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Tag: Terry Heick

  • A New Definition For Equity In Education

    A New Definition For Equity In Education

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    A New Definition For Equity In Education

    by Terry Heick

    In a profession increasingly full of angst and positioning and corrective policy, there are few ideas as easy to get behind as equity.

    Equal. Equality. Equity. Equilibrium. Equate. These are all fine ideas—each tidy and whole, implying their own kind of justice while connotating the precision of mathematics. Level. Same. Twin.  Each word has its own nuance, but one characteristic they share in common is access—a level, shared area with open pathways that are equidistant to mutually agreed-upon currencies.

    When discussing equity, there are so many convenient handles–race, gender, language, poverty, access to technology, but there may be a larger view that we’re missing when we do so.

    Equity is the idea and goal of fairness and inclusion to provide all students with the resources, opportunities, and support they need to succeed, regardless of their background, abilities, or socioeconomic status. Unlike equality, which treats everyone the same, equity recognizes that students come from diverse circumstances and may require different approaches and resources to achieve similar outcomes.

    The Scale of Equity

    There isn’t a more global issue—equity being perhaps the global issue of our time. United Nation statistics published last year in The Economist put it plainly. While progress is being made in sub-Saharan Africa in primary education, gender inequality is in fact widening among older children. The ratio of girls enrolled in primary school rose from 85 to 93 per 100 boys between 1999 and 2010, whereas it fell from 83 to 82 and from 67 to 63 at the secondary and tertiary levels. And elsewhere, in Chad and the Central African Republic, there is a flat-rate of less than 70 girls for every 100 boys.”

    This is a starkly different conversation about equity than the one we might have in the United States, the UK, Canada, or Australia. We have the luxury of becoming choosier, and harsher on ourselves, as progress is made, i.e., let’s first make sure there are free, quality schools everywhere, and that children can all read and write, and then at some point down the line we can concern ourselves with iPads vs Androids, or the broadband access in our poorest communities.

    It’s easy to miss the scale of this as an ‘issue’ because unlike assessment, curriculum, teacher pay, class sizes, educational technology, or any other persistently evergreen edu-choke point, equity never stops affecting. It’s both the center and periphery of everything because we’re always who we are, where we are.

    The Cultural Effect

    As a species, we express ourselves through differences. What makes ‘culture’ interesting is how it both recognizes the individual while simultaneously allowing them to disappear into the whole again. In culture, there is both identity and anonymity. There is a constant self–>group transaction that is based on both affection (inward expression) and image (outward expression). This transaction is then repeated across cultures, with completely different functions. Differences within and across cultures are differences nonetheless, but the individual can think while groups simply gather.

    So this is a brutally narrow take on how people gather and cohort and manifest their vision of what it means to be human, but the point remains: As educators, we suffer that same reductionism when we see the masses the same way Nielsen does television ratings. Students aren’t demographics, and it’s murky at best to see how treating them that way has improved their lot or our shared progress.

    While squinting and trying to narrow gaps, it’s too easy to lose the scale and product of our work. The segmenting of Mackenzie and Andrew into a group, and that group into a subgroup, and their understanding into data, and the knowledge we hope they come away with into standards we can teach with—this all becomes a tone—a posture dictates the terms of teaching and learning. Equity in the classroom is different than in the job market.

    A subcorollary is that we all share equity and inequity, both in possession and effect. In “The Hidden Wound,” Wendell Berry writes, “It may be the most significant irony in our history that racism, by dividing the two races, has made them not separate but in a fundamental way inseparable, not independent but dependent on each other, incomplete without each other, each needing desperately to understand and make use of the experience of the other…. we are one body, and the division between us is the disease of one body, not of two.” This is both abstract and practical. We share both living space and social membership.

    Somehow, though, public education, more so than any other industry or profession, is expected to aggregate these inherent disparities while transcending them. Our task?

    • Create a curriculum that provides a common language for knowledge without homogenizing the nuance of that knowledge
    • Design learning models that are inherently inclusive regardless of access to technology
    • Establish authentic functions for family members and communities who may speak a completely different language

    As individuals, we work to separate ourselves—as children, often based on image, and as adults, often based on income, where we choose to live, what we drive, the smartphone we carry, and what we choose to do “for a living.” But each of these expressions of who we are–gender, native language, race, sexuality, socioeconomic level, and so many others–are also opportunities for disparity all work to undermine the function of education.

    It’s easy to see equity in education as a matter of fairness, access, and inclusion, but that’s only the case if what’s being fairly accessed is a system of teaching and learning that is able to meet the needs of an increasingly global population—that means fluid, responsive, dynamic, neutral, and alive. For an industry that struggles to get every student reading on grade level, this may be a bit much. My gut reaction, then, is that this can only occur through the affectionate expression of the local—this student in this home in this community, with the school functioning as an extraordinary support system.

    The equity is at the student level rather than the demographic level because demographics only exist in paperwork. For every student, there is commonness and there is difference; there is what’s shared (i.e., student needing knowledge), and there is distinction (e.g., poor, rural, white, black, male, female). This never stops. We can revise our schools, curriculum, pedagogy, and technology until it is inclusive, fair, and accessible to every student, but that’s been an ongoing effort that may represent a kind of basement for our goals.

    But why not consider something more ambitious? New thinking about the terms and definitions of gender emphasize both the characteristics and the fluidity of any culture. If we insist on standardizing content, maybe we can avoid standardizing education. How many different answers are there to, “Why learn?” Fantastic! Let’s iterate ourselves until we can honor that.

    The work before us, then, may not be to level an academic playing field for which there is no straight, but rather to create new terms for why we learn, how, and where—and then change the expectation for what we do with what we know.

    Simply guaranteeing access and inclusion into a body of content-based is no longer sufficient if our goals stretch beyond academic. A modern definition for equity in education may be less about equal, fair, or even, and more about personalization–a body of knowledge, habits, and networks that help each student realize their own perfectly unique potential.

    As for a definition for equity in education? How about, “eye-level access to curriculum, education models, and learning spaces that depend entirely on the native interests, knowledge demands, and human affections of learners individually.”

    Or more briefly, “a fully-realized system of learning that starts and ends with the humanity of each student.”

    A New Definition For Equity In Education; adapted image attribution flickr user helpingting and skotit;

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    Terrell Heick

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  • Tone In Teaching: 20 Words That Can Change How Students Think

    Tone In Teaching: 20 Words That Can Change How Students Think

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    Tone In Teaching: 20 Words That Can Change How Students Think

    by Terry Heick

    While I often talk about ‘scale’ as one of the primary challenges in education–and have also wondered about curriculum, too–a more subversive concept constantly at play throughout education is tone.

    As an ‘English’ teacher, I always explained tone to students as a kind of  ‘attitude’ that can be expressed in a variety of implicit and explicit ways–from words (said and unsaid) and body language to voice tone, timing, irony, and any other modality used to communicate ideas.

    How Students See Themselves Matters

    Tone affects how students see themselves and their role in the learning process. In fact, a student’s own ongoing internal dialogue and thoughts about themselves and their self-identity as learners isn’t just a ‘factor’ in learning but one of the single most important factors.

    Imagine you were preparing to go on stage to dance in front of some kind of an audience. Consider the possible scenarios:

    Scenario 1: You can’t dance and you know you can’t dance

    Scenario 2: You can’t dance but believe that you can

    Scenario 3: You can dance but believe that you can’t

    Scenario 4: You can dance and you know you can dance

    How many of these scenarios are likely to yield a ‘good’ dancing performance? In addition to being honest with one’s self, internal ‘self-talk’ and your own perception about yourself matters, too. Without the right tone during the ‘interactions of learning described above, everything feels–and often functions–all wrong.

    An Example Of Tone In An Interaction With A Student

    Our underlying assumptions (about everything) impact tone greatly and come across plainly in our phrasing and language choice during our interactions with students.

    Think about the difference between saying, ‘Tyler, what answer did you have for #3?’ and ‘What are some possible responses for #3 that might make sense?’ Suddenly it’s not a matter of ‘Tyler’ and what he ‘has’ as an answer. Nor does he feel as put on the spot. He still may not feel empowered to answer freely and may not have a clue how to answer. But the tone in the latter is completely different, shifting from a matter of accuracy to a matter of possibility.

    Part of this is about using a growth mindset with students so that they are more likely to do so themselves. But while tone is generally a cause, as we stated above, it can also be an effect; that is, the tone of the classroom is created by–in part–the tone and underlying implications of the language used within it. With that in mind, below are some words and phrases that can greatly impact the tone of learning in your classroom.

    To have the desired effect (i.e., establishing a tone to the learning process where students feel supported, empowered, safe, and absolutely integral to their own success), context matters, of course. How this does or doesn’t work varies wildly on everything from the age of the students to your own personality and teaching style and so on. The collection below is only meant to introduce you, as a teacher, to the possibility of language that empowers learners.

    Further, note that these words aren’t necessarily ‘good’ or ‘bad.’  The point is that tone matters and is hugely adjustable through words and phrases, and some of those words and phrases appear below.

    Tone In Teaching And Interactions With Students: 20 Words That Change How Students Think

    Might

    This one was one of the most useful words I use as a teacher. By disarming the question of outright students and only asking students to surmise, ‘might’ can create a tone of accessibility for many questions.

    Consider the difference:

    “Why does so much literature depend on symbolism for effect?”

    “What might literature depend on symbolism for effect?”

    In the latter, you’re not asking for an answer, you’re asking for a hunch.

    Need

    “I need…” or “You need…” can express a kind of sympathy and utility, but often are used instead to make a specific declaration or even accusation “You need to be…” or “I need you to…” Overall, need is an urgent word that, if overused or imprecisely applied, can create a negative tone that decenters actual learning and inquiry in favor of procedure and compliance.

    Obviously, that doesn’t mean that using the word ‘need’ is bad. Like any word, its semantic effect varies wildly depending on application. The point here is to be as intentional (not necessarily as ‘careful’) as possible–to use language by design to promote student growth.

    We

    If you shift from ‘you’ to ‘we,’ the burden and possibility and work of learning also shift, from singular to ‘all of us.’

    Me

    By talking about yourself–or encouraging students to talk about themselves and their role in the learning process–students are better to see those roles while also hearing others discuss how they see their own role, performance, anxieties, goals, habits, preferences, etc. For example, a teacher saying “For me, being on time gives me extra time to organize myself and settle in to new environments” can help students see the teacher reflecting on themselves, their choices, and their preferences.

    In short, the word ‘me’ personalizes thinking–for better or for worse.

    You

    The word ‘you’ immediately centers the student and their role, responsibility, etc. It is not ambiguous or unclear, it creates a tone of specificity and accountability.

    Pronouns

    ‘What if we…’ vs ‘What if you…’ vs ‘What if (no pronoun)…’?

    Whether you use a singular or personal pronoun–or personal or indefinite pronoun–affects tone. Even choosing to use no pronoun at all matters.

    Consider a situation where you’re discussing an upcoming unit and say “We are going to learn how the environment is impacted by…” Saying, “You are going to learn how the environment is impacted by…” is a bit different–more immediate. If you choose no personal pronoun at all by saying, “How the environment is impacted by…is going to be learned,” it sounds funny and likely wouldn’t be used that way, but it’s clear how pronouns affect tone.

    Why

    Why is a great probing, clarifying, and critical thinking question useful in almost any assessment or line of questioning. Why asks the students to consider macro ideas like purpose and function–not just “When was immigration…” but “Why was immigration…”

    Even prefacing the word ‘Why’ with the word ‘But’ creates a slightly more playful tone. “But why?” is a bit more playful than the blank “Why?” If you want that playfulness depends on the desired effect of the question.

    The tone established by the word ‘Why’ is one of inquiry and understanding and also makes room for much of the subjectivity inherent in knowledge. ‘When’ is, more or less, objective; ‘Why’ is, more or less, subjective.

    Cause and Effect

    Using the words ’cause’ and ‘effect’ can impose objectivity and analysis on a situation that’s otherwise emotionally charged. If a student is anxious or overly-confident or confused, by focusing on the cause and effect of a context, it’s easier to remove the emotion and see what’s going on and why. In that why, ’cause’ and ‘effect’ can create a tone that leads to clinical (and sometimes ‘cold’) analysis.

