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Monday, February 21, 2011

Board of Education Social Media/Networking Discussion

On Thursday, March 10, 2011, sometime between 7-8:30 pm Mountain Time (depends on how the agenda goes), we will be having a discussion with our Board of Education surrounding Social Media/Social Networking and K-12 schools. Details are still to be ironed out, but we expect to host a web page with the presentation and a CoverItLive live blog session embedded side-by-side, and also plan to have a live stream that can be opened separately.

Update 3-7-11: Here's the page with the Cover-It-Live and the Prezi.

Some of the questions/issues we’re likely to address are:
What is social media/networking? How is it different? Why is it important?

What is the social value of social media/networking?

What are the realities and what are the myths? What are the risks and what are the benefits?

What are the organizational, communication, and learning power of these services?

How can these be used for learning and collaboration, not just echo-chamber and group think?

What is their role in K-12 education? (Note: I’m in high school, so that’s my focus, and I imagine most of the focus in this discussion will be age 13 and up, but thoughts on younger ages are welcome as well.)

What should Board policy look like surrounding social media/networking? Should there be policy? If so, should it be just for this, or should it fall under our current code of conduct and we don’t need a separate policy?

What should our Internet filter policy be for this? What about students that use their phones/own connection to the Internet while at school and therefore aren’t restricted by our filter?
We’ll use the hashtag #BoardChat

Proposed Prezi Presentation (First Draft 2-20-11, feedback to Dan Maas).

Please leave any thoughts you have about the above items – or additional related items not listed -in this Google Doc. Thanks in advance.

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6 Comments:

Blogger Cathy Nelson said...

Karl, be sure to have look at this teacher's blogpost making a case for Facebook at school. Doug Johnson refers to it in a post from his Blue Skunk Blog today.

http://jenhegna.edublogs.org/2011/02/20/making-the-case-for-facebook-in-education/

Hope to be in the lurking audience!!

2/21/11 3:53 PM  
Blogger Linda said...

What a great idea. As a former board member and as a current teacher interested in using social media and networking, this scenario would appeal to all my neurons.

2/21/11 5:22 PM  
Blogger Marty Park said...

Hi Karl, We've been having/leading some of the same discussions in KY. Here are some links to our Prezi and shared Google Bookmarks.

Prezi: http://prezi.com/7a7f0k0hmbf2/social-media-professional-communication-for-next-generation-learning-environments/

Social Media Bookmarks: https://www.google.com/bookmarks/l#!threadID=GGXZwhsAFAKo%2FBDSKrZQoQk93VnOUl

(most of the bookmarks we use around narratives, so may not be as useful)

2/23/11 10:37 AM  
Blogger Mr. ONeal said...

Not sure of your timeline but if the meeting is not for a week or more you could even try a Google Moderator session to see what questions board members, parents, educators and students have towards social media.

3/1/11 10:48 AM  
Blogger Ryan Smith said...

This is an interesting topic Karl.. As a university student in the education department I think social networking is a very interesting subject to discuss. In this new era students are becoming more attuned with technology and are communicating in many new ways. As a teacher it is always a plus to know how and what students are talking about.

3/1/11 6:06 PM  
Blogger diipo said...

Hello Karl,
We want to use social media to engage these people in conversation and tell them about our product and our vision. We want to engage these bloggers, teachers, managers on their blogs, on their social media channels and communicate across to them.
We want to utilize web 2.0 technologies to implement a collaboration/communication platform that schools, classrooms, teachers, parents, and students can use. Microblogs, blogs, and wikis are currently the weapons of choice for tech-savvy educators. We need to introduce to them a better way of collaborating and sharing information.
Education social networking is the best for your class. It helps to connect with your teachers and students and communicate with your class.

4/27/11 10:12 AM  

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Sunday, February 20, 2011

What If It Was Possible?

(cross-posted on my class blog - thought some of you here might be interested.)

Teachers get this fairly often.
That's impossible Mr. Fisch. I can't do that.
Is it really impossible? Or does it just take a whole lot of work?

Watch.




So next time you feel yourself getting ready to say,
That's impossible.
remember this video and ask yourself,
Is it really impossible? Or do I just have to work at it?
What kind of box have you put yourself in?

(via A Year of Reading)

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3 Comments:

Blogger James said...

I enjoy your video and your message very much. This truly an inspirational blog entry. Thank you for bringing this into my day.

http://jimboslife1.blogspot.com/

3/1/11 6:14 PM  
Blogger Kayla Nelson's EDM310 Class Blog said...

