Cell Phones in Education

Mar 1, 2011 by

Here a a few facts from The Pew Research Center about teens and cell phones:

  • One in three teens send over 100 text messages a day- that’s 3,000 a month!
  • 72% of all teens (that’s also 88% of teen cell phone users) text message.
  • 75% of all teens ages 12 – 17 have their own cell phone, up from 45% in 2004.
  • While some teens are avid texters, a full 22% are not, sending only between 1 – 10 text messages a day.

You can take a look at one of their recent slide presentation on Teens and Cell phones below:

Given the largely ubiquitous nature of the cell phone,  it’s natural that educators would start thinking about them as a potential learning tool.  And even for teens without cell phones, many have adopted devices like iPod touches, which have texting capability, as well as access to apps, which provide yet another window to try to leverage existing technology to squeeze in a little more learning around the edges.
Liz Kolb has written a book called From Toy to Tool: Cellphones in Learning for ISTE. She is an instructor at the University of Michigan, and has a PhD in Learning technologies, and her website, From Toy to Tool, has fantastic resources about the potential of using cell phones for true learning.

One of the interesting things I learned about from Liz’s site was a new web based service called Studyboost.com, where students can essentially create study questions, share questions with classmates, teachers and more, and have questions texted to them at different intervals, to give them additional practice or prompts. I’m going to give this one a go with my own kids, to see if this additional prompt helps them use their long bus ride a little more effectively. While I see this as basically a “flash card meets texting” app, for vocabulary and math facts, it may be really useful, but time will tell.

Overall, I’m intrigued by the creative ways folks are finding to make use of technology already in the hands of many students. Recently, I was at a presentation and SMART has a beta trial of software that would let you use almost any internet-capable device- cell phone, ipod, etc. as an audience response “clicker” device in the classroom, allowing for on the fly assessments and interactive quizzes, using devices already in the hands of most students. This could be a real benefit for school districts all over, feeling the financial pressures growing, and not sure where to get the most for every dollar spent on tech. This would help leverage the devices a majority of students already have in their pockets for something more than entertainment.

The days of every handheld device being a mere toy or distraction are ending, and instead, we’re finding ways of using the available tech in innovative ways to enhance student learning, which is exciting.

Have you thought about where the cell phone fits into education? What do you think are the pros and cons? What would you like to try?

Encouraging Learning

Jan 25, 2011 by

Seth Godin has a great blog post about ways we’ve classically looked at trying to help others do things, big and small. The key part I think all educators and parents should pay attention to is this:

The third method, the one that I prefer, is to open the door. Give people a platform, not a ceiling. Set expectations, not to manipulate but to encourage. And then get out of the way, helping when asked but not yelling from the back of the bus.

When people learn to embrace achievement, they get hooked on it. Take a look at the incredible achievements the alumni of some organizations achieve after they move on. When adults (and kids) see the power of self-direction and realize the benefits of mutual support, they tend to seek it out over and over again.

With differentiated instruction and personal learning, part of what’s asked is for teachers to set expectations, encourage, and get out of the way. Parents need to take this same attitude with grades and homework. Set expectations, guide and assist when needed, but basically get out of the way and let the child do it. Too often we fall into the trap that goading or nagging will work. Too often we take for granted that if giving the opportunity, the student just might make a good and reasoned decision. While I’ll be the first to admit kids don’t always have the experience or the frontal lobes to make the best judgments about what’s good for them now or in the future, if you lay out the case for them and provide all the facts and context, they can make surprisingly good decisions.

We need to develop a greater sense of trust in our students, in our colleagues, and in ourselves to do the right thing, most of the time. Too often I see people making plans, rules, policies and the like for the fringe operators, the people who will go out of their way to test limits or circumvent the system. Those people are never going to go away. They will always be there. The parameters need to be set for the bulk of people trying to do the right thing, and then deal with the outliers as outliers, as one-offs, as making human mistakes or bad decisions like we all do. Because some folks can’t be trusted, doesn’t mean we should all live in a police state. Instead, we have to set the expectation of trust and community, and if we do, the vast majority will follow.