    An example? “The project running six days behind schedules was, in part, caused by…”

    Also, “The effect of your keeping up with your reading journal was…”

    Both emphasize process, while creating an analytical tone, can be useful in helping students develop an understanding of process and procedure.

    Love

    Discussing ‘love’ and affections don’t always have a place in academic learning. They’re also overused (“I love your writing!”) and so become emptied of meaning. But if students are able to talk about what they genuinely love, the classroom, at worst, becomes a warmer place.

    Think

    The shift from ‘know’ to ‘think’ is similar to the shift from ‘Why did…?” to “why might…?”

    It doesn’t ask students to ‘know’ but rather to simply ‘think’: “Why do you think that might have happened?”

    As with many other words on this list, it makes the learning–and any answers, for example–feel more accessible.

    If

    ‘If…then…’ phrasing can help students see the conditional circumstances–cause and effect, for example. You might say, “If you ask for help and work hard, then you’ll have a greater chance of doing well during this course,” or “If you assume the best in others, then you’ll have a better chance of making friends.”

    ‘If you had to guess, what would you say?’

    ‘What’s your hunch?’

    Possible

    What’s possible in this class? What’s possible with gifts like yours? What’s possible with your project?

    ‘What’s possible’ asks students to imagine and dream and think forward–ideally with hope and positive presuppositions. It’s different than ‘What are…’ and ‘What will…’ and other more concrete phrasing that asks students to know rather than speculate or wonder.

    Might can also work together with possible to great effect: “What’s possible…” might works to help the student wonder: “What might happen if…”

    An extreme example of this? “I’m not sure but if I had to guess I might say that…”

    Though uncertain, this approach provides a kind of rope or ladder to a student willing to try in lieu of confidence or certainty. Model this throughout the year and you just might find students using it as well–thus coming to see knowledge as inherently uncertain.

    Tomorrow

    As with all of the words on this list, the tone established by the word ‘tomorrow’ depends greatly on timing and context–and even the tone of voice used to vocalize the word. Ideally, the word ‘tomorrow’ is used to frame today’s learning and tomorrow’s possibility. It asks students to consider what may come and what their role may be in that, not to mention the further-off ‘tomorrow’ of the future.

    No

    This one’s pretty obvious. If you want a certain and unambiguous tone, use the word ‘no’ firmly. There are times where boundaries need to be set and clarity is necessary. This isn’t ‘bad’–just be aware that a tone is being established with all of your language and use it as mindfully as possible.

    Other common words that contribute greatly to tone in learning: Improvement, But, Because, Need, Hello, Good, Bad, Always, Never, Stop, Interesting, Maybe, I wonder…, Next time, Trouble, Help, Believe.

    Tone In Teaching: 20 Words That Change How Students Think

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    Terrell Heick

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  • How I Eliminated (Almost) All Grading Problems In My Classroom

    How I Eliminated (Almost) All Grading Problems In My Classroom

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    How I Eliminated (Almost) All Grading Problems In My Classroom

    by Terry Heick

    Grading problems are one of the most urgent bugaboos of good teaching.

    Grading can take an extraordinary amount of time. It can also demoralize students, get them in trouble at home, or keep them from getting into a certain college.

    It can demoralize teachers, too. If half the class is failing, any teacher worth their salt will take a long, hard look at themselves and their craft.

    So over the years as a teacher, I cobbled together a kind of system that was, most crucially, student-centered. It was student-centered in the sense that it was designed for them to promote understanding, grow confidence, take ownership, and protect themselves from themselves when they needed it.

    Some of this approach was covered in Why Did That Student Fail? A Diagnostic Approach To Teaching. See below for the system–really, just a few rules I created that, while not perfect, went a long way towards eliminating the grading problems in my classroom.

    Which meant students weren’t paralyzed with fear when I asked them to complete increasingly complex tasks they were worried were beyond their reach. It also meant that parents weren’t breathing down my neck ‘about that C-‘ they saw on Infinite Campus, and if both students and parents are happy, the teacher can be happy, too.

    How I Eliminated (Almost) All Grading Problems In My Classroom

    1. I chose what to grade carefully.

    When I first started teaching, I thought in terms of ‘assignments’ and ‘tests.’ Quizzes were also a thing.

    But eventually I started thinking instead in terms of ‘practice’ and ‘measurement.’ All assessment should be formative, and the idea of ‘summative assessment’ makes as much sense as ‘one last teeth cleaning.’

    The big idea is what I often call a ‘climate of assessment,’ where snapshots of  student understanding and progress are taken in organic, seamless, and non-threatening ways. Assessment is ubiquitous and always-on.

    A ‘measurement’ is only one kind of assessment, and even the word implies ‘checking in on your growth’ in the same way you measure a child’s vertical growth (height) by marking the threshold in the kitchen. This type of assessment provides both the student and teacher a marker–data, if you insist–of where the student ‘is’ at that moment with the clear understanding that another such measurement will be taken soon, and dozens and dozens of opportunities to practice in-between.

    Be very careful with what you grade, because it takes time and mental energy–both finite resources crucial to the success of any teacher. If you don’t have a plan for the data before you give the assessment, don’t give it, and certainly don’t call it a quiz or a test.

    2. I designed work to be ‘published’

    I tried to make student products–writing, graphic organizers, podcasts, videos, projects, and more–at the very least visible to the parents of students. Ideally, this work would also be published to peers for feedback and collaboration, and then to the public at large to provide some authentic function in a community the student cares about.

    By making student work public (insofar as it promoted student learning while protecting any privacy concerns), the assessment is done in large part by the people the work is intended for. It’s authentic, which makes the feedback loop quicker and more diverse than one teacher could ever hope to make it.

    What this system loses in expert feedback that teacher might be able to give (though nothing says it can’t both be made public and benefit from teacher feedback), it makes up for in giving students substantive reasons to do their best work, correct themselves, and create higher stands for quality than your rubric outlined.

    3. I made a rule: No Fs and no zeroes. A, B, C, or ‘Incomplete’

    First, I created a kind of no-zero policy. Easier said than done depending on who you are and what you teach and what the school ‘policy’ is and so on. The idea here, though, is to keep zeroes from mathematically ruining a student’s ‘final grade.’

    I try to explain to students that a grade should reflect understanding, not their ability to successfully navigate the rules and bits of gamification stuffed into most courses and classrooms. If a student receives a D letter grade, it should be because they have demonstrated an almost universal inability to master any content, not because they got As and Bs on most work they cared about but Cs or lower on the work they didn’t, and with a handful of zeroes thrown in for work they didn’t complete ended up with a D or an F.

    Another factor at work here is marking work with an A, B, C, or ‘Incomplete.’ Put another way, if the student didn’t at least achieve the average mark of C, which should reflect average understanding of a given standard or topic, I would mark it ‘Incomplete,’ give them clear feedback on how it could be improved, and then require them to do so.

    4. I went over missing assignments frequently.

    Simple enough. I had a twitter feed of all ‘measurements’ (work they knew that counted towards their grade), so they didn’t have to ask ‘what they were missing’ (though they did anyway). I also wrote it on the board (I had a huge whiteboard that stretched across the front of the classroom).

    5. I created alternative assessments.

    Early on in teaching, I noticed students saying, in different ways, that they ‘got it but don’t all the way get it.’ Or that they believed that they did, in fact, ‘get it’ but not the way the assessment required (reminder: English Lit/ELA is a highly conceptual content area aside of the skills of literacy itself).

    So I’d create an alternative assessment to check and see. Was the assessment getting in the way–obscuring more than it revealed? Why beat my head against the wall explaining the logistics of an assignment or intricacies of a question when they assignment and the question weren’t at all the points? These were just ‘things’ I used the way a carpenter uses tools.

    Sometimes it’s easier to just grab a different tool.

    I’d also ask students to create their own assessments at times. Show me you understand. It didn’t always work the way you’d expect, but I got some of the most insightful and creative expression I’ve ever seen from students using this approach. As with most things, it just depended on the student.

    6. I taught through micro-assignments.

    Exit slips were one of the the greatest things that ever happened to my teaching. I rarely used them as ‘exit tickets’ to be able to leave the classroom, but I did use them almost daily. Why?

    They gave me a constant stream of data for said ‘climate of assessment,’ and it was daily and fresh and disarming to students because they knew it was quick and if they failed, another one would be coming soon.

    It was a ‘student-centered’ practice because it protected them. They had so many opportunities and, math-wise, so many scores that unless they failed everything every day, they wouldn’t ‘fail’ at all. And if they were,

    I could approach a single standard or topic from a variety of angles and complexities and Bloom’s levels and so on, which often showed that the student that ‘didn’t get it’ last week more likely just ‘didn’t get’ my question.

    In other words, they hadn’t failed my assessment; my assessment had failed them because it had failed to uncover what they, in fact, knew.

    7. I used diagnostic teaching 

    You can read more about diagnostic teaching but the general idea is that I had a clear sequence I used that I communicated very clearly to the students and their families. It usually took the first month or two for everyone to become comfortable with it all, but once I did, grading problems were *almost* completely eliminated. Problems still surfaced but with a system in place, it was much easier to identify exactly what went wrong and why and communicate it all to the stakeholders involved in helping support children.

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    Terrell Heick

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  • 8 Of The Most Important Critical Thinking Skills

    8 Of The Most Important Critical Thinking Skills

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    Critical thinking is the ongoing application of unbiased analysis in pursuit of objective truth.

    Although its name implies criticism, critical thinking is actually closer to ‘truth judgment‘ based on withholding judgments while evaluating existing and emerging data to form more accurate conclusions. Critical thinking is an ongoing process emphasizing the fluid and continued interpretation of information rather than the formation of static beliefs and opinions.

    Research about cognitively demanding skills provides formal academic content that we can extend to less formal settings, including K-12 classrooms.

    This study, for example, explores the pivotal role of critical thinking in enhancing decision-making across various domains, including health, finance, and interpersonal relationships. The study highlights the significance of rigorous essential assessments of thinking, which can predict successful outcomes in complex scenarios.

    Of course, this underscores the importance of integrating critical thinking development and measurement into educational frameworks to foster higher-level cognitive abilities impact real-world problem-solving and decision-making.

    Which critical thinking skills are the most important?

    Deciding which critical thinking skills are ‘most important’ isn’t simple because prioritizing them in any kind of order is less important than knowing what they are and when and how to use them.

    However, to begin a process like that, it can be helpful to identify a small sample of the larger set of thinking processes and skills that constitute the skill of critical thinking.

    Let’s take a look at eight of the more important, essential critical thinking skills everyone–students, teachers, and laypersons–should know.

    8 Critical Thinking Skills Everyone Should Know

    Essential Critical Thinking Skills

    8 Essential Critical Thinking Skills

    Analyze: Break a whole into parts to examine

    Example: A teacher asks students to break down a story into its basic components: characters, setting, plot, conflict, and resolution. This helps students understand how each part contributes to the overall narrative.

    Evaluate: Assess the value or quality

    Example: A teacher prompts students to evaluate the effectiveness of two persuasive essays. Students assess which essay presents stronger arguments and why, considering factors like evidence, tone, and logic.

    InterpretExplain the meaning or significance

    Example: After reading a poem, the teacher asks students to interpret the symbolism of a recurring image, such as a river, discussing what it might represent in the poem’s context.

    SynthesizeCombine to form a coherent whole

    Example: A teacher asks students to write an essay combining information from multiple sources about the causes of the American Revolution, encouraging them to create a cohesive argument that integrates diverse perspectives.

    Infer: Draw conclusions based on evidence

    Example: A teacher presents students with a scenario in a science experiment and asks them to infer what might happen if one variable is changed, based on the data they’ve already gathered.

    Question

    Formal or informal inquiries to understand

    Example: During a history lesson, the teacher encourages students to ask questions about the motivations of historical figures, prompting deeper understanding and critical discussions about historical events.

    Reflect 

    Recall and interpret experiences or ideas

    Example: After completing a group project, a teacher asks students to reflect on what worked well and what could have been improved, helping them gain insights into their collaborative process and learning experience.