Mr. Fisch, thank you for the inspiring post along with the video. Too often I hear people say that they can't do something because it's impossible. I agree with you 100 percent, I think all things are possible if you believe and work hard.

3/3/11 12:25 PM  
Blogger JoshL2014 said...

After reading/watching This Post by Mr. Fisch, I have come to an epiphany. I have realized that not being able to do something is a myth until proven impossible. This relates to every aspect of my life. I say that, "It's impossible" to hit a baseball further, to run faster, and to climb 30 skyscrapers without ropes. All of these things have bean proven that it is, in fact, possible. People have used the word "impossible" way too freely, and this one thought, this one subtle word "impossible" could change the way our world evaluates "possible". Thanks Mr. Fisch

4/5/11 8:56 PM  

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Tuesday, February 08, 2011

No One Right Way

(I apologize in advance if this comes off as more rant-y than usual – if that’s even possible. This is very much thinking out loud, so take it for what it’s worth. It's certainly not intended to be directed at anyone, the people I mention are all helping me think through this. And, of course, I very well may be completely wrong. On to the post.)

As happens every so often, I was involved in a briefly intense Twitter discussion yesterday where I followed my usual habit of pushing (provoking?) hard just to explore my own (and others’) thinking. This one, however, I felt sort of deserved a follow-up, so here’s my attempt to summarize my current draft thinking.

The genesis of the discussion was a tweet by Will Richardson:


 I pushed back a little with:


And away we went with lots of other folks chiming in along the way.

I understand the basic criticisms of calling these 21st century skills, namely that we’re ten plus years into the 21st century already and that many (most? all?) of these skills were important before the 21st century. And I also understand Will’s basic premise that, as crucial skills, these shouldn’t be taught in isolation in a separate course, but should be embedded – and modeled – in all of our classrooms.

But here’s the thing. I think there’s no one right way. I think in our passionate desire to effect the changes we think our students need, we sometimes fall into the same trap as many of the so-called reformers that we daily deride. Would it be so horrible to have a 55-minute-(or whatever)-a-day course called “21st Century Literacy Skills” taught by someone who’s pretty immersed in this arena? (For those of you who have heard Will passionately speak about these literacies, would you be averse if he was available to teach that to your students?). And, yes, these ideas should be talked about, explored, and modeled in all classrooms in addition to that one course, but if a school decided to dedicate time for that course, would it be so bad? (As Chris Lehmann has often said, if you value something let me see where it lives in your schedule. I think a case could be made that having a course in every kid’s schedule dedicated to this would show that you very much value it. Although it’s not the only way.)

But I also think it’s okay if a school decides that, no, these should be embedded in all of our courses and we’re not going to teach a separate, pull-out course specifically about these skills. There’s not one right way to do this and, if we insist there is, then we take away something I think is vital to making this whole school thing work: flexibility and personalization. (I think perhaps the only good thing I said at EduCon was that all education is global, but it’s also local.) The teachers in the classrooms with their kids, with their very individual students, with specific backgrounds and learning conditions, and very specific wants, needs and passions, need to be able to address those needs as they see fit, without folks criticizing that that's "so 2005." (And, yes, I’m as guilty of that as anyone. Mea culpa.)

I also think that much of the angst over the “21st Century Skills” label is misplaced. While I agree with folks who say that many of these skills were important pre-21st century, I disagree with some of their conclusions. First, I think that while many of these skills (collaboration and communication immediately come to mind) were very nice to have in the 20th century, I think you could often get by without them. I would suggest that for most of the professional jobs that many folks aspire to these are now necessary and prerequisite skills, not just “nice-to-have” skills.

Moving beyond employment, I also think they are necessary skills to be effective citizens in the 21st century. As the Twitter discussion unfolded, Zac Chase, Laura Deisley and I broke off into a side discussion around being an informed voter in the 21st century. Zac pushed back suggesting that really today isn’t all that different in terms of being a voter, saying that sure there are a lot more people talking about stuff, but in the end are they really saying anything that’s changing the process? (More from Zac around these ideas). Laura and I, representing the – ahem – older crowd, suggested that based on our experience, we feel it really is different. That the wealth of information available about candidates and issues, the various forms of media used to convey that information, and the ability to interact socially and at a distance around them makes being a voter/citizen much, much different today.

This is different, and it requires different skills.

And while I understand and partially agree with the argument that “Hey, we’re eleven years into the 21st century, shouldn’t we already be teaching these skills and let’s just get on with it instead of talking about them like they’re new,” I also think that some are overlooking one pretty important point: we still have eighty-nine more years left in the 21st century. I think too many folks hear “21st Century Skills” and think of a fixed, standard set of skills that are settled and clearly defined. But I think they’re still evolving, and will continue to evolve (transform?) in ways that are really hard to imagine at this point. Is it so bad to use a label that forces us to look forward? (Did educators in 1911 know what the next eight-nine years were going to bring? Would it have been bad for them to be talking about 20th Century Skills?)

