Sunday, March 5, 2017

"Learning is creation, not consumption." #IMMOOC Blog Post 2



In Part I of The Innovator's Mindset, one idea that really gave me pause for reflection was the quote from The Center for Accelerated Learning on pg. 55, "Learning is creation, not consumption." It made me think of a sixth question to add to the list of Critical Questions for the Innovative Educator:

What evidence of learning do we see in this student's creation?

For several years I have believed in the power of looking at student work in shifting a teacher's focus from what they are doing to what their students are doing. This shift is important because I have known many teachers who think only about what and how they are teaching, how their day is going, how hard they are working, how busy and stressed they are, how frustrating or amazing their students  can be. I have argued that looking at student work is what is needed to deepen PLC conversations and refocus teacher energy on the student experience. After all, it's the student learning that is the purpose of our work.

Now I feel the need to revise my mantra from "looking at student work" to "looking at student creations." In a creation, a teacher would see not just facts or algorithms regurgitated onto a page, instead she would see synthesis, prioritization, and communication about a topic or concept. This tells us so much more about a student's strengths and weaknesses, his "soft skills," his depth of understanding, and his ability to share it with others.

The painting shown above was created by my daughter for her high school art class. I am not an artist myself, but I can appreciate the skill, focus, persistence, planning, and time management that went into this creation, and I bet her teacher can see it too.

6 comments:

  1. You given me some food for thought: "For several years I have believed in the power of looking at student work in shifting a teacher's focus from what they are doing to what their students are doing" Moving away from teacher-directed to student-centered classrooms can allow us to discover more about our students and the learning in the classroom. Loved your thoughts on this. Thanks!

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  2. I love this idea of thinking about student work as student creations! I feel like that puts a more positive spin on it! "Work" has such a negative connotation! How often do we hear people say they don't want to go to work and they are tired of work? Daily? Hourly? Yet, we then want our students to get excited about their work and engage with their work. But, your spin of student creations is a lot more positive! Creating something is fun and enjoyable! Now that is something I can get excited about and engaged in! :o)

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    1. I agree, Angela. How can we ask students to do what we aren't willing to do ourselves?

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  3. When I go into a classroom, I am so much more interested in hearing what a student has to say about what's happening while I'm visiting. I often ask students what they are working on. I love your focus on creation - I need to adapt my question to "What have you created today?" I'm going to integrate that into my classroom visits tomorrow!

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