    Judge: Form an opinion or conclusion

    Example: A teacher presents students with a scenario where two solutions are proposed to solve a community issue, such as building a new park or a community center. The teacher asks students to use their judgment to determine which solution would best meet the community’s needs, considering cost, accessibility, and potential benefits.

    8 Of The Most Important Critical Thinking Skills

    Citations

    Butler, H. A. (2024). Enhancing critical thinking skills through decision-based learning. J. Intell., 12(2), Article 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/jintelligence12020016

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    Terrell Heick

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  • Improving The Relationship Between Schools And Communities

    Improving The Relationship Between Schools And Communities

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    by Terry Heick

    Education is a series of learning experiences informed by policy, and actuated by teachers.

    Policy, by its very nature, is sweeping and ambitious. It is designed to work on various scales, is well-intentioned, and often difficult to fault on paper. The teachers aren’t really much different. They are ambitious, designed to work on various scales, and are commissioned (quite literally) to enact the policies that govern the institutions (schools) they work in.

    The wrinkles arise however as teachers strive to realize a vision for education that is, as things are, entirely impossible: For every student to master every academic standard.

    No matter the starting literacy level, emotional intelligence, goals in life, family history, socioeconomic background, learning and thinking habits, or academic ambition, the same result is expected of all students–and increasingly troublesome word stuffed full of connotation and implication.

    Proficiency.

    And perhaps worst of all, this inclusive scale of proficiency is regarded not as a necessary evil, but the noblest of goals–equality manifest as democracy itself.

    Equality In Learning

    Equality in learning can mean anything. Same spending. Same resources–or rather, same fulfillment of relative needs. Same expectations.

    Fair doesn’t always mean equal, as many will correctly reason, but as we seek to democratize the learning process, we end up with scripted responses to unscripted circumstances, and as a result the homogenization of something that has no business being homogenized.

    Learning
    But equality in learning is a dangerous chase to give, full of dead-ends, rhetoric, and, at times, waste.

    Learning is messy and personal–messy because it’s personal, in fact. And it’s wasteful for many of the same reasons. Not because people learn differently, but because education often tries to impose ‘sameness’ on it all. And when that approach doesn’t work, gobs (and gobs) of resources are spent troubleshooting, ‘remediating,’ and erstwhile tail-chasing.

    Learning can be frustrating for the same reasons it’s compelling–because it’s instinctive and primal. It starts out as play, and then quickly turns more formal as self-directed experimentation turns into sterile academia. Schools–well-intentioned–care so much for the learning that they pull out every stop: sirens, meters, and relief valves to let us know what’s going on at all times.

    This, however, is a (small) part of the problem, like checking a rubric and data during your first date to see how things are going. That doesn’t mean there is no place for data and rubrics, but it just might be that, in pursuit of proficiency we’ve found dull edges.

    And in pursuit of excellence we’ve found mediocrity.

    Not An Argument For Learning Models

    At this point, this is usually where the conversation turns to learning models–entrepreneurial learning, self-directed learning, mobile learning, play-based learning, project-based learning, inquiry-based learning, blended learning.

    And so on.

    And this is all pertinent and felicitous–all screaming for thinking, integration, and revision. But instead, a more immediate focus of our scope might be the way teachers and teacher systems push back on one another in the vast majority of public schools today.

    The Systems

    So what are these ‘systems’?

    District walkthroughs and their ‘non-negotiables.’

    Professional growth plans.

    Professional learning communities.

    Data teams.

    District and school-sponsored professional development.

    News media publishing of test scores.

    Actually, let’s stop and look at that one for a moment.

    Public Reporting Of Test Scores

    The publishing of test scores isn’t the problem–it’s the void of context most people have for internalizing those data. The public sees in more binary terms–failing school and performing school. Maybe improving school. That’s it.

    Never failing test, performing attention to literacy, or on the rise community support. Schools are not seen as completely interdependent with society, but rather widget factories, and are thus judged by their widgets. And perhaps worst of all, these widgets are children.

    Why this is a problem has to do with connotation and loaded language–old-guard advertising tricks to get people to care. A widget is cold, but a child is a living, breathing, blinking thing that deserves the best possible future–and the best from us today to help make that happen.

    And of course that’s true.

    Vague & Emotionally Loaded Language

    So when we talk, our language can be empty and generalized. We talk about the future, the learning, of our collective and unyielding intent to ‘do right by these kids.’ We make decisions that ‘are best for the kids,’ rather than the adults, because what adult would propose the opposite?

    But it’s exactly through this selfless ambition and pathos-based grandstanding that we get ourselves in trouble. We simply cannot consistently fulfill what we promise, and, puzzled, turn to professional development to solve our woes.

    If school is an analogue of post-modern industrialism–and it shouldn’t be but it currently operates as exactly that–then teachers and administrators are the ones that operate the levers and the presses. We create the molds, fill the conveyors with widgets, fill the pallets, operate the forklifts, and take very serious notes on our clipboards as we watch with equally serious eyes.

    But it’s the teachers and administrators, tirelessly planning and revising while the entire operation teeters, that are wheezing and chuffing. We promise and swear in both creed and policy to help every single child meet their potential as human beings. The pressure–and hubris–of that promise!

    We add empowering signatures on our email, ‘Failure is not an option,’ or ‘Preparing children for the future,’ and then ‘recharge our batteries’ during weekends and holidays so that on Monday afternoons we can sit erect in two hour staff meetings that rob us of any bit of innovative spirit we had managed to restore.

    We invite the parents into school every quarter with the promise of bake sales or a school play and other extracurricular events, pretending not to notice how awkward it all is—how we both are raising different parts of their children but barely know one another.

    How we stubbornly continue to teach children as an industry produces goods.

    How we fail to connect organizations with families and schools and universities and cultural programs and community centers in any compelling way because, as schools, we insist on going alone, only opening the doors on our schedule and our terms to help us do what we want to do because we wrote the book on what needs to be done.

    We use language and processes of education that are completely alien to most families. And in the process, we create a completely unsustainable–and morbidly private–system of learning that reduces the capacity of families and communities while we toil away in proud martyrdom, never realizing that our ambition is costing us everything.

    If schools serve students, and students are deeply embedded in the fabric of communities, how can we serve those students without knowing those communities? And without those communities knowing us?

    Maybe we open our school and classroom doors for meaningful interaction with families and communities on equal terms not at an extracurricular level, but a curricular level.

    That’s much easier said than done, but conversations about school improvement could do worse than start there.

    Exactly Where To Start With School Improvement

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    Terrell Heick

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  • 8 Strategies Your Teaching More Enjoyable This Year

    8 Strategies Your Teaching More Enjoyable This Year

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    by Terry Heick

    My wife is a schoolteacher, and recently I’ve been listening to her online meetings.

    And there have been a lot of them.

    It’s July 2024 and a week or three from the beginning of the 2024-2025 school year in the United States depending on your local school district’s schedule.

    Yesterday, I was at a cafe sitting next to what seemed to be a group of teachers and they had a lot of ideas.

    And a lot of enthusiasm.

    Over the low but constant noise of most cafes, some words and phrases were audible:

    Data.

    Goal.

    Standards.

    Vision.

    Fidelity.

    Roll out.

    More about data.

    Activity.

    Track.

    Something about dots and dot walls and data walls.

    They talked about goals.

    Parents.

    Groups and grouping.

    Tracking.

    Programs.

    Data, again.

    Fidelity, again.

    Communication.

    The district.

    More tracking (based on grouping and data).

    The gist of it all was clear and I could hear the eagerness and buzz lifting up away from the table. It’s July and school is starting soon and there are things to do and teachers are clearly busy, busy, busy.

    But it wasn’t just buzz. The was more to it. Something just beneath the surface.

    Mindnumbing-ness

    My wife has had 8-10 of these meetings since late last week—faculty trainings where she’s being trained on things she needs trained on and then faculty meetings to discuss the schedule for upcoming trainings.

    It’s exhausting to hear but, with only a few exceptions here and there, it is all numbing. There is a kind of forced energy but the numb bit is both a cause and effect: another year, another series of sprints.

    A few thoughts–

    Teaching is a lot work. A lot.

    This has always been true but, for many educators, it’s gone from exhausting to unsustainable.

    All of the planning and energy busts are followed by something close to a slog or dredge, which itself is followed up by an annoyed kind of fatigue, and then finished as entirely depleted by the end of the school year.

    Of course, this varies greatly from teacher to teacher. It depends on factors, including building and climate, mindset, relationships with parents, student engagement, and classroom management, the function of various standards in your teaching and curriculum, the quality of the PLCs—if they are used in your building—and so on.

    So much goes into teaching, and so describe the profession as an exhausting slog that is barely endurable by the end of the year is a magnificent over-generalization and probably disillusioned.

    The point here isn’t necessarily to mark the general satisfaction of teachers over the course of the school year, but rather to notice the passion and enthusiasm of many teachers in July and how it will, sadly, wain as the year progresses.

    Policies vs Children

    There is so much to do and plan and prepare and create spaces for that there is very little left for human conversations about the teacher and about the student. That’s the broadest lesson here, for me.

    July energy is markedly different from the spring semester.

    And this isn’t just a matter of energy being higher and lower. Rather, as the school year continues, there is a shift from vision and creativity and even a bit of enthusiasm, to a quieter and plainer sense of effort.

    Take ‘July’ as a metaphor—a bridge month from the summer to the upcoming school year. (The idea of the teachers get the summer off is a dated one, but that’s another post entirely.)

    The level of energy from teachers in July is often, and understandably, much higher than it is in late November, never mind March or April of the following year.

    July is a beginning.

    A Few Strategies For Sustaining Your Enthusiasm For Teaching During The School Year

    1. Pace Yourself

    Pacing, as an obvious solution here, requires the luxury of pacing, which many teachers don’t have.

    The idea is that the energy levels that are both tempting and often necessary before the school year starts can often set schools up for failure because educators create these necessary, set of plans to try to meet student needs and start off with the best intentions simply.

    2. Create Moments

    Or recognize them, but whatever you do appreciate. Just as it can be difficult in life—but also rewarding—being present for the individual moments during a lesson, for a small group activity, or conversation with a student all gather to create a larger body of work called teaching.

    2. Set Realistic Goals

    Setting achievable goals helps maintain motivation and reduces burnout. Break the school year into manageable segments with specific, attainable objectives for each period.

    Create a yearly plan with milestones and celebrate small victories along the way. This could include mastering a new teaching strategy, implementing a successful project, or simply staying on top of grading.

    3. Prioritize Self-Care

    This can be, just as a can be in your personal, but self-care is absolutely essential for sustaining energy and enthusiasm. Taking care of your physical, emotional, and mental health helps you stay resilient and positive.

    Schedule regular exercise, maintain a balanced diet, and ensure you get enough sleep. Incorporate relaxation techniques such as mindfulness or yoga into your daily routine. Make time for hobbies and activities that bring you joy outside of teaching.

    4. Build a Support Network

    A strong support network can provide encouragement, share ideas, and offer emotional support during challenging times.

    Connect with colleagues, join professional learning communities, and participate in teacher groups or forums. Regularly meet with a mentor or coach for guidance and feedback. Don’t hesitate to seek help when you need it.

    5. Stay Organized and Efficient

    Organization and efficiency in planning and classroom management can save time and reduce stress, allowing more energy for teaching.

    Use tools like planners, apps, or digital calendars to keep track of tasks and deadlines. Develop routines for common tasks such as grading, lesson planning, and classroom setup. Delegate responsibilities when possible and use time-saving teaching strategies, such as flipped classrooms or project-based learning.

    6. Reflect and Adapt

    Regular reflection helps identify what’s working and what isn’t, allowing for adjustments that keep your teaching practice fresh and engaging.

    Set aside time each week to reflect on your teaching. Keep a journal to document successes and challenges, and brainstorm ways to improve. Solicit feedback—formal or informal—from students and colleagues and be open to trying new approaches or techniques.

    7. Social-Emotional Teaching

    and so far as you were able, try to create learning activities and lessons that lend themselves well to joy or fun or positive experiences for both the students and yourself. It’s hard for teaching to be fine, and sustainable, the work.

