Sunday, January 30, 2011

Blog Post #2

Did You Know 3.0:

I have seen this video before, but it is still shocking to imagine some of the information from it. It is hard to believe all of the technological advances the video predicts, like that there will be a computer in thirty odd years that will have more computation capabilities than the entire human race. It sounds like something out of a science fiction movie or something, but it could happen in our lifetimes.

This video really shows why we as teachers and as human beings should try to keep ourselves as informed as possible with the newest technological advances, because our children will have access to things that we cannot even fathom now. My own parents and grandparents are still trying to figure things out, like cell phones, facebook, and the internet in general, while I've been familiar with these things for years. My mom works on computers, so she knows a bit about them. She and I often get calls from my grandparents asking questions about how to do certain things that seem simple to both of us, whether that be typing up a resume or finding someone's facebook page. The point is, kids know how to do things that many adults do not and this is not going to change, so teachers need to be as technologically literate as possible to keep up and to utilize some of that technology in the classroom.


Mr. Winkle Wakes

This really showed how much things have changed in the world in the past 100 years. Advances in medicine allow people to live through things that would have killed them years ago, business people are able to communicate with each other instantly from across the world, and so on. Ipods, laptops, and cell phones are seen just about anywhere you go and there are constantly new gadgets to figure out.

What the video also points out, though, is how little education has changed. Mr. Winkle walks into a school and is completely comfortable there, because things are not so different than they were a hundred years ago when he fell asleep. In many cases, things are like they were in the school that Mr. Winkle visited, with no real use of technology or exposure to the outside world. It's a shame considering how much technology there is these days. There has to be a way to incorporate some of that into the classroom, right?

The Importance of Creativity

I really enjoyed listening to Ken Robinson talk. He was really funny, but he also made a great point about creativity.

"If you're not prepared to be wrong, you'll never come up with anything original".

I completely agree with this quote and his stance on creativity in education. Children can be corrected and told they are wrong so often that they can lose their creativity for fear that they may be wrong again, which is what Mr. Robinson is saying here. I like his ideas about teaching students the arts the same way that we teach mathematics and the humanities. Encouraging the creativity of students should be important too.

Teachers should work to harness students' creativity and encourage them to grow in the things that they are good at instead of, as he said, telling them that they should not work on these areas because they will never get a job in those fields. The story about Jillian was really interesting and what he said, that someone else might have medicated her and told her to calm down, is so true. We should work to be more like that doctor was, encouraging rather than discouraging creativity.


Harness yout Students' Digital Smarts

The work that teachers like Ms. Davis (and our own Dr. Strange) are doing is amazing. When I was in middle school, I had no idea what a blog was nor did I get to use any of the tools that she is putting to use in her classroom. I never really thought about all the options there are to connect students with the world around them, rather than just sitting them down and teaching them facts. This way they are really being educated and are engaged in what they are doing.

It is so important to be able to use a computer now, so it is really smart of her and others like her to use them in the classroom. I also like that she teaches them how to learn and encourages them to figure things out for themselves, because she won't always be there to show them how to do everything. More teachers should be like she is in her classroom!

Can U.S. Students Compete?

2 comments:

  1. Great Post Kristen! I like it too when Ken Robinson said "If you're not prepared to be wrong, you'll never come up with anything original." Everyone makes mistakes, and we all live and we learn. None of us are perfect. It is not important that we try to be perfect.

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  2. Hi, Kristen!

    You did a great job with your post, but you did not respond to the Cecelia Gault video. Do this, and send me an email when it is posted! You also need to add pictures and links to the videos.

    - Allie

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