That was one of the essential ideas of the presentation that shall not be named – that we live in exponential times. If Kurzweil is right in his prediction that by mid-century a $1000 computer will exceed the computational capability of the human race, then life is going to be radically different, and our brains have literally not evolved in such a way for us to truly understand that. Our brains do a pretty good job of projecting things out linearly, but we suck at exponential (which is a really important point that Kurzweil makes several times).

Here’s the example that I use with my Algebra class to demonstrate this. Take a standard piece of Xerox paper and fold it in half. Then fold it in half again. And again. And again. How many times do you have to fold it in half until the thickness equals the distance from the Earth to the Moon? (Yes, understanding you couldn’t physically fold it in half that many times, but assuming you could.) Go ahead, take a gut-level, intuitive guess of how many times. Answer below.

Richard Miller, chair of the English Department at Rutgers, says that
We're living in the time of the most significant change in human expression in human history
 and that
We are no longer grounded in the printing press; what you see before us is the networked world.
The networked world is different than the world in the previous centuries. Yes, we’ve always had networks. The cavemen had learning networks. They knew who to go to learn about hunting, and who was the expert on gathering, and who to learn from about how to defend the tribe. And our networks evolved and expanded over time, and include our extended families, and our neighborhoods, and our places of employment, and often a professional community. And they includes books, and 20th century media like radio and television. But I still don’t think that compares to the potential (realized by some, not by others) of our learning networks today. I have teachers on six continents that I learn from every day. Many of whom I’ve never met face-to-face.

This is different, and it requires different skills.

Miller goes on to say,
To compose, and compose successfully in the 21st century, you have to not only excel at verbal expression, at written expression, you have to also excel in the use and manipulation of images. That's what it means to compose . . . All of our students, regardless of discipline, regardless of major, can come together and work on this central activity of multimedia composition. That’s writing in the 21st century. It’s multiply authored, it’s multiply produced.
I think that if you agree that multimedia composition is a “central activity” of communication in our current time, then that requires some things to change.He also says,
We do not have a pedagogy on hand to teach the kind of writing [composing?] I'm describing. It needs to be invented.
Invented certainly suggests there’s something new here.

Jason Ohler defines literacy as “being able to consume and produce in the media forms of the day.” Is anyone going to argue that the “media forms” of today are not significantly different than media forms previously? Or that our ability to not only consume, but produce them, is not significantly different? Different not only in form, but in ubiquity, presence, function, and impact? As the National Council for the Social Studies says,
We live in a multimedia age where the majority of information people receive comes less often from print sources and more typically from highly constructed visual images, complex sound arrangements, and multiple media formats.
This is different, and it requires different skills.

The National Council of Teachers of English says,
Because technology has increased the intensity and complexity of literate environments, the twenty-first century demands that a literate person possess a wide range of abilities and competencies, many literacies. These literacies are . . . multiple, dynamic and malleable.
21st Century Skills, however you define them, are not static. They are “multiple, dynamic and malleable.” If folks want to use "21st Century Skills" as a catch-all label, I think that’s fine. If folks don’t want to use that label as a catch-all, then that’s fine as well. I think we need to move beyond arguing about the label, beyond saying there’s one right way to do this. If “literacies” is an accurate description, then it’s a core set of skills that all students (people) need to have, and I suspect having a course dedicated to it and/or embedding it in all classrooms are both better approaches than dismissing them because of the label.

Today is different, and it does require different skills. So what’s so wrong with having different approaches to help students learn those skills? There's no one right way.

Oh yeah. 42. Forty-two folds for the thickness of the paper to equal the distance from the Earth to the Moon. Most folks’ intuitive guesses are five or more orders of magnitude off. We suck at exponential. If we’re so bad at imagining that, then what else do we lack the capacity to imagine?

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11 Comments:

Blogger Will Richardson said...

So thanks for taking this deeper, Karl. (I wish this would happen more in my kids' classrooms.) Good stuff for the most part.

We're basically on the same page, but as usual, that initial 140-character Tweet (with a few characters left over) very poorly communicated my frustration. I don't disagree that we shouldn't be so angsty over the 21st Century Skills phrase, or that schools should be able to teach a course in 21C Literacies. The problem, however, is that course too often becomes the easy button, the way that we get around doing the really hard work of going deep into our curriculum to build these literacies into all aspects of what we do in schools. If we offer the course or the unit, we can check that box without every really making all this stuff that is really different show up anywhere else in the learning we do. I've seen it...I see it in many of the schools I get a chance to visit.