    8. Embrace It All

    That doesn’t mean to lower your expectations, but to realize that an all professions there are challenging times or facets of the job they can feel draining.

    Teaching is unique and that it is a kind of mix of procedure and creativity, and that can make it both a challenge and an opportunity to enjoy.

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    Terrell Heick

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  • How To Connect Schools And Communities Using Technology

    How To Connect Schools And Communities Using Technology

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    How To Connect Schools And Communities Using Technology

    by Terry Heick

    It’s possible that there is no time in the history of education that our systems of educating have been so out of touch with the communities. Growing populations, shifting communities, and increasingly inwardly-focused schools all play a role.

    In light of the access of modern technology, social media, and new learning models that reconfigure the time and place learning happens, it doesn’t have to be that way. Schools can evolve while simultaneously growing closer to the people they serve.

    First, for the purpose of this post let’s think of technology and social media as distinct.

    Technology has many forms, but in education, it is most visible in terms of computing hardware and software. The hardware is pretty obvious—phones, wearable technology from Apple and Android, iPads, personal computers, Macs, Chromebooks, graphing calculators, and the like.

    The software is a bit more inconspicuous because it’s embedded in the hardware. Here we have fundamental PC software like Microsoft Windows or Mac OS; we have productivity suites like Microsoft Office; we have web browsers like Google Chrome or Safari or Firefox; and we have niche programs like reading assessment tools or educational games, which function like what we’d now consider computer-based apps.

    There are also less visible forms of technology that make teaching and learning with technology possible, including electricity (you take it for granted until it doesn’t work) WiFi (imagine your classroom looking like it does behind your television—wires everywhere), the cloud (which enables mobile learning, hardware sharing, flipped classrooms, and other advances), and more. Each of these technology tools is critical in their own way, working together to make whatever we’d define as a ‘modern classroom‘ and ‘modern learning‘ work.

    But hidden with this list is one bit of seemingly dated software that can be concept-mapped on its own in a million other directions of possibility. No one gets excited by it, but it still makes the internet go: the web browser.

    Although itself just a program that translates html code to visual information, the modern web browser has become a vessel that everything else attaches itself to. For schools looking to connect with communities, it also actuates social media channels like Instagram, twitter, facebook, and pinterest, and allows for the blogging or site updates that keep parents informed.

    None of this is new, really. The technology has been there for years. Parents have always been ‘informed’—but of what? That’s where there is potential. What we’re communicating as educators, when, and why.

    So what can social media ‘do’?

    Solicit mentoring relationships

    Whether organized by a district, school, teacher, family, or the student themselves, connecting with potential mentors through social media is compelling because it’s A) Public—transparent and safer than ‘social media’ sounds and B) Because it’s public, it can encourage companies to respond when they may not in private.

    Connecting students to the artists, architects, engineers, makers, writers, farmers, cooks, and other ‘roles’ for the purpose of mentoring and apprenticeship is one way to begin to repair the disconnect between schools and communities.

    This one is closely related to the idea of ‘mentoring’ in the sense that it connects students with people outside of the classroom from their community. But rather than for the purpose of mentoring, it could be less involved—topical but authentic communication between those leading the community, and those living in it, and social media is the perfect way to make it happen.

    Share ‘school work’

    Ideally authentic products and artifacts produced through new skills and knowledge useful to people and communities.

    Want work to leave the classroom? Use social media to publish it with the world. Worried about privacy? Assign students anonymous codes or avatars to publish under. Used closed communities (Facebook Groups, for example) that, while not fully open, are still school-wide. There are ways.

    Curate cultural artifacts and ‘local memory’

    Today, museums do the work of ‘curating,’ but that’s a crude way to preserve the cultural artifacts that matter. Why can’t schools do this? And why can’t technology be used to streamline and crowdsource it?

    How To Connect Schools And Communities Using Technology

    In addition to connecting with the world students live and breathe in, new learning models afforded by technology are also useful in reconnecting with families, neighborhoods, and native places students have affection for.

    Flipped Classroom

    The flipped classroom is one way to exchange where learning happens—or at least what kind of learning happens where. Here, the roles are reversed: Students are exposed to content at home and practice it at school.

    Mobile learning

    Mobile learning is a brilliant way to immerse students in native places and landscapes. The challenge here is that education isn’t quite ready for it, but if you can figure it out, the possibilities are extraordinary: Deep integration of learning, place, and people.

    Place-based education

    See above—learning that is based on place and not an indexed set of nationalized curriculum. Authentic, familiar, and personal.

    Project-based learning

    Project-based learning can incorporate all of the above—flipped classrooms, place-based learning, mobile learning, and so on. The idea is that teaching and learning are anchored through the process of authentic projects constructed over time. These ‘reason’ or ‘need to know’ for these projects will ideally both start and finish in communities.

    Experiential learning/Scenario-based learning

    Treat the school like a think tank. Explore and address local community issues. Use social media to connect with families and neighborhoods and businesses and organizations, then use problem-based or scenario-based learning to address them.

    Conclusion

    Technology, so far, hasn’t healed the disconnect between schools and communities, but that could be because we’re selling it short for what it can do—which might start with not seeing its potential fully. Today, popular uses are sharing grades, missing work, test dates, snow days, and basic school announcements. This isn’t nearly good enough.

    Whether you’re talking about hardware, software, social media, or something in between, more than anything else, technology connects. As educators, we just need to be intentional about what we’re connecting, and why.

    image attribution flickr user usdepartmentofeducation; how to connect schools and communities

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    Terrell Heick

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  • Teaching Students To See Quality

    Teaching Students To See Quality

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    teaching students to see quality

    by Terry Heick

    Quality—you know what it is, yet you don’t know what it is. But that’s self-contradictory. But some things are better than others, that is, they have more quality. But when you try to say what the quality is, apart from the things that have it, it all goes poof! There’s nothing to talk about. But if you can’t say what Quality is, how do you know what it is, or how do you know that it even exists? If no one knows what it is, then for all practical purposes it doesn’t exist at all. But for all practical purposes, it really does exist.

    In Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, author Robert Pirsig talks about the evasive idea of quality. This concept—and the tangent “Church of Reason”–heckles him throughout the book, notably as a teacher when he’s trying to explain to his students what quality writing looks like.

    After some struggling– internally and with students–he throws out letter grades altogether in hopes that students will stop looking for the reward, and start looking for ‘quality.’ This, of course, doesn’t turn out the way he hoped it’d might; the students revolt, which only takes him further from his goal.

    So what does quality have to do with learning? Quite a bit, it turns out.

    A Shared Sense Of What’s Possible

    Quality is an abstraction–it has something to do with the tension between a thing and an ideal thing. A carrot and an ideal carrot. A speech and an ideal speech. The way you want the lesson to go, and the way it actually goes. We have a lot of synonyms for this idea, ‘good’ being one of the more common.

    For quality to exist–for something to be ‘good’–there has to be some shared sense of what’s possible, and some tendency for variation–inconsistency. For example, if we think there’s no hope for something to be better, it’s useless to call it bad or good. It is what it is. We rarely call walking good or bad. We just walk. Singing, on the other hand, can definitely be good or bad–that is have or lack quality. We know this because we’ve heard good singing before, and we know what’s possible.

    Further, it’s difficult for there to be a quality sunrise or a quality drop of water because most sunrises and most drops of water are very similar. On the other hand, a ‘quality’ cheeseburger or performance of Beethoven’s 5th Symphony makes more sense because we A) have had a good cheeseburger before and know what’s possible, and B) can experience a vast difference between one cheeseburger and another.

    Back to learning–if students could see quality—identify it, analyze it, understand its characteristics, and so on—imagine what that requires. They have to see all the way around a thing, compare it to what’s possible, and make an evaluation. Much of the friction between teachers and learners comes from a kind of scraping between students and the teachers trying to guide them towards quality.

    The teachers, of course, are only trying to help students understand what quality is. We describe it, create rubrics for it, point it out, model it, and sing its praises, but more often than not, they don’t see it and we push it closer and closer to their noses and wait for the light to come on.

    And when it doesn’t, we assume they either don’t care, or aren’t trying hard enough.

    The Best

    And so it goes with relative superlatives—good, better, and best. Students use these words without knowing their starting point–quality. It’s hard to know what quality is until they can think their way around a thing to begin with. And then further, to really internalize things, they have to see their quality. Quality for them based on what they see as possible.

    To qualify something as good—or ‘best’—requires first that we can agree what that ‘thing’ is supposed to do, and then can discuss that thing in its native context. Consider something simple, like a lawnmower. It’s easy to determine the quality of a lawnmower because it’s clear what it’s supposed to do. It’s a tool that has some degrees of performance, but it’s mostly like an on/off switch. It either works or it doesn’t.

    Other things, like government, art, technology, etc., are more complex. It’s not clear what quality looks like in legislation, abstract painting, or economic leadership. There is both nuance and subjectivity in these things that make evaluating quality far more complex. In these cases, students have to think ‘macro enough’ to see the ideal functions of a thing, and then decide if they’re working, which of course is impossible because no one can agree with which functions are ‘ideal’ and we’re right back at zero again. Like a circle.

    Quality In Student Thinking

    And so it goes with teaching and learning. There isn’t a clear and socially agreed-upon cause-effect relationship between teaching and the world. Quality teaching will yield quality learning that does this. It’s the same with the students themselves–in writing, in reading, and in thought, what does quality look like?

    What causes it?

    What are its characteristics?

    And most importantly, what can we do to not only help students see it but develop eyes for it that refuse to close.

    To be able to see the circles in everything, from their own sense of ethics to the way they structure paragraphs, design a project, study for exams, or solve problems in their own lives–and do so without using adultisms and external labels like ‘good job,’ and ‘excellent,’ and ‘A+’ and ‘you’re so smart!’

    What can we do to nurture students that are willing to sit and dwell with the tension between possibility and reality, bending it all to their will moment by moment with affection and understanding?

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    Terrell Heick

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  • The Relationship Between Reading And Critical Literacy

    The Relationship Between Reading And Critical Literacy

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    by Terry Heick

    Phonemic awareness is knowing that certain letters make certain sounds.

    Phonemic awareness is knowing that sounds can blend together in predictable and unpredictable ways.

    Phonemic awareness is about loving the sounds that letters can make, then noticing common patterns across symbols, media, and languages.

    Phonemic awareness makes decoding possible.

    Decoding is being able to blend sounds together to ‘make’ words you recognize.

    Decoding is collecting as many words as possible into your ‘sight word bank’ to increase your reading speed and comprehension.

    Decoding is recognizing common word parts used in many words and using knowledge of those parts to predict the meaning of unfamiliar words.

    Decoding enables comfortable reading speeds and oral fluency.

    Decoding makes literacy possible.

    Literacy is about comfortable reading speeds, sufficient background knowledge to make sense of embedded ideas, and syntax.

    Literacy means understanding that the order of words in a sentence affects meaning (and includes a basic grasp of grammar categories).

    Literacy is about knowing how punctuation can enhance meaning.

    Literacy is choosing to read a variety of authentic texts and digital media for a variety of authentic purposes.

    Literacy is thinking about what you read after you’re done, then sharing what you read with others.

    Literacy is, in part, reading important texts because you want to, then using those ideas to inform your behavior.

    When practiced well, literacy breaks down who we were to create who we might become.

    See also The Definition Of Critical Reading

    Literacy makes critical literacy possible.

    Critical literacy begins with being able to decode a text, and then analyze it for meaning, implicit and explicit themes, the relationship of a text to a given perspective, existing texts, biases, and so on.

    Critical literacy is about a text and the motives of the people behind the text. (Critical literacy might insist that authors cannot be separated from what they write in the same way as one’s ‘self’ should be seen as indistinguishable from one’s work.)

    Critical literacy is also about understanding how what we read and consume affects us. Critical literacy, then, suggests we become critical consumers of any given media. Think: What am I ‘consuming’, and what might I do as a result?

    See also: Stop Worrying About Screen Time

    Critical literacy, further, means understanding the potential human value of a text or digital media–value to people rather than ‘literary canons’ and purely academic pursuits.

