By Allan Alach
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I wish you all a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year. Forget about education, schooling, GERM, etc and focus on what really matters - on yourself and those near and dear to you.
I welcome suggested articles, so if you come across a gem, email it to me at allan.alach@ihug.co.nz.
This week’s homework!
A couple of week’s back I posted a link to an article about Finland’s intention to downplay the teaching of handwriting. Here’s another perspective.
“But psychologists and neuroscientists say it is far too soon to declare handwriting a relic of the past. New evidence suggests that the links between handwriting and broader educational development run deep.”
This week’s contributions from
Dan Pink: How Teachers Can Sell Love of Learning to Students
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“In his new book To Sell is Human, author Daniel Pink reports that education is one of the fastest growing job categories in the country. And with this growth comes the opportunity to change the way educators envision their roles and their classrooms. Guided by findings in educational research and neuroscience, the emphasis on cognitive skills like computation and memorization is evolving to include less tangible, non-cognitive skills, like collaboration and improvisation.”
Igniting Student Writer Voice With Writing Process Strategies
Bruce’s comment: Help students discover the power of writing.

7 Ways to Use Technology With Purpose
Bruce’s comment: Using technology with purpose – is technology still oversold and underused?
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Outlook on instruction: Class around the clock
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“Some exciting advancements are on the horizon for classrooms in 2015. While they sound technical, the biggest changes aren’t going to be driven by an app, a computer program or a new kind of tablet—they will come from new theories about how to engage both students and teachers in the classroom.”
Provocations for Early Childhood Education
Bruce’s comment: Just read a few of the postings on this blog to remind us of the kind of childhood we used to have and what the young need today – an exploratory childhood based on play - that some characterise as ‘benign neglect’.
“Just today I really started to piece more things together, to see the connections to who I was as a child and who I am now as an early childhood education practitioner. My passion for envisioning, creating and enhancing spaces for children is most definitely genetic first, then fueled by my studies and work with children, and set ablaze by 16+ years of exploring/applying lessons from the Reggio Approach - that whole nature versus nurture thing.”
Declaring your incompetence
Bruce’s comment: Some good advice if you really want to be a learner.
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Tinkering Is Serious Play
Bruce’s comment: Making things is very serious play – back to the real basics of learning.
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Passion-based learning in the 21st century: An interview with Sheryl Nussbaum-Beach
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“In this interview, Sheryl describes the “shift” she believes must take place in teaching and learning practices if elementary and secondary schools expect to remain relevant in an era when information and communication technologies will continue to expand exponentially.”
To Advance Education, We Must First Reimagine Society
“Because disaffection with the education system reflects a much deeper societal malaise, it’s imperative that we first figure out what kind of world we really want: a world populated by responsible adults who thrive on interdependence and community, or a world of “customers” who feel dependent on products, services, and authority figures, and don’t take full responsibility for their actions?”
Practices to Engage All Learners
Bruce’s comment: How to engage learners – a more important issue than current obsession testing and a narrow orientated accountability.
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From Bruce’s ‘oldies but goodies’ file:
Bruce’s comment: The above article made me think of this excellent book about exploring your environment through a range of perspectives.
“For many of us our experience walking is un-remembered because we fail to pay attention and we miss the possibility of seeing what is in plain sight of us.”
Learning from outdoor play
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Water play |
Following on, Bruce draws attention to this ‘oldy but goody’ blog about creating in early education an environment for the young to learn through play.
“Young children are programmed by evolution to learn from their experiences. By the time they arrive at school they have already developed the ability to walk, talk, draw, ask questions and develop theories about everything.Teachers need to build on such achievements and do nothing to blunt the amazing curiosity young children bring with them. Classroom environments, at all levels, should celebrate students’ interests, questions, and their theories.”
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“In recent years the myth of the principal as the key to school transformation became persuasive and as result the principal's status has gone up commensurably.Crowther questions this myth, believing that the reality has not lived up to the rhetoric. The so called 'heroic leader' may effect short term change but all too often this is a temporary transformation.”
Reflection on my teaching beliefs
Bruce’s comment: unfortunately we still haven’t escaped the surveillance and audit culture!
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Criteria for a quality Classroom.
Bruce’s comment: It’s a bit late for Southern Hemisphere teachers to do much about the ideas in the blog as most schools have closed for the year but it might be worthwhile reflecting about the ideas about criteria for a quality classroom and maybe keep in mind for the new year? The only things I would add to the list of quality learning criteria is that
quality classrooms have moved away from the use of demeaning ability grouping and have ‘reframed’ literacy and numeracy as an integral component of class inquiry studies.
Artwork represents endpoint of student research - year 5/6 |
Fundamentals in education
Bruce’s comment:
On re-reading this I was struck by how little my basic beliefs have remained unchanged over the decades – at the core of my beliefs is the simple idea of the importance of the creative mind continually responding to experience - continually reshaping itself as it goes.It is strange how ideas re-emerge as today I wrote a blog which had the same message – that how the brain ( one’s
identity) is unconsciously shaped by the culture it is exposed to and that we ought to be focussing on the culture we create as teachers rather than being side-tracked by accountability demands. Earlier today I re-discovered a booklet I put together in 1970 about the kind of creative teaching of a group of teachers I worked had developed. Once again this booklet still reflects my current beliefs. It is almost that, over the decades, in the process of coping with imposed compliance demands, I have been forced to dance to others tunes and in the process compromised my beliefs. I have the feeling I have come full circle. Let the others comply if they wish – let’s stick to what we really believe in.
1970s booklet |
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