So, I really wasn't saying that there was one right way as much as I was suggesting that this is one wrong way. The kind of skills we're talking about here transcend disciplines and grades. To isolate it out suggests, to me at least, an unwillingness to see the bigger picture, the one that is so different.

2/8/11 3:26 PM  
Blogger Michelle said...

I think I see what Will is saying, and I see it in our schools all the time. The teacher librarian at our school (yes, we're still lucky enough to have teacher librarians) is often tasked with teaching kids "21st century skills," but I don't know how often anyone else incorporates them into their classrooms. In our secondary buildings, those things are seen as the "computer teachers" jobs. I don't understand that mentality!

As a music teacher, I'm lucky enough to have flexibility in what I teach so I can learn with my students about making connections, collaborating, communicating, etc.

And Karl, I completely agree with you. Things are different. We ALL need to be teaching and learning differently... I just don't think that "school" is catching up quickly enough.

2/8/11 3:52 PM  
Blogger Karl Fisch said...

Will - That was fast.

Yeah, I know we basically agree, just used your tweet to force me to write something. And I know that course can become the easy button, but it doesn't have to and I think we need to be careful about assuming that it always does. Broad brush strokes . . .

Michelle - We also pretty much agree. I just think we should be careful about tarring a school that creates such a course just because we've seen it done poorly. I think a teacher librarian is an excellent person to lead that effort, as long as they are leading and not doing a solo act.

2/8/11 3:59 PM  
Blogger Mary Ann Reilly said...

My concern about the conversation is that all of the talk about skills tends to situate both 20th and 21st century literacy skills as examples of autonomous literacy (Street, 1985). This is highly problematic. Being literate is a cultural practice that is always informed by who we are and are not. Separating that from a set of autonomously sitated skills allows us to imagine we can transmit "literate behaviors" to and from people. How one organizes the experiences we call "literacy" matters and understanding that those practices are culturally (in)formed requires more emphasis. The more important question I think is not what the "course" will be called, but thinking that such learning can and ought to be reduced to a set of skills that can be transmitted and assessed (I am sure someone has already written a 21 st century literacy skills rubric). it won't matter a hoot so long as we continue to think that skills are transferable commodities that are striipped from sociocultural contexts. What we value, believe, understand, and privilege is our Discourse. Coming to understand the power and limitations of such ought to be the work we most privilege at hand.

2/8/11 4:01 PM  
Blogger monika hardy said...

struck a chord.
reminded me of this: http://tinyurl.com/63k4frt

if it resonates, super.
if not, ignore.

2/9/11 12:32 AM  
Blogger Patrick Higgins said...

Karl,

Understanding that we are all basically agreeing here, I'll have to split the hair and move in Will's direction here, and here's why:

When you place those specific "skills" within the confines of one class, those skills tend to stay in that class unless there is a conscious effort not only by the staff, but also by the students, to port them to their other practices. How many times have we heard teachers/students say "that's the blogging class," or "don't take teacher x because he/she makes you add to his Moodle discussion board every night?" Or worse, "Isn't that 21st Cent. Literacy class where they are supposed to be doing that stuff? because I have content to cover..."

I'd rather see the community come together and decide which aspects are going to be present in all classes, which aspects of "21st Century skills" they feel are valuable enough to be deal breakers for each of their disciplines.

2/12/11 8:05 PM  
Blogger Karl Fisch said...

Patrick - Well, splitting hairs when dealing with Will and me is a challenge in and of itself. I'm sure Will will be relieved as this is the first time anyone has ever agreed with him over me.

If it was up to me, I would prefer the approach you and Will suggest. But it's not up to me. Or to you. Or to Will. It's up to each school to make the best decision for that school and their students. I'm finding it a little hard to understand how we can all be so sure we know what's best for every single situation out there.

So, if the choice is a school that ignores this issue completely, or a school that teaches a separate course (and hopefully also integrates across all courses), you'd suggest the school ignore it completely?

2/12/11 8:57 PM  
Blogger Karl Fisch said...

For anyone following along, Mary Ann posted some additional thoughts on her blog.

2/12/11 8:59 PM  
Blogger Learner2020 said...

Not that I have any standing in this conversation, as I am merely an Audio Visual Educational Sales Representative or what most educators refer to as a vendor, I am however a member of the International Society for Technology in Education, also known as ISTE.

Karl knows me from work we've done for his school. Most of it good.