    Critical literacy means understanding the relationship between seemingly disparate media forms (e.g., books, social media, music, etc) as examples of human expression.

    Critical literacy is also about creating--writing, socially sharing, remixing, etc. (Reading and writing should be seen as two hemispheres of the same sphere.)

    Critical literacy, now more than ever, recognizes that human expression depends on prevailing local technology. As that technology changes, so do communication patterns. One things impacts another.

    Critical literacy makes cultural literacy possible.

    Cultural literacy is, in part, about acquiring knowledge and perspective that helps us create that which is worth creating, and realizing that answer is different for everyone.

    Cultural literacy can support cultivating genius, disrupting inequalities, creating sustainable systems, emphasizing our cultural memberships, and seeing our own role in the various natural, digital, and human ecologies we are a part of. (Digital citizenship, for example.)

    Cultural literacy depends on our knowing who’s said what and why–which messages and themes and ideas persist within them. This means we have to read, understand what we read, critically examine what we read, and use those lessons to inform our behavior.

    To do this we have to choose to read.

    To choose to read, we have to be able and choose to closely scrutinize texts and digital media.

    To do this, we have to know what words mean–what they really, really mean.

    To do this, we have to know that in digital media, modalities (e.g., light, color, sound) are symbols just like letters are symbols in texts, and these symbols–if we’re attendant to those sounds and the possibilities–can change the world.

    Sounds lead to words, words lead to ideas, ideas lead to perspectives, perspectives lead to behavioral change, behavioral change–if done critically–leads to a better world.

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    Terrell Heick

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  • When Schools And Parents Don’t Talk

    When Schools And Parents Don’t Talk

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    by Terry Heick

    Having gone on for decades now, discussions around the idea of ed reform are a bit tired.

    They seem pointless. Exhausting. A waste of time and creative bandwidth. Bottom-up change is exhausting and top-down change is exhausting for entirely different reasons.

    Rather than state or federal policy, make schools and communities accountable to one another.

    This would require supporting those communities in various ways and supporting learners by expanding the definition of ‘academic’ success.

    Among the benefits, the improved visibility of our collective, shared challenge to educate every learner every day for every standard regardless of background, literacy, learning habits, or scheme would be visible to everyone–kind of like opening the kitchen of a failing restaurant for the public to see; not to shame, but so that everyone could better understand.

    See also What Else Schools Could Be Besides Schools?

    It’d be a mess at first, but it would also expose the overwheling problems with our standards and curriculum and other related flaws like those in assessment and instruction, for example.

    It might also, indrectly, reveal ‘flaws’ in our collective practices as a society (not just as schools and classrooms), but doesn’t education already has enough on its plate? Parents might see our collective challenge as something whole and shared–or at least would have the chance to.

    In Why Parents Don’t Understand School, I said “This is a challenge (of schools and communities not speaking the same language) not new to education, but because of the unique position of educators as both experts and conduits between formal education and local communities, the burden falls to teachers to not simply paraphrase and translate but build and transfer capacity from the inside out.”

    But what if parents and families ‘don’t have time’? Judging by our collective test scores, student apathy, teacher burnout statistics, graduation rates from high school to college, and general lack of widespread, genuinely inspirational teaching and learning, neither do we.

    ‘Accountability,’ then, could become opportunity for all of us.

    Parents aren’t clear what’s being taught in school, not to mention how or why? That’s a place to start.

    There are too few resources in communities? In schools? Another good place.

    Society at large doesn’t understand formal learning–especially K-12? What exactly is being taught and why? This might be one of the most significant challenges, but that’s fine. We can all share, invest in, and thoughtfully approach it all together.

    Is literacy a problem at home, which is why it’s a problem in schools–or is it the other way around?

    Families have no real idea at all what’s happening in the classroom? Force their complete involvement. If they can’t, that’s okay–let’s just all be transparent that schools aren’t ‘the problem.’ If we can agree there, the rest can being a bit easier to sort out.

    Does this all sound impractical? Silly? More trouble than it’s worth? Hopeless? There’s another bit of data: we’re trying open schools to families and no one understands how or why.

    Isn’t that what’s crazy?

    What happens when schools and families don’t talk?

    Or worse, when they couldn’t even if they tried?

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    Terrell Heick

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  • 14 Ways To Help Students Build Confidence

    14 Ways To Help Students Build Confidence

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    Once it’s begun, it’s difficult to fully separate the person from the task. 

    When the artist is painting, the painter and the act of painting become a single ‘thing.’ The painting becomes a part of it all, too.

    As a teacher, your ‘self’ is embedded within your teaching—which is how it goes from ‘job’ to craft. The learning results are yours. You probably call them ‘your’ students. The same goes for students as well. There is a pleasing kind of string between the 8-year-old playing Minecraft and his or her digital creation.

    This is the magic of doing.

    But this also presents some problems. Students’ work and performance—both what they can and can’t do—are a part of who they are, and they are keenly aware of this. Even our language reflects this idea.

    Did you do your best on your homework? (As opposed to “Was the best work done on the assigned homework?”)

    Are you an A student? (As opposed to students who usually receive As on their report card.)

    Are you confused? (As opposed to awkward sounding but entirely logical “Do you have confusion?”)

    1. Recognize and adapt feedback loops.

    2. Emphasize mindset as central to success

    3. Improve metacognition/offer metacognitive strategies

    Other Ways To Build Confidence In Students

    4. Celebrate small victories (and don’t always call them small victories)

    5. Normalize (short-term) struggling (or call it a different word–like ‘grinding’)

    6. Let them see others struggle–but people credible to that student: entertainers, athletes, artists, etc.–and see them emerge from that struggle stronger for having endured.

    7. Help them understand that we all struggle with many things, and it’s our response to that struggle, not the struggle itself, that will dictate our suffering and ultimate success.

    8. Put them in positions to succeed, surprise themselves, etc.

    9. Consider additive grading (points go up through the grading period rather than down)

    10. Convince them that you truly believe in them (you saying it and them believing it can be different).

    11. Build knowledge. ‘Believing in them,’ of course, isn’t enough. They must have sufficient knowledge or experience with ideas and skills (‘content’) to ‘do well in school’ no matter how much you believe in them and how much they’re willing to buy into the struggle of human (cognitive) growth.

    12. Emphasize knowledge/learning as a marathon rather than a series of sprints. This ‘big picture’ perspective can help disarm short-term anxiety and help them settle in for the long haul of lifelong learning.

    Learning is personal.

    The Habits Your Students Retreat To

    So it makes sense that self-defense mechanisms kick in when they’re challenged. This can create all sorts of messes in the classroom that you could spend the entire year chasing down.

    Lack of apparent curiosity.

    Apathy.

    Refusal to take risks.

    Decreased creativity.

    Defeated tones.

    Scrambles for shortcuts.

    It just might be that these are all symptoms rather than causes. That is, symptoms of not wanting to make mistakes, fail, be corrected, or be thought of less by peers. As teachers, though, we tend to see them as causes of the mediocre work we can sometimes see.

    How we feel and think of ourselves matters in learning. Confidence, self-knowledge, interdependence, curiosity, and other learning abstractions are all as critical as reading level and writing strategies.

    See also How Project-Based Learning Can Promote Social-Emotional Learning Skills

    When students confront new content (e.g., a lesson with new ideas), circumstances (e.g., a collaborative project with students from another school), or challenges (e.g., self-direction in the face of distraction), their responses may not always be ideal.

    But as teachers, we do the same thing. We may begin an open-ended unit that attempts to use a learning simulation to allow students to toy with STEM concepts, but the minute things don’t work out, we can often retreat to bad habits.

    Scripted work. Negativity. Essays as assessment.

    Talktalktalktalktalktalktalk.

    Confidence, interdependence, curiosity, and other abstractions are all equally critical as reading level and writing strategies.

    4 Questions For Self-Knowledge & Reflection For Students

    So in the face of a challenge, what do your students ‘retreat to’? Below are four questions they can use to begin this kind of reflection and self-awareness.

    1. How do I respond when I’m challenged–intellectually, emotionally, physically, etc.? Do I see the difference in each of these categories of response?
    2. Which resources and strategies do I tend to favor, and which do I tend to ignore?
    3. What can I do to make myself more aware of my own thinking and emotions?
    4. What happens if I don’t change anything at all?

    5 Ways To Create More Confident Students: Promoting Self-Awareness & Metacognition In The Classroom

    So if these are the kinds of questions we face as educators, and the reality students face as emerging independent thinkers, how can we begin to promote this kind of behavior in the classroom? And further, how can we establish these actions as habits—thoughtless actions that students initiate on their own with little to no prompting?

    Like anything, it is first a matter of visibility—understanding what is necessary, seeing it when it happens, emphasizing and celebrating it, etc. In the classroom, this might be stopping during an especially teachable moment when you sense students struggling—or responding well—and having them journal, share thoughts with elbow partners, or somehow reflect on both the challenge and their response. To improve student confidence, you must first find the source of their lack of confidence.

    See Statement Stems To Help Students Develop A Growth Mindset and Metacognitive Prompts For Students.

    Second, it is a matter of practice. Anything complex or unnatural requires repetition. The more students see themselves face major and minor challenges in the classroom and then see the effects of their responses, the more conditioned they’ll be to respond ideally on their own.

    There is also the reality of the many feedback loops student interact in and through in our classrooms. (You can read more about that in What Is A Feedback Loop?) Creating more confident students means seeing and practicing (see above) feedback loops that tend to create opportunities to establish confidence and tend to not create opportunities that reduce confidence. For example, if a student is losing confidence in math because of test anxiety, we should consider that goal is to master math skills and concepts, not ‘do well on tests.’

    While we want students to perform well on any assessment, lacking confidence will obscure and/or invalidate assessment data. Put another way, their test scores may not reflect their grasp of content. To help this student develop more confidence in math, we’d first have to see this feedback loop for what it is (students worry about math –> perform poorly on math test –> their belief about themselves as this loop seemingly reinforces math students), then adjust or remove the loop: alter the assessment in some way (form, duration, complexity, etc.) or move to exit slip teaching for a short period of time to remove the punisher (i.e., bad test scores).

    Of course, learning to fail is a part of life and learning. The idea here is not to avoid negative events that may hurt confidence as this may have the opposite effect and reduce the likelihood that students will develop strength, perseverance, and the kind of mindset that will support them inside and outside of your classroom.

    Lastly, there is the possibility of some mindfulness coaching for students. Help them separate themselves from their work and related performance. Help them understand that our lives aren’t single decisions but a vast tapestry of connections, with any single moment, performance, or failure barely visible and only important as it relates to their lives as a whole.

    Closely related here are student mindset (including what they assume about themselves and any given assignment they might struggle with) and metacognition (seeing their own thinking, internal dialogue, etc.) and making adjustments as necessary.

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    Terrell Heick

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  • On The Danger Of Popular Ideas In Education

    On The Danger Of Popular Ideas In Education

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    by Terrell Heick

    More than once, I’ve seen Bloom’s Taxonomy called a ‘fad.’

    This can be lumped in with Charlotte Danielson’s DOK framework and Learning Styles, eLearning, Blended Learning, MOOCs, Common Core academic standards, and a few dozen other practices, ideas, and programs–each as a fad. Something that, for a while, is ‘popular.’

    And sometimes, this is true.

    Oxford defines a fad as “A short-term obsession with a style, product, idea, or concept. Fads are characterized by high adoption (expressed in either increased sales or publicity or word of mouth) and equally fast disappearance and obsolescence.”

    This description would fit many practices, ideas, and programs in most industries. In the last decade or so, education has seen iPads and apps rise and fall in their adoption, with BYOD not far behind. Maker education, digital citizenship, eBook/eBook devices, and ‘mobile learning’ have each, to their degree, gained and lost traction again in their widespread application in formal education.

    Part of this is because education, at its best, changes in parallel with ‘the real world.’ As technology changes, for example, anyone or ‘thing’ that uses that technology is forced to change with it. As electric cars become more common and internal combustion engines become less common, ‘gas’ stations must change in parallel or risk being displaced.

    Put another way, it would be odd if things didn’t fall out of favor with its users. That it happens quickly isn’t always a bad thing.

