Feb 23 2009

Five Changes in Education-a Meme

First TJ Shay wrote this and tagged Pat Hensley; Then Pat Hensley, aka loonyhiker, wrote this and tagged me.

I have written this following the rules written in bold:

TJ Shay’s rules are: “List FIVE changes you would like to see in the educational system. Your responses should represent your perspective and your passion for learning and students…tag the following people…from a variety of perspectives. If you have been tagged, tag as many people as you choose, but try for a variety.”

1. To quote Ryan Bretag, “Leaders <should> tap the shoulders of professionals in the classroom to give them a greater responsibility and a stronger voice to encourage the personalization of learning opportunities designed as a community.

2. School Boards, Administrators-all policy makers and enforcers- must get over the ‘fear’ of digital tools that they manifest and foster. Blocking pornography, conforming to CIPA for Federal funding, should be the extent of the policy for filtering in schools. They have not banned writing implements for what is scribbled in the restrooms, so why do they do what they do to access to technology?

3. Collaboration should blossom face-to-face the way it has in PLNs. Don’t sit in Teachers’ Room and complain, collaborate in research and reporting to make things happen, to make things change.

4. Schools should be open seven days a week. As I said in an earlier post the only places more underused than schools are churches. When fuel prices skyrocketed last year, the first thing you heard from managers was that schools might go to four-day schedules. My gut feeling was antithetical to that – the only way that is a saving is in travel dollars. The extra hardships of childcare and sitting in under-heated houses and apartments, while the school environments are maintained, are unconscionable.

5. Individualize education plans and group students by needs and desires rather than by credits earned and courses completed.

I tag these colleagues from Plurk:

Char Young @charyoung – Homeschool educator and tutor
John Martin @edventures – Technology architect in higher ed
Scott Carter @scarter – ex-Biology teacher, ex-principal, and now a superintendent
Elizabeth Koh @elizabethkoh – Doctoral candidate and teaching ass’t at the National University of Singapore
Kobus van Wyck @kobus – Director of Khanya Program-providing ICT services to disadvantaged schools in South Africa

8 responses so far


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8 Responses to “Five Changes in Education-a Meme”

  1.   Paton 23 Feb 2009 at 14:28

    Great list! Thanks for doing the meme! I hesitate to tag people but I really wanted to see what my friends came up with! :)

  2.   | Kobus van Wykon 24 Feb 2009 at 03:42

    [...] wrote this and tagged Pat Hensley; then Pat wrote this and tagged Skip Zalneraitis; then Skip wrote this and tagged [...]

  3.   Kobus van Wykon 24 Feb 2009 at 03:53

    Thanks for tagging me. I have posted my contribution on my blog. Looking forward to comparing all the contributions.

  4.   Elizabethon 26 Feb 2009 at 08:53

    Thanks for the wise words and thoughts Skip.

    I have responded to your tag here:
    http://elizabethkoh.tumblr.com/post/81737254/five-changes-in-education-a-meme

  5.   wgraziadeion 27 Feb 2009 at 14:02

    SkipZ, glad to participate and read/learn from your post. A big TY to Elizabeth Koh for tagging me. It gave me the opportunity that I might have missed to learn from you and others in the ‘chain’. I posted my 5 changes (A-FACT) to education at http://bgraziadei.blogspot.com/2009/02/im-it-now-youre-it.html

  6.   Nancy Devineon 14 Mar 2009 at 07:28

    first–thanks for stopping at my blog and commenting.
    now..onto your suggestions. amazing and apt suggestions. how could we start? especially on numbers one and two. the fear of digital tools has virtually stopped people in their tracks, my students included.
    change in education is so slow.

  7.   Skip Zalneraitison 14 Mar 2009 at 10:25

    Nancy-
    When you started following me on Twitter, I visited your blog and subscribed.
    I agree wholeheartedly with you that change in education is so slow.
    I just read a post this morning in which the author opines that there is a divide in education between those for whom change in education i too slow and the majority for whom change in education is too fast.
    Is this where the dialog begins? Can we talk with colleagues about the ambiguity of perception-if it exists and, if it does, why?

  8.   Bill Graziadeion 16 Mar 2009 at 10:56

    See 5 Things I Would Change About Education Wiki http://5thingseducation.pbwiki.com/.

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