Tuesday, July 22, 2008

High School's New Face 2008


High School's New Face was again an incredible experience for participants. National presenters such as Sheryl Nussbaum-Beach, Giselle Martin-Kneip, Dennis Sparks, Tony Wagner and Ken Kay just to mention those most known to educators and our teachers. The conference once again inspired us to continue to bring our high school, our instruction and our students into the 21st Century.

We know that engaging students in meaningful learning is the key to improving student achievement. We also know that students will do better in school if they feel that they have a connection with their teachers. Students need to feel that the adults around them genuinely care about them. We want to find what students are interested in and make a connection to the content/subject being taught. Our Thoughtful Classroom initiative is helping us to personalize learning much more than in the past. Lessons are being designed that meet the needs of individual learning styles of students and teachers are thoughtful about designing lessons and activities that have something for each type of learner in the class. We want to find more ways to make that personal connection with students. Conversations we will be engaged in during the coming school year.

Our students are constantly engaged with media, technology, text messaging and socializing. Images flash in front of them on computer screens and information is a click away. "Sit and Get" type lectures will no longer capture the heart and minds of students. Lessons need to be creative, hands-on and engaging. More and more students are reporting that our teachers are doing 'something' different. Students are engaged. At the same time, students are being asked to change, and take more responsibility for their own learning. They are being asked to collaborate with each other, create projects instead of writing essays and make presentations as part of their learning to become proficient at public speaking and communicating their ideas and knowledge. I highlight these changes with some sense of pride that at Iroquois, we are on the right track.

A focus of High School's New Face was the need to teach 21st Century Skills. I have written about these skills before in a post about a report Tough Choices, Tough Times. They include skills in collaboration and teamwork, creativity and innovation, and communications skills including reading, writing and speaking. These are a few of the skills our business community tells us that workers in the 21st Century must be proficient in. Added to the list include critical thinking and problem-solving. These are skills employers need their workforce to possess. The skills related to the "product" a business is involved in is something the businesses/companies can teach. As we move forward, we need to emphasize these 21st Century Skills with our students. I believe that many of these skills are being taught as a result of our Thoughtful Education focus. We may not however, identify these skills for students. We need to talk about them and incorporate them into outcomes for students.

Proficiency in Information and Computer Technology is another area we have been integrating with instruction. We are quickly approaching the point where access to technology will no longer be the issue. Many students come to school well versed in the Internet and how to access information. But, are they able to determine if the information they find is from a credible source? Are they able to gather information and share it in a concise and efficient manner? Can they take the information they find and put it into their own words? We also know that the Internet can be a place where predators lurk, information posted can never be retrieved and just as written work is protected by copyright, so is information posted on the web. Students need to be educated to make the best use of the power of the world wide web. We are discussing how we can provide this learning to students. A group of teachers will be meeting in the next few weeks to discuss technology standards and benchmarks, Internet safety and how best we can teach this essential information to our students.

This is an exciting time in education. While accountability is at an all-time high, the environment (and our economy) is demanding that we do things differently than what has been done in previous decades. In a future post, I will discuss the need for 21st Century Skills and the imperative coming from our business community.

We took a great team to this year's conference. I would like to thank Ross Esslinger, Anne Obersheimer, Sean Lauber and Catherine Stojanovich for taking time out during summer to join in the learning and inspiration tha High School's New Face provides to our region.

4 comments:

Mr. Turton said...

I agree 100% with the points made on your post. I was fortunate to attend HSNF08 as an Alden representative. I feel that the 21st Century Skills can be very supportive of the "established core" content areas. The trick is in the implementation. As a relatively new teacher in elective areas, I have had the freedom to design projects for my students that use the 21st Century Skills. I just never thought to identify the skills that way. It is really nice to have the skills identified by a substantial body of research. My hope is that non-Regents, elective teachers will adopt these skills whole-heartedly and with urgency. Also, the technology is super important, but if it prevents a teacher from adopting and nurturing the other skills then it can be worked into the projects/lessons later.

The HSNF08 Presenters really drove home the fundamental gaps in our country's educational system. Everyone (that hires our students) agrees that strengthening these skills with strengthen our country.

I am proud to be part of a district with the vision to send representatives to conferences such as HSNF08.

Anonymous said...

This post is right on the mark in terms of spelling out the urgency regarding meeting the needs of digital kids in a digital world. Your insights are also invaluable in that you provide nay sayers with a well founded rationale for the adoption of teaching methodologies which are inclusive, incorporate all learners especially teachers in this learning journey. I will be referencing your article as I prepare/plan for the opening of a new school year. Thank you for the leadership you show at your level.

Anonymous said...

My experience and research support what you say in this post. Nice summary of the essential points.

I'd love to hear examples of the assignments your teachers give that get students thinking, using the skills you mention and technology.

I am grappling with a related question: what's the pedagogy for professional development if we want educators to teach so students learn these skills by using them all the time in their learning work?

FYI, I don't agree with your comment that students can stop writing essays. Written communication (a la Tony Wagner, etc.) is still an essential skill. But it is not about the mechanics of wrting [sic], it's about topics such as voice, passion, persuasion, focus, coherence, brevity.... I suspect you agree. However important mechanics is to our wrIting, when we dwell on that (grammar is another diversion - useful to learn, but still a diversion from the essentials of writing) we never seem to get to the stuff that transforms students into "authors."

NRochelle said...

Dennis,
I absolutely agree that students need to write ala Tony Wagner's skills. Didn't intend to mean it had no place. I'm just looking for other ways for students to demonstrate learning besides the typical, write an essay.