ISTE does provide a rubric for teachers called NETS (National Educational Technology Standards) for Teachers and for Administrators.

For Karl or any of his colleagues that would like, I have a couple of hefty NETS publications that I am willing to lend. The first is "Preparing Teachers to Use Technology". The second is a NETS "Resources for Assessment". I have read them but have no immediate need for them.

It just so happens that I am one of those people who loves to learn for the sake of learning. One of my favorite publications in the Journal of Research on Technology in Education. It's always filled with interesting articles.

One study in a recent edition, did an expose on students learning of different grade levels using a popular movie making software program with students required to execute different roles in a timely completion of a motion picture project. The quick of the matter is that the Juniors and Seniors under three different dynamics never finished their projects on time, but only one group of sophomores did. The authors postulate that the habits that the older, more experienced students had gained, failed them because changes in the version of the actual movie making program changed during the course of the experiment. The sophomores hadn't Lolo'd (a sales term meaning Locked On Locked Out)themselves into preset patterns of using the program.

This speaks to Karl's point of the pace of change. It's moving faster than your brightest students.

None of us will master all of the facets of technology - the hardware or the software.

There's a reason I'm not a teacher and it has to do with patience. I admire each and everyone of you because you possess an innate strength that most of the rest of us don't possess... or at least you should if you're going to be good at your job...and that's patience.

Seriously, if anyone would like to take me up on my offer of my "lending library" please let Karl know.

David Alley

2/13/11 7:10 PM  
Blogger Kayla Nelson's EDM310 Class Blog said...

I am a student in Dr. Strange's EDM310 class at the University of South Alabama. I enjoyed reading your post. I agree there is no "one right way" of going about teaching technology. A lot of schools are struggling with budget cuts, and I think that technology could be added in every class, not just one. I also am optimistic about the 21st century. I loved that you made the comment we are only 11 years in, we have "89 more to go." This shows that yes we've come a long way, we still have many more years to go. Great post!

2/15/11 10:10 AM  
Blogger Miranda R Tidikis said...

I am a student in Dr. Strange's EDM310 class at University of South Alabama. Dr. Strange's class is about 21st Century literacy skills. By the end of our class we should have a working knowledge of media communications, current and future technologies and how to use them, and how to use the technologies legally and safely. So this post hits home. In our case this is a separate course to learn these skills. I like the idea of having a separate class that focuses and can get really in-depth with the skills. I also feel that it should be embedded in other courses as well. I do not think that the labeling should be such a large issue though. The importance should be focused on the skills. As educators I believe we should be literate in skills that are necessary today and help us with what ever future skills we are going to encounter. I believe that we should try and embed these skills in our teaching if possible. We should be teaching our students what they need to know and how to use the technologies available to them. I really enjoyed this post. Thank you for sharing.
I will be commenting on another post of yours in two weeks, March 6, then posting a summary of both posts on my blog if you would like to read my post. My blog is http://TidikisMirandaedm310.blogspot.com

2/20/11 2:16 AM  

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Monday, February 07, 2011

Kiva Loans

(cross-posted from my Algebra Class Blog)

It took a while because Kiva didn't have very many available loans there for a little bit, but I was finally able to loan out the $300 we raised for Kiva today. I picked 12 different entrepreneurs/groups in Kyrgyzstan and loaned them each $25. They are all women (or the groups include women), as empowering women in underdeveloped countries is one of the best ways to help.

Here are the 12 different loans:
  1. Mairambu Azimbaeva's Group
  2. Bubush Rysmendieva
  3. Gulmayram Sarybaeva
  4. Zoya Estebesova
  5. Gulnur Taylakova
  6. Olmoskan Suerkulova's Group
  7. Gulchahira Rysbaeva
  8. Nazira Karalaeva's Group
  9. Uulkan Ermamat Kyzy's Group
  10. Tilebat Batyrbekova's Group
  11. Jumabubu Orokova's Group
  12. Nurhan Ergeshova's Group
Click through the links to learn more about these folks, and consider contributing on your own to Team Shift Happens (or just to Kiva in general, it doesn't have to be part of a team).

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Blogger Wendy Wolfe said...

In the fall of 2009 I traveled to Kazakhstan and while there, met some amazing people from Kyrgyzstan, most whom worked for the government or universities at the time. (Those who worked for the government have since lost their jobs in last year's unrest.) That region of the world is in such need with great potential and Kiva is great. I hope your class has a great experience.

3/1/11 5:19 PM  

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Tuesday, February 01, 2011

Blended Algebra

I need your help again. I'm currently in the brainstorming phase of trying to figure out what a blended learning high school Algebra class might look like in my school. We're defining a "blended" class as one that is designed with both virtual and face-to-face components, with a significant portion of the class taking place in a non-school setting.