    Or even generally a bad thing.

    There is a difference between iPads and gas stations, though. iPads rose and fell in popularity in the ‘real world’ and education alike, the latter in many ways caused by the former. In contrast, gas stations are merely being displaced rather than losing their appeal to the public.

    So ‘losing traction,’ for many things, make sense.

    But there is also the issue of what appears to be a ‘good idea’ quickly falling out of favor when that idea is embedded in the infrastructure that adopted it in the first place. This costs time, money, and the intellectual and psychological investment of educators, students, and parents alike.

    Take teachers, for example. Teachers are already overworked, undervalued, undermined, and undersupported. To expect–and force–them to change over and over again is, as with most professions, reasonable. But this is not small task with new programs and priorities that require significant changes in curriculum, assessment, and instruction.

    And this seems to be one source of educators’ frustration.

    When measuring success, effectiveness, and performance in education, what are we measuring exactly?

    What Works In Education?

    In What Works In Education And How Do We Know? I wondered about the terms of success in a human-centered industry (an unfortunate oxymoron), asking, “When measuring success, effectiveness, and performance in education, what are we measuring exactly?”

    Regarding letter grades, I said, “Grades are an interesting mix of understanding and compliance—if you more or less ‘get’ the material, work hard to decipher the procedural mumbo-jumbo of most lessons, read well enough, and actually turn in all of your work, you’re likely to get ‘good grades.’ Do the work and show the teacher you care, and you’re in a decent place in most classrooms.”

    In Stop Saying Learning Styles Don’t Work, I tried to get at that idea, offering that “Somehow, the idea that when we decide that this student learns best ‘by listening’ and this student learns best ‘while doing jumping jacks’ has come to define learning styles.”

    And finally, in Why Some Teachers Are Against Technology (which is obviously years old, now), I took a swipe at the idea of ‘fads,’ noting, “Every few years someone in education has a bright idea that, for whatever reason, doesn’t light things up the way it might’ve…Some observant educators have noticed this trend, and so preach patience and fidelity when integrating critically necessary new thinking—even when, like scripted curriculum or test-based accountability, that thinking is flawed. This gives us an interesting ecosystem of both pursuing and resisting new ideas.”

    But what if what later turned out to be a fad was ‘good’–useful in some way–and didn’t stop being good when it disappeared?

    “It makes sense to be skeptical of change, especially in an industry with such a mixed history of evolving itself. Every few years, someone in education has a bright idea that, for whatever reason, doesn’t light things up the way it might’ve. This has a few net negative effects, among them a kind of permanent momentum where change comes and change goes. We get used to failure.’

    Thoughts

    Here are a few of what I hope are hopefully logical/true statements:

    I. Any new program, priority, or effort in education costs attention, money, and the one thing teachers already have too little of–time.

    II. This makes teachers skeptical and seemingly pessimistic about ‘new things.’

    III. Skeptical and pessimistic teachers aren’t ‘happy’ teachers.

    IV. Teachers being ‘not happy’ is, for obvious reasons, problematic.

    V. Among these problems is an increased resistance to new ideas and a pre-tensioned willingness (eagerness?) to move on to the next idea.

    VII. That is, there can become a tendency to label ‘things’ as good or bad, right or wrong, research-based or not research-based, student-centered or not student-centered, and so on. This binary thinking isn’t helpful to teachers or, more importantly, students.

    VIII. Further, being ‘disproven’ and being ‘not useful’ are not the same. On what terms, for example, has the thing disproven? And so we think of ideas as ‘fads.’

    IX. Sometimes, they are bad ideas and are indeed eventually ‘debunked.’

    X. But this can create a reflex to move on–to abandon useful ideas in some wrong-headed effort to be perceived as new or modern even ‘innovative.’

    Conclusion

    It just might be that education has more than enough new ideas and not enough affection and patience to refine and rethink and reapply them with creativity and passion.

    Maybe.

    But how can Bloom’s Taxonomy–or any taxonomy–be thought of as ‘old news’? iPads, Chromebooks, learning styles, or even more recent trending concepts like project-based learning, are all based on thinking that is worth of a collective and ongoing contemplation or we start over and over and over again.

    While ridding what we do and how we do it of dogma and bad thinking is necessary as self-criticism to refine our practice as educators, pessimism is something entirely different. Necessities create possibilities and possibilities become ideas and ideas become potential and potential becomes ‘policy’ and eventually you look up and the once good idea has become something else entirely.

    A fad.

    And so, over and over again, every few years we feel like we have to reinvent the wheel or have the wheel reinvented for us.

    And that’s an exhausting place to be.

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    Terrell Heick

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  • 8 Things Students Need In Modern Project-Based Learning

    8 Things Students Need In Modern Project-Based Learning

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    project-based learning in the 21st century

    by Terry Heick

    We recently offered a definition of project-based learning and looked at keys to designing Project-Based Learning.

    We also have looked at the difference between ‘doing projects’ and project-based learning, various project-based learning resources, project-based learning apps, and offered ways for using an iPad in Project-Based Learning.

    And have shared some practical ideas for better teaching through project-based learning as well.

    What might be missing from these posts, however, are simply the characteristics of project-based learning in the 21st-century. What does it look like? What might be evidence that it’s happening consistently? What needs to be built into every project–or the design of the required curriculum–so that students can shift from a mere ‘project’ to a thoroughly modern learning experience that runs parallel with the connected world they live in?

    We tend to think of project-based learning as focused on research, planning problem-solving, authenticity, and inquiry. Further, collaboration, resourcefulness, and networking matter too–dozens of characteristics ‘fit’ into project-based learning. Its popularity comes from, among other characteristics, its general flexibility as a curriculum framework. You can do, teach, assess, and connect almost anything within the context of a well-designed project.

    But what if we had to settle on a handful (or two) of itemized characteristics for modern, connected, possibly place-based, and often digital project-based learning? Well, then the following might be useful.

    8 Needs For Project-Based Learning In The 21st-Century

    1. Connectedness

    Or connectivity. Interdependence–however you want to phrase it. The idea is, what does this project connect to? A community? A hope? An app? An existing project already in place? A social challenge? Some kind of conflict? Something downright unsolvable?

    Through connectedness, students can then identify a proper scale to work within. (In fact, ‘Scale’ could well be an item of its own.)

    2. Meaning

    ‘Meaning’ is always first personal, and then academic (if it becomes academic). This kind of meaning requires authentic audiences, purposes, and collaboration set in real, intimate communities that share history, space, and meaning with learners.

    3. Diversity

    Diversity of purpose, scale, audience, digital media, potential resources, existing models, related projects, and so on require first analysis of these kinds of diversities on the part of the project manager–that is, the student.

    This can also be a matter of differentiation–less diversity and inherent complexity for students struggling with certain strands of project-based learning as a kind of set of training wheels until they get their balance. And when they do? Add it right back in.

    4. Research

    This one’s not sexy or compelling–this is a big part of the ‘work’ of any project.

    Researching the history of an issue or problem. Understanding the subtleties of given demographic data. Analyzing the credibility of information. Seeing how technology can serve or distract you (or rather, them) from the meat of the issue. This kind of knowledge helps you turn a problem into an opportunity.

    5. A Necessity For Creativity And Critical Thinking

    Among other themes, the 21st-century is about niches, innovation, and scale–seeing an opportunity, and designing something that works on a given–and clear–scale.

    Too often, however, creativity is encouraged without being required. Points are given and a column is added to the rubric and teachers ask for it explicitly but designing a project–or helping students design their own project–that fails without creativity is another thing altogether.

    Lateral thinking, outside-the-box thinking, and taking the best from existing models are all part of 21st-century learning.

    6. Pivot Points

    Perhaps the most modern of characteristics is the ability to be agile–to pivot as circumstances, data, and needs change. The world changes quickly, and the ability to adapt is an extraordinary sign of strength. Pivoting to a new digital media, audience, programming language, timeframe, purpose, or other parameter is crucial for 21st-century survival.

    If a student is designing a kit that helps test water quality for third-world communities but instead finds instead a way to use Google Maps to help certain communities share water cleaning technology instead. This is a pivot and is how creativity works.

    Building an app to help people find restaurants, but find out people use it more to set up lunch dates with friends? Pivot.

    Trying to build an art museum, and find an incredible source of collectible books instead? Pivot.

    When students can ‘pivot’ within the development of a project, it shows they’re able to see both the micro details and the macro context–which is a pretty remarkable assessment in and of itself.

    7. Socialization

    This is ideally accomplished through an authentic purpose and audience, but there’s more to it than that.

    See also Using Authentic Audience In Project-Based Learning

    The socialization of thinking by connecting, collaborating, publishing, and socially curating (see more on that below). Ideally, this would be done in multiple media forms and in multiple languages if possible. The English and Angle-centric image of education–and of edtech especially–is rapidly coming to a close.

    Not all aspects of all projects need to be socialized, but for the sake of transparency and shared journeys in education, choosing something to share, socialize, and perhaps even collaborate on in the future can be powerful.

    8. Elegant Curation

    Crude curation is saving an email, favoriting a tweet, or pinning randomly to a board no one reads that students will never reference again in the future for anything.

    Elegant curation is about saving a ‘thing’ while honoring the thing itself. Showcasing it without losing its meaning or fullness. Somehow capturing both that which is being saved and its context as well–and doing so in a way that makes it accessible to yourself and others as technology continues to change.

    8 Needs For Project-Based Learning In The 21st Century

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    Terrell Heick

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  • What Role Does Empathy Play In Learning?

    What Role Does Empathy Play In Learning?

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    What Role Does Empathy Play in Education?

    by Terry Heick

    So much talk about empathy in education recently. Why? What’s the big idea?

    The role of empathy in learning has to do with the flow of both information and creativity. A dialogic interaction with the world around us requires us to understand ourselves by understanding the needs and conditions of those around us. It also requires extended critical thinking and encourages us to take collective measurements rather than those singular, forcing us into an intellectual interdependence that catalyzes other subtle but powerful tools of learning.

    See also Teaching Empathy In The Classroom: A Quick-Guide

    If successful it should, by design, result in personal and social change through a combination of self-direction, reflection, and collaboration with ideas and the people who have them. This brings us to empathy.

    The role of empathy in learning involves a dialogic interaction with the world around us. This emphasizes knowledge demands–what we need to know. It also encourages us to take collective measurements rather than those singular, forcing us into an intellectual interdependence that catalyzes other subtle but powerful tools of learning.

    But where does it come from? What causes it? What are the authentic sources of empathy in a classroom?

    See Also 30 Of The Best Books To Teach Children Empathy

    Empathy Source: Analysis of ‘Other’

    Whether by close academic examination, more personal ‘evaluation,’ or some kind of analysis that’s in-between, ‘other’ lays the groundwork for empathy.

    The act of an infant reaching out for your face as you hold, or making eye contact with someone during a conference, or even reading literature all are framed by empathy–or suffer tremendously without it. There is a moment when one ‘thing’ recognizes another, followed by some momentary burst of analysis. Who is this person? Are they a threat, an opportunity, or neither? What do I need from them, and them from me? What social contracts or etiquette are at work here that I need to be aware of and honor?

    Literary study is probably the most iconic case for empathy in a traditional learning environment. A novel requires the reader to see the world through one (or more) of the character’s eyes–to understand their motives and draw close to their worldview so that can have a fictional-but-still-parallel experience.

    Empathy Source: Your interactions with them

    This is a powerful opportunity to model empathy. Reinforcement of desired behaviors. Socratic discussion. Grading writing. Evaluating projects. Missing homework. Behavior problems. All of the dozens of interactions you have with students on a daily basis are opportunities for them to see what empathy looks like. 

    This doesn’t mean they necessarily will, in turn, use it with others, but there’s no chance at all for that to happen if they don’t even know what they’re looking for. Your empathy with them may be the only empathy they’ve ever seen.

    Empathy Source: Their interactions with one another

    Another opportunity to see empathy in action is in working with one another—quick elbow-partner activities, group projects, peer response, group discussions, and more. Sharing sentence stems that promote empathetic dialogue can be helpful to students—like training wheels so they know where to start.

