Posts Tagged ‘SLA’

Tinkering Towards Educon

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

I’ll be heading to Philadelphia later this month for the Educon conference. This is a terrific small conference held at the Science Leadership Academy about education and change. Educon is famous for having “conversations” not “presentations.” This means that the wisdom of the crowd gets shared as we explore one topic in depth.

This year I’m leading a conversation on Tinkering Towards Technology Fluency

Conversation Description: Tinkering is a time-honored educational practice, focusing on a learner exploring a subject or problem without clear goals or time constraints, using objects or tools at hand, driven by passion and curiosity. Seymour Papert used the word, “bricolage” to describe a way to solve problems by trying things out, testing, playing, and trying again. This stands in direct contract to the way we teach students to use analytical methods (such as the scientific method) to solve problems. Current digital tools would seem to support this method of learning, with the rapid ability to build first drafts and easy to use editing tools. When mistakes and prototypes were expensive and time consuming, it certainly made sense to carefully plan your attack on a problem. However, this is no longer the case. In industry, the methodology of production planning has been revolutionized by rapid design tools. Accepted practices of design and planning have completely changed over the past 25 years, with linear “waterfall” planning completely replaced by new “spiral” design methodologies, especially in the design of digital products.

Beginning questions for the conversation are:  How can tinkering influence our understanding of technology literacy as a set of skills to be mastered? How might this influence classroom practice when teaching analytical problem solving in any subject? How can tinkering fit in today’s structured classroom environment? How does a teacher maintain a schedule and series of learning objectives that result in learning, not just fooling around? Is anything a student does tinkering? What role does judgement and content knowledge play in tinkering?

If you are considering attending Educon, I hope you join the conversation!

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Sylvia

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Educon 2.2 – Call for Sessions

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

Educon 2.2 will be held in Philadelphia, PA January 29-30, 2010.

You should come!

I’ve written about this conference before – Educon 2.1,“I’m the luckiest teacher in Philadelphia” (reflections on Educon 2.0), Educon 2.0 – What is Student Voice. It’s a unique conference, lots of space for conversation and meeting people face to face, including the students who attend the Science Leadership Academy, the host of Educon.

But wait, there’s more. Maybe this year it should be you joining and leading the conversation?! (yes… you….)

As Chris Lehmann, principal of SLA says, “This conference only happens because so many people are excited to come together and share their ideas and passion. We have some amazing events lining up for this year, but the sessions — the things that the community creates and imbues with meaning — will always be the heart of the conference. So please, consider coming, and considering submitting a proposal to facilitate a conversation.”

I’m thinking about a new session, something about gender and leadership, from the classroom to the keynote podium. And maybe how technology can help create opportunities for girls and women to lead in new ways. It’s not a fully fleshed out idea, but there just seems to be something there. I’m interested in talking about it, so maybe other people will be too. That’s the cool thing about Educon – it’s about people coming together around ideas, not just slideshows.

So, what’s got you thinking and pondering – and I bet it’s something that keeps other people awake at night. That’s the start of a conversation that matters. Share it, be brave, and submit something. You never know what will come of it.

The deadline is Nov 1 to submit a session idea – see more details here.

Sylvia

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