(Note: "significant" does not indicate a certain percent, it just means that this is not a "regular" face-to-face class with an online component. A "significant" portion of the content/learning will be delivered/completed/happen outside of  a traditional brick-and-mortar classroom.)

Since this is very much in the beginning of the brainstorming phase, it's pretty wide open in terms of how it might be structured. At this point, the following are the only parameters that we can't change (and I may be assuming too much even with these):
  1. We have to teach our current Algebra curriculum. See the skill list from my current Algebra class for an idea of what we have to "cover." So this is not the time or place to have the discussion of whether we should be teaching Algebra.

  2. We have to assign grades, and those grades have to be kept in our student information system and available on our portal for student/parent access at any time.

  3. The class is time-bound to our school year, so students need to start at the beginning (mid-August) and finish the course by the end of our school year (late May). (And the course might have to be time-bound to our semester schedule, so they have to finish the equivalent of first semester Algebra by mid-December - not sure of this yet.)
Other than those three restrictions, the rest at this point is open. Here's my Google Doc with some notes (not editable, also embedded below) and the brainstorming wiki page (editable, please do edit). You can comment on this post, edit the wiki page, or start/contribute to a topic on the discussion tab of the wiki page.



You can see from my notes that I am making a few assumptions in addition to the three non-negotiables above, with the most significant one being that this will be a "flipped" or "reverse" classroom, with the traditional lecture component delivered via online video outside of face-to-face time. While these assumptions are where I'm leaning, they still are subject to change.

You can also see that one of the huge questions that is still up for grabs is whether this class just teaches the Algebra skills, or whether we try to teach the skills and have the students try to go deeper, exploring the mathematics (perhaps through a project/problem-based approach, perhaps not). While it's probably no surprise that philosophically I prefer the latter option, this pilot course may not be the place to try this.

So, I'd appreciate any feedback/brainstorming you'd like to contribute.

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Blogger Matt Townsley said...

This is a huge undertaking, Karl. Kudos to you for giving it a whirl. One "issue" I have philosophically with the strictly flipped classroom / Khan Academy video approach is one of appropriate pedagogy. Here's what I mean...if you want to students to construct a concept (let's say the idea that two perpendicular lines have opposite reciprocal slopes), it might be done more effectively in groups of 2-3 using a structured activity you design rather than watching some examples on Khan Academy. When it comes to algebraic ideas, Khan makes a lot of sense (follow these three steps...check for errors...), but when a relationship or concept come into play, a video may not be appropriate.

Does that make sense? I guess what I'm trying to suggest is a flexible approach that changes based on the standard. You probably already knew that though. :)

2/1/11 4:29 PM  
Blogger marleyfan601 said...

While I am not an experienced professional by any stretch of the imagination, why not use the same type of systems that I have experienced thus far in college. Most popularly teachers use an online class shell that contains important documents, links, and most notably a discussion board. This method has been fine in English, but in math it will require a bit of work on your part to think of creative assignments. Given your expertise and technological savvy, I believe that a simple system such as described above, in conjuncture with current technological trends for education, you could do something very inspirational and lasting for your students.

2/1/11 5:04 PM  
Blogger Scott Sibberson said...

I have some teachers teaching Chemistry in "flipped" fashion at my high school. They do it so the students can watch some instruction and have class time to ask questions and solve problems with the teacher experts there to help. This could be very beneficial in a math classroom, especially if you are not creating all of the sessions for the students to watch on your own. I'd like to see how it goes.

I hope to see you when you come to Ohio in a couple of months.

2/1/11 5:26 PM  
Blogger Karl Fisch said...

Matt - Yeah. With my current face-to-face Algebra class, that's how I'm doing it. I introduce/explore the concept in class, then they watch the step-by-step video for homework after exploring. (My videos, not Khan's, fwiw.)

For what my district is asking me to look at, though, I'm not sure that's going to work out. We'll see.

2/1/11 6:38 PM  
Blogger Karl Fisch said...

marleyfan601 - I'm curious, how does that work for you? Do you feel like it's just as effective, or even more effective, than a completely face-to-face class?

2/1/11 6:42 PM  
Blogger Karl Fisch said...

Scott - If you're at that conference, try to find me and we'll talk.

What you describe is more or less what I'm currently doing in my Algebra class (although I did create all my own videos). As I mentioned in my comment to Matt, though, I think this blended class may need to be a little more online and a little less face-to-face, not sure yet.