    “I can tell you’ve…that must have…” as in, “I can tell you’ve worked hard on this writing. That must’ve taken self-determination, and even some courage.”

    Empathy Source: How Content Is Framed

    How content is framed is another opportunity for empathy. For example, using essential questions that require, reward, and promote empathy can turn a unit into a study on what other people think, why they think it, and what they feel?

    Grant Wiggins often referred to “What’s wrong with Holden Caufield?” from The Catcher In The Rye as a powerful essential question, one that requires students to examine another person in an alien context, make deep inferences based on a schema that is (obviously) personal, and then—hopefully—empathize with a fictional character, not as a quick writing prompt or ‘higher-level question,’ but a 6-week study.

    Studying fiction—or studying fiction well is an exercise in empathy as well. Studying history without empathy is like turning our shared human legacy, full of wonderful nuance and narrative and scandal and hope—into a dry, chronologically-based FAQ. Which sucks.

    Empathy Source: Where Learning Goals Come From

    The relationship between learning goals and empathy may not be clear, but what we choose to study and why we choose to study it are—ideally—primarily human pursuits. When these are handled outside of the classroom, e.g., in the form of curriculum standards, scopes-and-sequences, maps, units, power standards, and the lessons that promote their study, this places the institution immediately at odds with the student and sterilizes the learning experience.

    When students are able to look to other schools, other classrooms, their own lives, or even non-academic ‘fields’ to see how experts and passionate creatives identify, value, and improve their own knowledge and skills, it can help to tilt the learning experience to something emotionally immediate and relevant and authentic—fertile ground for empathy.

    Empathy Source: Transfer Of Knowledge

    What do we do with what we know? What happens when I try to take what I learned here, and use it there? What are my thinking habits? What are the chances I’ll make this transfer unprompted, now and in the future?

    These questions surrounding students’ transfer of knowledge can all benefit from empathy, and promote its growth. Understanding is a problematic word, but let’s consider for a moment two kinds of understanding—that which is demonstrated within the context of a lesson or unit, and that which is able to leave this fragile academic bubble and can survive on its own outside of it. (Or better yet, be useful in that outside world.) This kind of movement isn’t simple, or necessarily natural when they are learning content and goals are all academic.

    In The Courage To Think Critically, I was theorized as much:

    “To think critically about something is to claim to first circle its meaning entirely—to walk all the way around it so that you understand it in a way that’s uniquely you. That’s not academic vomit but fully human. After circling the meaning of whatever you’re thinking critically about—navigation necessarily done with bravado and purpose—you then analyze the thing.

    See its parts, its form, its function, and its context. After this kind of survey and analysis, you can come to evaluate it–bring to bear your own distinctive cognition on the thing so that you can point out flaws, underscore bias, emphasize merit—to get inside the mind of the author, designer, creator, or clockmaker and critique his work.”

    Empathy Source: Movement Within & Across Learning Taxonomies

    Another example? Understanding by Design’s ‘6 Facets of Understanding.’ Note the progression:

    6 Facets of Understanding–Peaking With Empathy & Self-Knowledge

    “Facet 1: Explain

    Provide thorough and justifiable accounts of phenomena, facts, and data.

    Facet 2: Interpret

    Examples: Tell meaningful stories, offer apt translations, provide a revealing historical or personal dimension to ideas and events; make subjects personal or accessible through images, anecdotes, analogies, and models.

    Facet 2: Apply

    Examples: Effectively use and adapt what they know in diverse contexts.

    Facet 4: Have perspective

    Examples: See and hear points of view through critical eyes and ears; see the big picture.

    Facet 5: Empathize

    Examples: Find value in what others might find odd, alien, or implausible; perceive sensitively on the basis of prior indirect experience.

    Facet 6: Have self-knowledge

    Examples: Perceive the personal style, prejudices, projections, and habits of mind that both shape and impede our own understanding; they are aware of what they do not understand and why understanding is so hard.”

    The movement in the 6 Facets here is from outward patterns to inward patterns. Explaining, interpretation, and application are, in large part, outward. The facets then tend inward—perspective, empathize, and self-knowledge. The lesson here–or one lesson of many–is that understanding is a deeply personal process. It is a matter of knowledge, but also identity, perspective, and empathy.

    Why Is Teaching Empathy Important?

    The role of empathy in learning is significant because it helps students to understand and connect with the material they are learning. Empathy allows students to step into someone else’s shoes and see the world from their perspective. This can be helpful in subjects like history, where it is beneficial for students to understand the motivations behind historical events. Additionally, empathy can help students to connect with people from different cultures and backgrounds, which can be valuable in a global society.

    In order to learn effectively, students must be able to understand and feel what it is like to be in another person’s shoes. This is where empathy comes in. Empathy allows students to see the world from another person’s perspective and develop compassion for others. It is a vital component of social-emotional learning and can help students build relationships, communicate better, and resolve conflicts.

    Conclusion

    Our TeachThought Learning Taxonomy includes domains of ‘Self,’ ‘Interdependence,’ ‘Function,’ and ‘Abstraction,’ implying the human, emotional, and connected nature of learning. Learning is about experimenting through, playing with, and otherwise coming to internalize new information and perspective. Knowledge-holding is only one part of ‘knowing.’

    Empathy provides not only provides a common ground between people–and a human tone–but also an authentic need to know what we know and use that knowledge to improve the interactions we value the most.

    Adapted image attribution flickr user flickeringbrad; The Opportunities For Empathy In The Classroom

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    Terrell Heick

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  • Levels Of Integration For Critical Thinking

    Levels Of Integration For Critical Thinking

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    A Basic Framework For Teaching Critical Thinking In School

    by Terrell Heick

    In What Does Critical Thinking Mean?, we offered that ‘(c)ritical thinking is the suspension of judgment while identifying biases and underlying assumptions to draw accurate conclusions.’

    Of course, there are different definitions of critical thinking. The American Philosophical Association defines it as, “Critical thinking is the ability to think clearly and rationally, understanding the logical connection between ideas. It involves being active (rather than reactive) in your learning process, and it includes open-mindedness, inquisitiveness, and the ability to examine and evaluate ideas, arguments, and points of view.”

    But understanding exactly what it is and means is different than teaching critical thinking–that is, consistently integrating it in your units, lessons, and activities. Models and frameworks have always been, to me, helpful in making sense of complex (or confusing–which is generally different than complex) ideas. I also find them to be a wonderful way to communicate any of that sense-making.

    Put another way, models and frameworks can help to think about and communicate concepts.

    See also Examples Of Analogies For Critical Thinking

    A Framework Integrating Critical Thinking In Your Classroom

    Obviously, teaching critical thinking in a classroom is different than ‘teaching’ it outside of one, just as it differs from the active practice and application of critical thinking skills in the ‘real world.’ I have always taught students that critical thinking is something they do seamlessly in their lives.

    They analyze plots and characters in movies.

    They create making short videos.

    They critique relationships and punishments and grades and video games.

    They evaluate their favorite athletes’ performance and make judgments about music.

    And so on. With that context out of the way, let’s have a look at the framework, shall we?

    Levels Of Integration Of Critical Thinking

    Critical Thinking Classroom Integration Levels

    Preface: This post is necessarily incomplete. A full how-to guide for teaching critical thinking would be done best as a book or course rather a blog post. The idea is to offer a way to think about teaching critical thinking.

    Critical thinking can be done at the…

    -Analogies (see also Teaching With Analogies)

    -Choice Boards

    -Debate

    -The Question Formulation Technique

    -Tiering

    -Essential Questions (see How To Use Essential Questions)

    -Differentiation (see also Ways To Differentiate Instruction)

    -Understanding by Design (any of the elements of the UbD framework–backward design, for example)

    -Topics (i.e., learning about topics that naturally encourage or even require critical thinking)

    See also 6 Critical Thinking Questions For Any Situation

    -Spiraling (in this case, at the curriculum mapping level)

    -6 Facets of Understanding

    -Project-Based Learning (see 25 Questions To Guide Teaching With Project-Based Learning)

    -Inquiry Learning (see 14 Teaching Strategies For Inquiry-Based Learning)

    -Asynchronous Self-Directed Learning (see our Self-Directed Learning Model)

    -Heick Learning Taxonomy

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    Terrell Heick

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  • 14 Effective Teaching Strategies For Inquiry-Based Learning

    14 Effective Teaching Strategies For Inquiry-Based Learning

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    Effective Teaching Strategies For Inquiry-Based Learning

    by TeachThought Staff

    Inquiry-based learning is an approach to learning guided by students through questions, research, and/or curiosity.

    An inquiry-based learning strategy is simply a way to facilitate inquiry during the learning process. It might be useful to think of ways to suppress inquiry to emphasize the strategies that might be used to promote it.

    Years ago in the (tongue very much in cheek) 12 Ways To Kill A Learner’s Curiosity, I said that limiting choice, thinking in black and white, and focusing on answers instead of questions were just a few ways to stifle inquiry and curiosity.

    In Strategies For Creating An Inquiry-Driven Classroom, professional development facilitator Irena Nayfeld offered that “children want to understand the world around them, and naturally reveal their interests by asking questions – sometimes even too many questions! As educators, we may feel pressure to keep going with our intended lesson plan or to get to our ‘point.’”

    Let’s take a look at how to promote inquiry-based learning in your classroom.

    14 Ways To Promote Inquiry-Based Learning In The Classroom

    1. Instructional design

    One of the most powerful ways to promote inquiry learning in your classroom is to design activities, lessons, and units that benefit from, promote, or require inquiry. Without ‘room’ or a ‘role’ for inquiry in your classroom, it will be difficult to ’cause’ sustainably.

    Good essential questions can be useful here, too.

    2. Question-Based Learning

    Question-based learning is a TeachThought framework for learning through the formation and revision of questions over the course of a specific period of time. You can read more about Question-Based Learning. This also can be combined with student-led or self-directed learning where students ask their own questions, which, if done in an authentic (to the student) way, should result in more sustainable inquiry as well.

    Also, see questions to guide inquiry-based learning.

    3. Inquiry-based rubrics and scoring guides

    By defining and itemizing individual facets of inquiry and framing what it looks like at different proficiency levels, students can be more clear about exactly what you’re hoping to see them capable of and ‘doing’ as a result of the activity or lesson.

    4. Model inquiry

    This can be done in many ways, including dialogic conversation, Socratic Seminars, and think-alouds, among others.

    5. Use question and statement stems

    Sometimes, students don’t know the mechanisms or patterns of inquiry, and question and statement stems can act as training wheels to help get students moving toward sustained, authentic inquiry. You can see some examples of sentence stems for higher-level discussion, for example.

    6. Intentional Feedback Loops

    Reward ‘Cognitive Stamina’ by encouraging students to ‘dwell’ on a topic or extend inquiry even when hitting dead-ends, the assignment is ‘over,’ or they’re unsure where to ‘go’ next. Consider some kind of ‘inquiry-driven grading’ where you adjust grading processes to accommodate this unique approach to learning.

    The brain works through feedback loops. Roughly put, students do something, and something happens in response. The tighter and more intentional the feedback loops are for applying inquiry, the more likely it is to ‘stick.’

    See also What’s a Feedback Loop In Learning?

    7. Gamification

    Reward points for great questions. Even consider assigning ‘points value’ to great questions–perhaps even higher ‘point values’ than the answers themselves.

    You could also provide ‘levels’ for students to progress through (based on points, for example). Reward curiosity with immediate positive feedback. (See #6 above.)

    8. Reframe content

    Math, science, social studies, language arts, and other traditional content areas overflow with fascinating concepts, topics, histories, legacies, people, etc. ‘Position’ content in a new way that is fresh, provocative, or even controversial (see below). Inquiry is more natural when ideas are interesting.

    9. Controversy sells

    ‘Banned books’ or other (mild to moderate) controversies can go a long way in sustaining student engagement–which sets up the stage for inquiry.

    10. Clarify the role of mindset in inquiry

    This can be done partly by clarifying the value of mistakes and uncertainty in the learning process.

    11. Use ‘smart’ learning spaces

    Design physical learning spaces to promote interaction, access to digital and physical media, and spontaneous collaboration. Artfully design spaces with color, light, and furniture, etc.