Asserting authority should only have to be used when necessary. If you have a true learning community, it should be a trusting community as well, and you earn the respect and authority you have, as a teacher, parent or student. And this means not having to use your power or assert it very often, because it’s taken as a given, as a parameter of the interaction and group. This requires confidence in your position within the community as well, and that it will not be constantly challenged.

And I think this is really where many of us, including myself, fall short from time to time. You need to be confident and secure in your knowledge, your contributions and your place in a group in order to thrive. If you find yourself needing to assert your power and authority frequently, maybe you need to look at how secure you feel in your position, and whether or not the challenge you feel is internal or external. Sometimes it may be your lack of confidence that exacerbates the challenges to your authority, not a need for more and stricter rules.

Just something to think about.

Kids Know

Dec 11, 2010 by

There was an interesting article in the New York Times about the results of a recent study funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.  The study, costing $45 million and around two years to perform reported what I hope most teachers know in their bones- and I quote the NY Times article here:

“Teachers whose students described them as skillful at maintaining classroom order, at focusing their instruction and at helping their charges learn from their mistakes are often the same teachers whose students learn the most in the course of a year, as measured by gains on standardized test scores, according to a progress report on the research.”

So what we’ve shown in a formal study is good and compassionate teaching works well.

Teachers were ranked as thy study began based on value-added modeling, ranking teachers based on how much their students learned each year as evaluated on tests; the students were separately confidentially surveyed on what they thought of the teacher and classroom.  As it turns out, ” Classrooms where a majority of students said they agreed with the statement, “Our class stays busy and doesn’t waste time,” tended to be led by teachers with high value-added scores, the report said ” confirming that students are as interested in getting to work and getting things done as most adults assume they would prefer to socialize or do anything other than work.

And significantly, the article also states:

“One notable early finding, Ms. Phillips said, is that teachers who incessantly drill their students to prepare for standardized tests tend to have lower value-added learning gains than those who simply work their way methodically through the key concepts of literacy and mathematics.

Teachers whose students agreed with the statement, “We spend a lot of time in this class practicing for the state test,” tended to make smaller gains on those exams than other teachers.

“Teaching to the test makes your students do worse on the tests,” Ms. Phillips said. “It turns out all that ‘drill and kill’ isn’t helpful.”

Education of students is important.  Surprising to most adults, but not surprising to me, is that every study I’ve ever read where people ask students what they think of their teacher and  how hard they’re asked to work yields results where kids are, on the whole, honest and accurate in their assessments when compared to external measures of effectiveness and observations.  Not only that, but when given choices between challenge assignments and the easy stuff, kids choose to challenge themselves, because no one likes things that seem to easy and not of value.

To me, this is further evidence that education works best when it’s an interactive process between teachers and students, which is what differentiated instruction and personalized learning are all about.  Students, regardless of their level or talents, need teachers who are invested in their learning.  They deserve teachers who help them push a bit, make mistakes, learn from them, and help them master skills.

Everything we know from developmental psychology tells us this- from Vygotsky’s scaffolding model, to Piaget’s Assimilation and Accommodation models, to Dr. Bob Brooks, who writes frequently with Dr. Sam Goldstein about resiliency in children and has written the textbook on Understanding and Managing Children’s Classroom Behavior.

Dr. Bob Brooks even asks parents to ask their own children for a performance review from time to time.

When I first heard Dr. Brooks speak and he asked us all to go home and ask our kids how we were doing as parents, a large, audible gasp went up in the room.  He asked us all to ask ourselves why this made us so uncomfortable.  Almost every parent feels comfortable given our kids critique and review of their behavior all the time, but we are scared of the same thing?  Are we afraid that the “power” we hold will evaporate?  Are we afraid our kids will see us as human?  Are we really all as insecure in how we’re doing as the man behind the curtain in the Wizard of Oz?

