalf Of Todd Lash
As a Central alumni and semi-serious class
officer. I would be glad to give my input as well. Once you
know the whole story, you may discount it, but hear me out :)
I was young!!!! I'm totally different now....I swear! From:
ctrl-shift-bounces AT lists.mste.illinois.edu
<ctrl-shift-bounces AT lists.mste.illinois.edu>
on behalf of Smith, Kathleen Rapp <smithka AT illinois.edu>
Some
thoughts. I taught at Central for 15 years. Regardless
of what you might hear, there is "family" in the
school. There is a past (good, bad and ugly) and always
a future. I have spoken to some of my students from
those past days ('91 to '06) and they are very saddened
to think that the school will leave "old Champaign". It
does not really matter where it goes, they will just
feel the loss. That area belonged to no one. Walk six
blocks in any direction and you would see the diversity
that is Champaign. I don't doubt we need a new
facility, but do we need to lose the spirit to get it?
I loved my time at Central, and the students were the
best part.
Mathematics is the Language of the Universe. Kathleen R. Smith University of Illinois Urbana/Champaign Department of Mathematics, Retired 217 687-2889 From:
ctrl-shift-bounces AT lists.mste.illinois.edu
[ctrl-shift-bounces AT lists.mste.illinois.edu] on
behalf of Charles Schultz [sacrophyte AT gmail.com] Awesome, I love this! Thanks for such a thorough response.
Now how do we get community leaders to read and understand what you have written? :)
On Mon, Feb 9, 2015 at 2:07 PM, Martin Wolske <mwolske AT illinois.edu> wrote: We were talking at our
digital literacy for all learners team meeting
today about recent conversations with teens at
one site in which they were expressing their
dislike of school in general and some of their
white teachers in specific. This brought to
mind the introduction to bell hooks'
Teaching to Transgress (attached) and
also John Dewey's Experience and Education.
Both highlight, each in their own way, that
education that insights passion is one that
centers what is learned in the issues and
opportunities of the community. hooks in
particular brings the point home for me as she
relates the passion she had for learning in
the segregated, woefully under-resourced
school that made it clear she was learning to
make a difference for her community, and how
she lost that passion as she moved to the
integrated school that emphasized the
individual superstar -- which by the way as a
person of color she would never be. Dewey's
community school movement understood this need
to make education relevant to the community
context and issues as well. Ultimately, let's
fight for well resourced, modern schools by
all means. But the cool *things* won't mean
squat unless we also get the community aspect
right. From day one what attracted me to
Kenwood was their founding on principles that
situated technology and literacy as something
done for the community. Their Collaborative
Discussion framework is but one significant
way they operationalize this core principle.
As another example, George has been
highlighting the participatory democracy
framework used by Mission Hill. Ultimately,
these take the historic strengths of the
community schools approach and marry them to
21st century contexts.
I've linked 1 file to
this email:
hooks-TeachingToTransgress-Intro.pdf(5.6
MB)Boxhttps://uofi.box.com/s/mgo5y1dee5yxflyl9vg5j5eb2fgok8ea
Mozilla Thunderbird
makes it easy to share large files over
email.
On 2/9/15 1:01 PM, Charles Schultz wrote: Good afternoon, Shifters!
I am having a conversation with a friend about the location of the high school that is dominating local education news, and we are both saddened that more important issues are not in that conversation (Kerris, sound familiar?).
What will education look like in 50 years? Heck, what about 100 years? While the draft versions of the new high school have "modern" elements that include open work/collaboration areas, does the overall design take into account how the very fabric of education is changing? Will it support EdChats and EdCamps? Distance learning? The funny thing (to me) is that you can do EdCamps and distance learning in any building, new or old. Right?
True, nobody can accurately predict the future ("cloudy the future is, always changing"). But the current trends can at least give us an idea of where it is headed. So what do the current trends say? Is a $94 million high school a wise investment of our future?
PS - there are
no wrong answers, I am truly
inquiring. :)
-- Charles Schultz
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--
Martin Wolske, Senior Research Scientist and Adjunct Faculty
Graduate School of Library & Information Science
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
337 LIS Building, 501 East Daniel Street
Champaign, IL 61820
217-244-8094 (office) 217-244-3302 (fax) 217-840-7434 (cell)
Google Hangout: martin.wolske; Twitter: @MartinBWolske; Blog: http://mwolske.wordpress.com
-- Charles Schultz -- Martin Wolske, Senior Research Scientist and Adjunct Faculty Graduate School of Library & Information Science University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 337 LIS Building, 501 East Daniel Street Champaign, IL 61820 217-244-8094 (office) 217-244-3302 (fax) 217-840-7434 (cell) Google Hangout: martin.wolske; Twitter: @MartinBWolske; Blog: http://mwolske.wordpress.com |
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- [Ctrl-Shift] What will education look like in 50 years?, Charles Schultz, 02/09/2015
- Re: [Ctrl-Shift] What will education look like in 50 years?, Martin Wolske, 02/09/2015
- Re: [Ctrl-Shift] What will education look like in 50 years?, Charles Schultz, 02/09/2015
- Re: [Ctrl-Shift] What will education look like in 50 years?, Smith, Kathleen Rapp, 02/09/2015
- Re: [Ctrl-Shift] What will education look like in 50 years?, Todd Lash, 02/09/2015
- Re: [Ctrl-Shift] What will education look like in 50 years?, Reese, George Clifford, 02/10/2015
- Re: [Ctrl-Shift] What will education look like in 50 years?, Martin Wolske, 02/10/2015
- Re: [Ctrl-Shift] What will education look like in 50 years?, Reese, George Clifford, 02/10/2015
- Re: [Ctrl-Shift] What will education look like in 50 years?, Todd Lash, 02/09/2015
- Re: [Ctrl-Shift] What will education look like in 50 years?, Smith, Kathleen Rapp, 02/09/2015
- Re: [Ctrl-Shift] What will education look like in 50 years?, Charles Schultz, 02/09/2015
- Re: [Ctrl-Shift] What will education look like in 50 years?, Martin Wolske, 02/09/2015
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