    12. Leverage interdisciplinary learning

    Work with teachers across content areas and grade levels to increase interdependence and ‘gravity’ of student work

    13. The power of ‘place’

    Connect students with experts and local organizations to embed work in places native to that student. This is obviously more complex than can be explained as a line item in a single post but just imagine the role of ‘setting’–how much more at ease and natural and connected students are in places native to them–communities or homes or neighborhoods or streets or cities they care about and have a history with that is inseparable from the student.

    14. Emphasize humility

    You can read more about this idea from a separate post, I wrote on learning through humility.

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    Terrell Heick

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  • 25 Questions To Guide Teaching With Project-Based Learning

    25 Questions To Guide Teaching With Project-Based Learning

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    25 Questions To Guide Teaching With Project-Based Learning

    by Terry Heick

    I’ve been thinking of the kinds of questions I consider when planning a project–or planning a unit when students plan a project on their own.

    There’s a lot to consider here–so much so that 12 isn’t even close to enough, but that’s because I tend to over-complicate things (so my kids tell me). I”ll stick to a ‘primary’ set for the first dozen, and then add a secondary set you can take a gander at below.

    I’ve more or less organized them into a kind of spectrum, from the simplest questions to consider, to the most complex. I focused more on creating compelling and student-centered projects, rather than creating a list of questions to use as a checklist for pure academic planning.

    For related reading, you might check out the difference between doing projects and project-based learning, as well as our project-based learning cheat sheet that provides some examples to jumpstart your thinking.

    A Project-Based Learning Spectrum: 25 Questions To Guide Your PBL Planning

    SIMPLE

    1. What role is the learner assuming? Designer? Engineer? Brother? Artist? Cultural Critic? Naturalist?
    2. What is their purpose? What are they doing, and what should the project itself ‘do’?
    3. Who is their audience? Who is the audience of the project’s design, impact, or effect?
    4. How can different learning spaces (e.g., classroom, home, digital) work together? To promote meaningful interaction? An authentic audience? Personalized workflow to meet each student’s needs?
    5. What kind of support does each student need individually? Who can provide it? How much structure is enough for that student? (Scoring Guide, Teacher-Provided Tools, Rubric, etc.)
    6. What’s the ‘need to know’? Is there one? Where did it come from? Is it authentic? Teacher-based, school-based, curriculum-based, or student-based? What are the consequences of each?
    7. Which academic standards are the focus of the unit? How will data from formative assessment (that target these standards) help teachers and students respond within the project?
    8. Who will provide learning feedback? When? How? And feedback for what–the quality of the project? Progress towards mastery of academic standards? Will it be ‘graded’ with letters, numbers, as a matter of standards-mastery, or some other way? Which way best supports student understanding?
    9. How should the product be paced to maintain student momentum? What ‘check-in with the teacher’ markers make sense?
    10. How can assessment, iteration, and metacognition improve student understanding?
    11. How can the student bring themselves (affections, experience, voice, choice, talent, curiosity) to the project? Also, what is the teacher’s role in the process? Is it the same for every student?
    12. What sort of quality criteria make sense? How will we know if the project ‘works’? Was it effective? Performed? Who designs this quality criteria?
    13. What kind of project would the student never forget? 
    14. What’s most critical to the success of the project? Creativity? Critical thinking? Organization? Grit? All may apply, but how might the project be designed to focus on the factors you or the student value most?
    15. How can students work within their local community to solve authentic problems, or celebrate meaningful opportunities?
    16. Is technology use distracting, useful, or critical to the success of the project?
    17. Does it make sense for the project to also be Inquiry-focused? Problem-based?
    18. How can students build on their unique schema and background knowledge to produce something special?
    19. What role might iteration play in the project?
    20. Is the project research-based? Product-based? Service-based? 
    21. Can mindfulness be embedded into the project to help students see their own thinking, identify barriers and opportunities, and respond in a self-directed way?
    22. What filtered (e.g., a teacher-selected book, an encyclopedia) and unfiltered information sources (e.g., a Google search, a social media stream) might they use cooperatively?
    23. What learning taxonomies or cognitive actions might guide students to think best? We covered some of these in a recent post, many of which are shown in the graphic below.
    24. What scale makes the most sense for the student to work best?
    25. Is the project designed to build on student strengths (rather than trying to ‘correct deficiencies’)?

    COMPLEX

    A Project-Based Learning Spectrum: 25 Questions To Guide Your PBL Planning; image attribution Wikimedia commons (the spectrum to the right)

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    Terrell Heick

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  • Why Education Needs More Than Reform

    Why Education Needs More Than Reform

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    by Terry Heick

    On Collaboration As An Industry

    Hopefully, we can agree that education–as it exists–isn’t good enough.

    For students or teachers or communities. It just isn’t.

    This is a tired argument, but it’s an underlying assumption of this concept: education needs more than reform. Iteration. Evolution. Transformation. Whatever word reflects the level of urgency you’d assign it all.

    It’s curious that in seeking this evolution, we turn to the product of the system rather than the systems themselves. We criticize the egg instead of understanding the chicken. Of course, the bits and pieces–the gears–of that chicken are complex to the point of obscurity. This makes self-correction through iteration–the current model for ed reform–a challenge.

    This is in lieu of so much creativity, knowledge, and expertise out there because these same experts get behind the machine and push. We seek approval from the same power holders and institutions that nod their heads yes or shake their heads no, not realizing it is their way of thinking that got us into this mess. We seek change not just from within but from above.

    In response, we need collaboration between and across innovators and experts that is disruptive, even if it’s simple for the sake of disrupting. Make noise. Draw attention. Walk into a movie theater and scream, “fire!” Unplug the television. Turn off the WiFi because this whole thing isn’t getting anywhere quickly.

    Disruption, in general, is about unsettling and is often thought of as chaos. Disruptive collaboration is working together to force change. It’s the artful unsettling of that which has become inartistic. Reconfiguring systems that can no longer see themselves or replacing them altogether. It’s about shifting the locus of control.

    On Collaboration In Thought

    We could talk about helping our students collaborate disruptively–and we should–but most immediately, this is about teaching and learning. As educators, we should first want our thinking disrupted–taken apart, criticized, and scrutinized, then handed back to us in pieces. And not as contrarians but as equal partners seeking to understand one another.

    We could seek collaboration that torpedoes our ideas–and the ideas of the power holders up top that have shut off their innovation trying to please the folks above them–and then emerges on the other side a kind of hybrid of what we think together. And then want it all to disappear and only come back to us in bits and pieces that we can’t recognize as my thinking, but only thought.

    We could stop seeing ourselves–or the people we collaborate with–as simply ideas and opinions because ideas and opinions replace people and diplomacy and friendliness and compliance get in the way–swapped for creative and careful thinking that actually stands a chance to survive the whole clumsy process.

    And once these ideas are articulated and broken apart and transparent, and nobody’s thinking, let’s color them with the wonderful stain of idea exchange so that we can own them as a whole thing ourselves. And then we can produce something of worth together.

    On Collaboration & Its Products

    We should want the product of our collaboration to be disruptive, too. Existing systems already have their own momentum and don’t need our help. They don’t need our hashtags or likes or affection. They’ve yielded the context that necessitates our collaboration to begin with.

    If you want to go fast, go alone; if you want to go far, go together. So, let’s build something that offers viable alternatives for everyone–especially those marginalized by the existing system. Let’s stop demanding rigor and accountability and instead create something ourselves that is scalable beyond the walls of your school or the reach of the concept of ‘academia’ that continues to haunt learning everywhere. 

    Something that thinks not in a pattern of school->curriculum–>content–>proficiency, but instead person–>learning–>knowledge–>lots of people–>lots of learning–>social capacity–>wisdom.

    Let’s connect and build something that doesn’t serve you or the past or what’s already here but others and the here and now. Let’s build something we’ve never had–and do so by empowering everyone that’s a part of this.

    Something that isn’t built to make your school or classroom spin faster, but rather is built for the real work of understanding something.

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    Terrell Heick

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  • The Inside-Out School: A 21st Century Learning Model

    The Inside-Out School: A 21st Century Learning Model

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    by Terry Heick

    This post has been updated from a 2012 version

    As a follow-up to our 9 Characteristics of 21st Century Learning we developed in 2009, we have developed an updated framework, The Inside-Out Learning Model.

    The goal of the model is simple enough–not pure academic proficiency, but instead authentic self-knowledge, diverse local and global interdependence, adaptive critical thinking, and adaptive media literacy.

    By design this model emphasizes the role of play, diverse digital and physical media, and a designed interdependence between communities and schools.

    The attempted personalization of learning occurs through new actuators and new notions of local and global citizenship. An Inside-Out School returns the learners, learning, and ‘accountability’ away from academia and back to communities. No longer do schools teach. Rather, they act as curators of resources and learning tools and promote the shift of the ‘burden’ of learning back to a more balanced perspective of stakeholders and participants.

    Here, families, business leaders, humanities-based organizations, neighbors, mentors, and higher-education institutions all converging to witness, revere, respond to and support the learning of its own community members.

    The micro-effect here is increased intellectual intimacy, while the macro-effect is healthier communities and citizenship that extends beyond mere participation, to ideas of thinking, scale, legacy, and growth.

    The Inside-Out School: A 21st Century Learning Model

    The 9 Domains Of the Inside-Out Learning Model

    1. Five Learning Actuators

    • Project-Based Learning
    • Directed and Non-Directed Play
    • Video Games and Learning Simulations
    • Connected Mentoring
    • Academic Practice

    2. Changing Habits

    • Well-being (for teachers and students) as a matter deserving of innovation & design
    • Acknowledge limits and scale
    • Reflect on interdependence
    • Honor uncertainty
    • Curate legacy
    • Support systems-level and divergent thinking
    • Reward increment
    • Require versatility in the face of change

    3. Transparency

    • Between communities, learners, and schools
    • Learning standards, outcomes, project rubrics, performance critera persistently visible, accessible, and communally constructed
    • Gamification and publishing replace ‘grades’

    4. Self-Initiated Transfer

    • Applying old thinking in constantly changing and unfamiliar circumstances as a constant matter of practice
    • Constant practice of prioritized big ideas in increasing complexity within learner’s Zone of Proximal Development
    • Project-based learning, blended learning, and Place-Based Education available to facilitate highly constructivist approach

    5. Mentoring & Community

    • ‘Accountability’ via the performance of project-based ideas in authentic local and global environments
    • Local action –> global citizenship
    • Active mentoring via physical and digital networking, apprenticeships, job shadows and study tours
    • Communal Constructivism, meta-cognition, Cognitive Coaching, and Cognitive Apprenticeship among available tools

    6. Changing Roles

    • Learners as knowledge makers
    • Teachers as the expert of assessment and resources
    • Classrooms as think-tanks
    • Communities not just audience, but vested participants
    • Families as designers, curators, and content resources

    7. Climate of Assessment

    • Constant minor assessments replace exams
    • Data streams inform progress and suggest pathways
    • Academic standards prioritized and anchoring
    • Products, simulation performance, self-knowledge delegate academia to a new role of refinement of thought

    8. Thought & Abstraction

    • In this model, struggle and abstraction are expected outcomes of increasing complexity & real-world uncertainty
    • This uncertainty is honored, and complexity and cognitive patience are constantly modeled and revered
    • Abstraction honors not just art, philosophy, and other humanities, but the uncertain, incomplete, and subjective nature of knowledge

    9. Expanding Literacies

    • Analyzes, evaluates, and synthesizes credible information
    • Critical survey of the interdependence of media and thought
    • Consumption of constantly evolving media forms
    • Media design for authentic purposes
    • Self-monitored sources of digital & non-digital data
    • Artistic and useful content curation patterns

    The Inside-Out Learning Model Central Learning Theories & Artifacts: Situational Learning Theory (Lave), Discovery Learning (Bruner), Communal Constructivism (Holmes), Zone of Proximal Development & More Knowledgeable Other (Vygotsky), Learning Cycle (Kolb), Transfer (Thorndike, Perkins, Wiggins), Habits of Mind (Costa and Kallick), Paulo Freire, and the complete body of work by Wendell Berry

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    Terrell Heick

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