So, despite not knowing what I would hear, I went home and asked my kids what they thought.  The boys were 7 and 10 at the time and I was nervous, to be honest, for reasons I couldn’t even articulate but could best be summed up as insecurity and lack of formal training other than trial and error at this job called parenting.  I might have graduated from law school, but as my husband, an OB -GYN, will confirm, no one hands you a parenting manual when your baby is born- you are on your own, with only on the job training and the books at Barnes & Nobel as your guide.

I sat down with the oldest boy first, and then his younger brother.  I was surprised at how accurate their observations were and how honest they were.  I was surprised how well they thought I was doing.  Even when I pointed out my own short comings- yelling, crabbiness, pushing them to do better- the kids said they understood and often knew that they needed to be refocused or told what to do, and understood why I got frustrated with them.   This honest conversation was a turning point in our relationship.   It’s now much more relaxed, open and honest.  I know I can ask them what they think if things seem out of kilter, and they can help problem solve the situation.  Instead of going straight to yelling, I can say “I’m frustrated that we keep having this same problem.  Can we find a way to make this easier for both of us in the future?”  We can work together to make a better parent-kid relationship, they trust me more, and trust that I probably have a reason behind even the most arbitrary-sounding rules.

This same honesty and openness works when I’m teaching classes to kids or adults.  Being fallible doesn’t diminish your authority- it actually earns you respect, because it gives those in the room permission to be human as well.  Asking students how they feel the class is going is another form of comprehension check- it lets teachers and students figure out where they stand with each other, and forms a relationship based on trust that’s important to have when you’re asking students to step outside of their comfort zone.

In almost any classroom, we regularly ask students to put themselves on the line in front of the teacher (authority figures) and their peers.  This can be emotionally risky for kids, who worry that what they say may not only be “wrong” but could lead to teasing or ridicule later on.  Unless teachers can establish a classroom where trust between teacher and student (and hopefully between students as well) is valued and important, how can we really expect students to stretch and take the emotional and intellectual risks necessary to learn and grow?

What all of this tells me is that we need to teach students, then subjects.  The people are most important, and the connections you make between teacher and student are the most important thing that goes on in the classroom.  And the data is now backing this up- when teachers are more concerned with creating a safe and supportive learning environment, and help students challenge themselves, make mistakes and learn from those mistakes, as is key with an inquiry-based approach, students do better.  Teachers are rated as being more effective.  Everyone wins.

What’s difficult, is this asks teachers to make an emotional investment in teaching and in their students.  It can lead to disappointments, which no one likes.  It’s not easy.  It’s not scripted.  It requires each teacher to be present and to teach with the student rather than try to fill their brains like filling bottles on an assembly line.  But in the end, the more you invest, the more kids get out, and everyone wins.

If we know this is the right way to teach, if we know it’s the right thing to do for education, what is it so hard to change?

The change is not necessarily systematic.  Most of it is attitudinal, and it starts at the individual teacher level.  It needs to be supported and nurtured by the school and administration in order to thrive, for sure, but you can change your classroom tomorrow by just asking the students how you’re doing, what they like and what they don’t, and what would help improve things.  Problem solve together.  Remember when kids say “hard’ or “difficult”  or “I can’t” ,they are often saying “I don’t understand” or “I need more help” or “Can you explain it in another way?”

What do you think?

Can you change your classroom by connecting with your students and helping them take a more “experimental” approach to assignments- allowing them to make mistakes and get another chance to try again afterwards, once they understand why they made the mistakes and how to tweek it for next time?  What would it do for you if your supervisors treated you this way?  Would it help you improve at your job as well?

Let us know what you think in the comments, and where you would find challenges trying this approach in your classroom.

Classroom Design is Important, Too.

Nov 19, 2010 by

I was at a meeting yesterday, and there was discussion of what a 21st Century classroom should look like. I remembered seeing some information about a “Node” chair that gave lots of flexible seating options in the classroom and seemed to be a better solution than most of the desks I see in classrooms today, which make chiropractors cry- both from the pain they cause and from the money the doctors make straightening out people afterwards!