2/1/11 6:45 PM  
Blogger monika hardy said...

here's what the kids created last year in an attempt to own their learning in algebra 2:
http://tinyurl.com/yeejs2x

here's a jing explaining it - esp how the cyclic grid worked:
http://tinyurl.com/46bb9t2
not mentioned in the jing, notice at the bottom of the grid - we had an expert tutor from india on call for those moments of - where is this in real life. highly recommend logging that as an open source collection. i know you do a ton of that already Karl.

and then here's a doc explaining the philosophy behind what we did, how we got started etc: http://tinyurl.com/6f9b4m5

and this ning is where we housed it all:
http://talk-ed.ning.com/
it's morphed from the time the jing was made. on the right hand side if you go down a bit to a yellow strip labeled - it's right here - that takes you to the grid.
below that is the updated version of most popular resources the kids used.

the ning hasn't been touched much this year - as we have moved on to facebook.
2 years ago we lived on moodle. last year i had the moodle and the ning available per their choice - everyone was on the ning by semester. this year i offered the ning or facebook.

if any of this helps or interests you Karl, and you'd like to know more. give me a holler.

bravo to all you are doing.

2/2/11 2:04 AM  
Blogger Sue Downing said...

I'm not an expert, but I have been playing with algebra since I was introduced to it more than four decades ago. I think your blended algebra plan can be a great combination of f2f practice/help and students using provided links and sources they find themselves to explore the concepts. The learning opportunities outside the classroom, such as the Kahn Academy and the links below, would help your students become self-directed lifelong learners.
http://www.ck12.org/flexbook/book/1374/
http://www.mathalicious.com/
http://www.purplemath.com/
http://www.yummymath.com/index.php
I wish you the best success in your endeavor!

2/2/11 5:34 AM  
Blogger The Curmudgeon said...

Carl,

Since I became aware of your "Flipped" concepts, I have had the notion that you should connect to some local resources. Try some of these demos and see it applies in your paradigm

http://tcfir.org/lapt/sys/options.cfm

Also, I am aware of an online Algebra resource that meets or exceeds current standards and SAT proficiencies.

I'm more than glad to assist.
Reid Cornwell
Wrc@tcfir.org

2/2/11 9:48 AM  
Blogger marleyfan601 said...

The thing I found the most liberating about it was having a venue to express my opinion; even though the class was heavily discussion oriented, it was nice to be able to go online, view the text, and be able to give my interpretation. The only downfall was that everything was very basic as far as the technological aspect was concerned. Everything occurred within the class shell, but if the was a way to incorporate virtual activities into this scheme I believe it could be really fantastic because it provides an expressive outlet as well as a practical one.

2/2/11 3:10 PM  
Blogger David Warlick said...

Karl,

I read your post yesterday, but am just now getting back to it. The frost thought that i had was including in the virtual realm a video at the front end of each unit or top that illustrates some problem to be solved but the upcoming learnng, or some other application. Perhaps even solicit videos from leathers after the unit. I'm not sure this is possible, and there were certainly times in my life when I would have sworn that there was no possible practical application for algebra. But I'm older and more mature now.

Another idea is that of including a virtual world as part of the virtual realm. This would not be a place to meet nearly as much as it would be a sandbox where leathers can actually apply their spends (algorhythms) to create objects that actually perform. I've done some building and scripting in Second Life and it's almost entirely about algebra.

I know that Second Life would be difficult, but OpenSim should work the same way and they may even have better tools out ther now.

2 penny's worth.

2/3/11 3:04 PM  
Blogger Karl Fisch said...

Thanks everyone for the ideas. Thinking.

2/7/11 8:48 PM  
Blogger smckay said...

I currently teach an Algebra class to 8th grade students and a few in 9th grade using this blended approach. My school is an independent study school that provides instruction two days a week. We usually cover 4-5 lessons from a textbook each week. In the past, I just covered several lessons each class period period and students did all homework assignments at home.

Recently, I heard about the "flipped" classroom and was inspired to try this with my students. Most of my instruction is now on screencasts that students watch prior to coming to class. They also do a few simple problems at home.

I created Cornell Note sheets with fill in the blanks and space for working out problems. During my screencasts, I am filling in the notes and my students are completing their notes while watching on their own time.

I often make minor errors, because I'm recording so many screencasts in a short period of time, but instead of recording the screencast again, my students know that if they find an error and e-mail it to me, I'll award extra credit points to the first one to identify the error. It keeps them interested and watching carefully.

When students come to class on the two scheduled days, I check their notes and they are expected to use them as we work on more difficult problems together and in groups.

In addition, I offer online tutoring using Elluminate where students come for additional help once a week on a day when they work from home.

