Posts Tagged ‘education’

I saw a tweet in the middle of the day – wish I could find it now – that remarked on the irony of a day full of lectures delivered to a roomful of people who love to decry the utility of lectures as a learning tool.

Book 6 // Creating Significant Learning Experiences

Posted March 6, 2010 by Charles
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My Review

The author begins this book in a truly maddening fashion. If I hadn’t needed to finish at least half of it for class I wouldn’t have bothered reading past page 5. The opening quote, which inspired the title (probably not the ideas though, as we’ll see later) actually turns “teachers” into a pejorative: “We won’t meet the needs for more and better higher education until professors become designers of learning experiences and not teachers.” What in the world is teaching, if not designing learning experiences? Any class you plan ahead of time (teaching out of the copy of Wired you read on the bus that morning does count) is a designed learning experience; it may not be a good one, but it fits the descriptor.

For the next few pages he goes on a remarkably cliche rant about traditional methods and citing graduates’ lack of knowledge as an indictment of those lazy professors who “repeat the same practices…for years.” He suggests that a college graduate’s inability to date the Civil War between 1850 and 1900 is the result of poor college instruction, but I’m pretty sure that should have been covered more than once by eighth grade. You can forgive a prof for not including it on the American History exam.

He also suggests that students who take an intro class freshman year (with no later courses in the discipline) should be able to remember the specifics of the material 5 or 10 years later. This is horrifically unrealistic, and makes for an unhelpful criticism.

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The Pace of Change or “I hate being wrong”

Posted December 31, 2009 by Charles
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Over the last few months I’ve heard and read time and again that “things are changing more rapidly than they ever have before.” I wasn’t buying. In my mind there were just too many things that are the same as they were 50 and 100 years ago.

We still use phones (though not tied to the wall or party lines), watch TV and listen to radio (though with higher fidelity and more options), and travel in vehicles powered by fossil fuels.

The one major change that I’ve acknowledged over and over (since the telephone and telegraph) is the computer processor. It’s the common thread in most of the advances I can pinpoint over the last 50 years: advances in space travel, science, engineering, communications, the internet. But I wouldn’t admit that any other change was more than cosmetic, or a shifting of emphases.

Then I asked John Dyer an open-ended question: “What do you think about the idea that things are changing faster than ever before?”

“I think it’s statistically verifiable.” Then he proceeded to walk me through just how wrong I was.

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I once asked a pathologist friend in Philadelphia, ‘Have you seen many brains?’

‘Hundreds of them,’ he said.

‘Have you ever seen one worn out?’

‘I’ve never seen one even slightly used,’ he answered.

Howard Hendricks, from Teaching to Change Lives

Good Statistics and Bad Inferences

Posted November 16, 2009 by Charles
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teen-couple

I’ve used this quote more than once here:

“There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics.”

Sometimes people manipulate statistics to deceive. Statistics are used to get you to give money to shady charities, invest in faulty opportunities, or convince you that what you’re fighting for is wrong. But sometimes, people take statistics and just miss the point completely.

In Cultural Literacy, E.D. Hirsch talks about the Coleman Report, released in 1966, which showed that socioeconomic status was the most prominent determiner of student success, despite the best efforts of schools. Most educational leaders seemed to take that to mean that no matter what schools did, poor kids were going to perform well below wealthy kids. It has become a self-fulfilling prophecy.

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