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Competency data standards and management, standards-based eLearning content development, SCORM tips and techniques, and whatever else seems relevant.

Monday, August 07, 2006

 

What should we be teaching?

Watching Ken Robinson, author of "Out of Our Minds: Learning to be Creative", talking to the National Governors Association on C-Span. Take a look, if you can, at his writings such as http://www.ecs.org/html/projectsPartners/chair2005/docs/Sir_Ken_Robinson_Speech.pdf

Too much focus on content, too much focus on assessments gets in the way of teaching creativity. China got the message. They are engaged on a major educational reform which goes exactly contrary to the content-centric, assessment-centric model that is stifling education in some Western countries. Innovation is what made America great. Ironically, it seems that the emphasis on "basics" content and standardized testing will stop what made American success possible. Robinson believes that creativity can be developed systematically. Creativity is applied imagination. Innovation is putting the ideas into practice.

Which brings one back to Seymour Papert's sardonic article about the "3 R's" http://www.papert.org/articles/ObsoleteSkillSet.html.

Ironic, isn't it, that I've developed such an expertise in technology standards such as SCORM when they are mostly used for traditional content-centric, teach then test trite content that hinders rather than fosters creativity and innovation? Those are only tools though. The great education comes not from teacher-proof or trainer-proof curriculum and tools -- the question becomes, how can great teachers, trainers, coaches and mentors make this stuff work for them? Not as the only tool, not as the only hammer, but as a useful part of the toolkit that any innovator can use to help foster whole person learning, and along with that the creativity and innovation that lead to true performance. "The problem in education is not that we aim too high and fail, but that we aim too low and succeed."
Comments:
Those interested in creativity, education and educational change might also be interested in this new book, "Education is Everybody's Business: A Wake-Up Call to Advocates of Educational Change" (Rowman & Littlefield Education). It's by educator Berenice Bleedorn ( http://www.creativityforce.com ), who was the gifted consultant for the Minnesota State Department of Education, a professor of creativity in both the business and education schools at the University of St. Thomas, has taught creativity to inmates in the state prison, and writes and speaks about creativity throughout the world.

This book really makes the case for the deliberate teaching of thinking - creative and critical - in education. It also links the importance of education to a thriving democracy. A great idea in the book is that "democracy deserves the best thinking possible" - which offers a great place to begin one's thinking about any number of political issues in the world today. Some other good quotes from the book include:

* Children and youth are all much smarter than we think. They are smarter than the standardized test scores tell us. They have a longer tomorrow than adults, and most of them think about it more than we realize. Students have a right to understand what is happening to the world that they are inheriting.
* The hope is that educational programs will become better designed to make the best possible use of the natural power of the human mind to grow and develop and to be significantly active in service to a cause beyond oneself.
* There are no limits to the intellectual resource of the human mind when it is provided with an atmosphere for personal growth.
* The idea that `Creativity=Capital' is not a facetious one. The capacity of the human mind for creativity and innovation is unlimited. Harvesting the creativity in a business translates to money in the bank.
* Creative thinking can be taught if learners can practice the art of being serious and playful at the same time.
* The educational problem of a disparity between average achievement scores of white students and black students may have some of its origin in the nature of schooling that neglects programs that identify creative talent and fails to provide for its appropriate expression in problem solving and other creative thinking activities.
* Educators have not only an opportunity but an obligation to open the "doors of perception" for all students. The enduring purpose of education is to provide students with a perception of the outer reaches of their talents and possibilities and, ideally, to give them a reason to continue to learn and contribute to their society for all of their lives.
* The mandate is undeniable. The future of the environment can be guaranteed only with the determined effort of all the players in the world drama in every society, and there is no time to lose. It is a perfect project for the integration of schools and society, the community and the education profession. It is a time for personal action and resolve.
* Initiatives from concerned citizens and business interests have a vital place in developing educational outcomes that can be competitive with the rest of the developing world and can continue to contribute to a better life for all.
* Paradoxical thinking is a prerequisite for a society and world steeped in a diversity of cultures, religions and ideologies if we ever hope to achieve a more sane and peaceful world. If complex thinking were taught, practiced and modeled during the process of education everywhere, the people of the world would understand more and fight less.
 
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