Students have different roles in the class - experts: who understand and lead learning teams, scribes: who collaborate with one another and me to write additional notes that are posted on my class website, timekeeper: who let me know when time is running short for a specific activity, and List keeper: who keeps track of topics/questions that I'll address either online or on another day.

My class website is a Google site and I use Google apps extensively. I've created quick checks using Google forms as well other online quizzes that my students take on their own.

Recently, I created a Facebook page for my class. My hope is that I'll be able to quickly and easily communicate with my students. They are more apt to check FB instead of e-mail. I use e-mail to communicate with their parents.

I have other aspects of my class that I am working on, but I've been very pleased with taking the lecture out of the classroom.

You are welcome to look at my class website: https://sites.google.com/a/juliancharterschool.org/mrs-mckay-s-algebra-i/

2/12/11 6:46 PM  
Blogger Susan Goding said...

Have you looked at the work by the National Center for Academic Transformation. Here is what Carol Twigg said about teaching math using a blended model. "In mathematics, the Emporium Model has consistently produced spectacular gains in student learning and impressive reductions in instructional costs. The Universities of Alabama and Idaho, LSU, Ole Miss, the University of Missouri-St. Louis, Virginia Tech and Wayne State have all replaced class meetings with a learning resource center that features student use of instructional software supported by on-demand personalized assistance. We more or less assumed that subsequent new projects in mathematics would want to emulate this success. Boy, were we wrong!" http://thencat.org/RedMathematics.htm

I have posted about his on my blog. I am a school board director and am advocating that our school district move toward this method of math instruction. It has shown good results in secondary education also.
http://susangoding.blogspot.com/2011/02/ncat-model-in-high-schools-that.html
http://susangoding.blogspot.com/2010/11/attitude-adjustment.html

3/27/11 2:41 PM  
Blogger Mr. Knight said...

Hi Karl,

I realize that you have posted this information a long time ago, but I would like to give to you my thoughts and opinions on the subject. I sadly have not been able to research many people with my hectic schedule and finally, I was directed to your blog and found this very interesting.

I think that the idea you have is very innovative and very realistic. It is hard to get away from the traditional style classroom, especially for mathematics. Some people say it is not possible to go from direct instruction to an student-centered classroom with complete exploration. I do have to disagree with those individuals, due to my experiences over the last year in my Geometry classroom.

Something that I tried to create inside my classroom is a project-based learning type of atmosphere. These projects were mostly small, but the emphasis was on 1. Getting to know the basics 2. Applying the basics to something simple 3. Taking what you know and directing it to real-life 4. Hopefully synthesizing that information with future information to come.

The students did all of their projects online and really did not have to be inside the classroom for any of the information. Although the students in my district are required to be inside the classroom, I did individualized instruction with this information and facilitated the learning rather than direct the learning. A lot of my students did not need assistance in the process, rather they just need a little guidance or clarifying questions to help them along the path.

Here are my thoughts on your blended situation:

- I do not think that a face to face meeting is necessary, unless you need a periodic check-up with a students. Or a student is falling far behind and they need required assistance (as stated by your classroom structure).

- You mentioned Khan videos that were created for a variety of topics. I think that Khan's videos are okay, but they lack the personality aspect of what you get when you have your own teacher. I think self-made videos that help with the burning questions that your students have and embed them on your website, would be a better idea than using Khan's. This way the students know that you are there to answer their questions, rather than directing them to a place where someone else can answer for them.

-My thoughts with having some sort of pre-prescribed program for your students like Khan or Catchup math, takes away from the individual prospering that your students can do. With project-based performance the students can turn their projects into something personal and you can see them prosper in their own light. If you allow them to follow one standard and just focus on the math, I believe that the students will get bored and lose interest, as well as, learn a way to beat the system.


Those are my thoughts on the subject and I do not know if I have helped you in any way, shape or form, but I think that you have an excellent idea. The following http://grou.ps/bentongeometry/talks/c455959 is my website that the students and I used to create our projects I made most of the assignments and have used them to complete all of the standards set-forth by the state. You are more than welcome to look through any of these and I will be happy to discuss things that might be helpful to you.

I am no expert and I do not want to come off as one, I am just telling you what I know and have learned and maybe the knowledge that I have gained could help you. Thanks Karl!

6/16/11 6:28 AM  
Blogger Karl Fisch said...

@Mr. Knight - thanks for your thoughts, I really appreciate it.

(Sorry, for some reason your comment got tagged as spam and I didn't notice it for a few days, so I just now published your comment.)

6/16/11 7:26 PM  

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