This point was also highlighted when I read The Principal’s Page blog which spoke about how twitter may be changing education but not school desks, and that we could even have kids pay closer attention if we didn’t treat them like veal. It’s a good read- please check it out.

I’m excited enough about this Node chair to be interested in trying one at home for my own kids, but unfortunately, they are not yet available to the public as a “buy one” option- but they may be after January- I can’t wait!

Check out this Youtube video about the Node chair to better understand not only how design and classroom design helps inform instruction, but how a more flexible seating option might really change how your class interacts.

Great Video featuring Sir Ken Robinson

Nov 6, 2010 by

The best part of this video is not only how it dissects education and the problems we face, but how it exemplifies visual learning at the same time.  Let us know what you think!

The Possibilities of Differentiated Instruction

Oct 22, 2010 by

Differentiating Instruction is about trying to make sure every child has a chance to learn to their best potential.  In today’s diverse classrooms, teachers need to teach not just to the middle of the bell-shaped curve, but make sure the needs of those requiring enrichment are met, as well as those who might be struggling.  In many ways, this is the promise of “Individualized Education Plans”- that children will get a customized education instead of one-size fits all.  Differentiated Instruction tries to give teachers tools to make a customized education a reality for all students, not just those with IEP’s.

With the significant administrative burdens of students with IEP’s and 504 plans, the thought of having to do this sort of thing for every student in the classroom could make any teacher cringe.  In reality, Differentiated Instruction involves planning, assessment and tweeking lessons on the fly, making the whole classroom a more engaging and interactive experience for teachers and students alike.

This year, I have children in 7th and 10th grade myself.  I live in a school district where the teachers are phenomenal, and have shown me time and again they are willing to go the extra mile if the other side of the equation- the kid and the family- are responsive.  For example, this morning, my 12 year old woke up with some nasty stomach issues.  I emailed all of his teachers asking for work.  We emailed assignments to the teachers that needed to be handed in today.

Best of all, at third period, his social studies teacher is going to connect him to the classroom through skype.  Timewise, it takes a few minutes to set up, but it means my child will miss one less class, one less instructional day, and at the same time, not get his friends sick.  Economically, it’s using tools already inside the classroom and at home, so it’s free.  Everyone wins when something like this becomes possible.  A child missing school still can get their work done as much as possible, and teachers don’t have to worry about trying to catch them up nearly as much.

I know this is not “normal” and it’s an anomaly.  But what if it doesn’t have to be?  What if we do go to one to one laptop ratios?  What if kids do have wifi at home?  What if kids can attend school virtually when they need to?  Attendance will still matter, of course, as will handing in all work that’s due, but many fewer kids may fall behind.

Things like this take money and time to be sure.  Without a wired school district, this couldn’t happen.  Without a wired home, this couldn’t happen.  But the “Let’s give it a try” attitude of the faculty and staff is even more important to the overall equation.  It may work well or it may not, but we’ll never know until we give it a test drive.

While we wait for class to start, my son’s reviewing activities and podcasts his teacher has placed on her web page.  His reviewing social studies and science lessons.  The technology doesn’t replace the importance of being in the classroom.  It doesn’t replace his teachers.  These tech tools augment his learning and allow it to continue outside the classroom.  When a kid decides it’s more fun to go and do activities on his teacher’s website- games that also relate to stuff in class- than watch TV, you know you’re winning the battle of engagement.

Engagement and sparking that interest in learning is well over half the battle in education.  Once you have attention, you can take kids on an amazing journey through learning.  We have to find ways for them to be successful.  We have to find ways to make the pathways towards curriculum goals achievable for them.  It may not always be easy.  But in the end, seeing that kid really excited about going to school, and upset when they can’t go is what every parent and every teacher wants for kids.  And it’s what kids want as well- to feel like they are really doing something important and meaningful every day.

Differentiation is one of the keys to getting on that road, and I hope this blog and podcast series will help make that easier for you to achieve in your own classrooms.