Changing how we think is no longer an imperative – it’s too late!
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Changing how we think is no longer an imperative – it’s too late!
Vodpod videos no longer available.
This morning 5 wonderful teachers and myself began our journey into Powerful Learning in the 21st century.
We are attending the official launch of the Australian cohort of the international Powerful Learning Practice program being run Sheryl Nussbaum Beach and Will Richardson.
Welcome to my fellow teachers from Joeys, and enjoy the next 12 months on this wonderful rollercoaster pedogogical journey.
searchcube is a graphical search engine that presents search results in a compact, visual format. It searches
the World Wide Web for websites, videos and images and displays previews of each result on a unique, three-dimensional cube.
Once your search results appear, you can use the arrow keys, the SHIFT key and the mouse to interact with your searchcube.
Mouse over the images and get a visual preview of the site. I have a lot of fun with the results of my search on information literacy. I don’t think we are looking at a tool to drill for in depth information here – but I can see a very good discussion around research, information literacy and more using this tool with kids.
Problem? images included in the search make it a bit more complex to identify the source than traditional image searching (what has happened to the world when a Google image search can be described as ‘traditional’). Advanced searching ? no! But then I suspect this is just a new niche, not a replacement for other tools.
There has to be something fun I can use this for as well as a teaching tool! What do you think?
Studying my SLED calendar (which I have embedded in my Google calendar) more closely yesterday I stumbled across a morning (in my time) meeting from Sheila Webber, Information Literacy expert and Senior Lecturer in the Department of Information Studies, University of Sheffield, UK. The meeting was too early for me, but I was intrigued nonetheless.
I have followed Sheila’s Information Literacy Weblog for some years, but made direct contact with her as a result of the publication of Information Literacy meets Library 2.0 to which we were both contributing writers (have you got a copy yet?).
All librarians should keep an eye on Shiela’s blog and the work she is doing. I slipped up myself, so was delighted to catch up on one of her current initiatives The Seven Pillars of Information Literacy. Do pick up The Seven Pillars of Information Literacy model which are available for download and use.
The Seven Pillars model was designed to be a practical working model which would facilitate further development of ideas amongst practitioners in the field and would hopefully stimulate debate about the ideas and about how those ideas might be used by library and other staff in higher education concerned with the development of students’ skills. The model combines ideas about the range of skills involved with both the need to clarify and illustrate the relationship between information skills and IT skills, and the idea of progression in higher education embodied in the development of the curriculum through first-year undergraduate up to postgraduate and research-level scholarship.
I was actually on duty as Docent at ISTE Island, when the sim was shut down in one of the usual Linden Lab restarts. Being on the loose in Second Life I spotted the fact that Sheila was also inworld, and after a quick IM she kindly invited me to take a look at the work they are doing on the Seven Pillars over at Infoli iSchool in Second Life: http://slurl.com/secondlife/Infolit iSchool/95/38/22/
Can I say, this is really an interesting project to watch!! I was so excited to see the framework growing in a 3D environment, allowing students to ‘walk the walk’ of the information literacy process. This is a model that can work not just in higher education, but in secondary education just as effectively (in teen second life).
As Sheila explained, she had students exploring and applying this information literacy model to their research and information needs during her course, after they had completed another unit which had included Second Life learning. This struck me as ideal!
We do need to look at innovative ways to capture the interest and commitment of our students to understanding the deep thinking involved in the information search process, and as the learning world becomes more and more immersive, these initiatives are an important step in the right direction.
The model not only allows students to ‘walk through’ the stages of the information process, but it also includes powerful investigation of both quantitative and qualitative research.
In fact, I would venture that using the 7 pillars in Second Life would very nicely tap into the cognitive AND affective domains of the information search process. By allowing collaborative discussions about the research process and by involving the students in use of such interesting tools as the Opinionater, a Likert scale social grapher (puts voting with your feet into a whole new perspective LOL), I can see an amazingly powerful application to information literacy instruction not just in tertiary, but also in school environments.
Wonderful experience. Thanks Sheila!
A nice find from Kairosnews ready for innovative use by any good school librarian – a wonderful story called The Puzzle Box. This is one for reading aloud, or working with online.
Either way, it’s a little bit of magic from Edward Picout! You might also like to visit the HyperLiterature Exchange, or do a search of the Electronic Literature Directory.
From Chapter 1:
“No, no,” said her Dad. “No, darling, I’m sorry, they didn’t have one. This is something else. It’s a present for you, but it isn’t a GameBox.”
“What is it?”
“Well, I’m not going to tell you that, am I? You’ll have to wait and find out. It was a marvellous shop, though, with all sorts of unexpected things in it. Not the usual mass-produced stuff at all. The shopkeeper was the strangest little man I’ve ever seen in my life.”
“Dad,” she said, “why didn’t you tell me Adam was in the back of the car?”
“What?” he said, turning round. “Adam’s in the back of the car? What are you talking about?”
Dora turned round too. The boy on the back seat had vanished.
“Honestly, Dora, you gave me such a turn.”
“But he was there, Dad! A boy called Adam! He was there just now! I was talking to him!”
“I think you must have fallen asleep and dreamt it,” said her Dad.
Libraries/media centres/resource centres have a critical role in our schools in terms of the full range of resourcing they can provide for our teachers and learners.
As I engage in deep and meaningful conversations with our artchitect/project manager of our revitalisation programme, I can’t help but muse how much we still have to do in the overall scale of things compared to public and academic libraries. I’ve spoken about this a lot in some of my presentations, but I am more amazed than ever at how much we still have to do.
The Wilton Library Association has put together a list of Innovative Internet Applications in Libraries. What a wonderful list, and it continues to grow. I highly recommend that school librarians bookmark this link and use it as a bit of a source of inspiration. I must not forget to try and develop more innovative things for my school once our Simply Books mashup has a “life of its own”.
Hot on the heals of this great list are the continuing changes coming out of Google, that can often help support the work of our school libraries.
Mashable writes that Google Book Search, the popular and somewhat controversial service which has archived millions of books into digital format, has added a new set of tools and partnerships, none bigger than the ability to embed a preview of The Da Vinci Code or the entire encyclopedia on Diabetes onto external websites.
Now this is a particularly interesting development. Though it is not a service I can use just yet, it does seem that several libraries including the University of California and the University of Texas Libraries are incorporating the previews into their online catalogues. This is a new form of content enrichment, and one to keep a close watch on.
Our libraries really will become virtual storehouses of information – if we want them to be!
Not to be forgotten though, while we gradually move towards launching services similar to our public and tertiary counterparts, is the wonderful ASK NOW service for Australian and New Zealand – including school students. I’m writing this down here to remind myself to DO something about this – embedd it into the intranet home page so that we never forget the value of this information service being delivered by experienced reference librarians.
Give it a go! Chat with an online librarian next time you are stumped for an answer!
As I sit in the coffee shop at home in my own suburb I am pondering how things on the communication front have changed in the years that I have been frequenting this excellent little shop.
How proud I was when I got a mobile phone so I could ring home while having coffee to get the kids to take the washing off the line. I could liase over my mobile to meet friends after school to talk. Now?
I am writing on my blog using the free wifi on my iTouch (though it could have been my eePC) after checking my email and twitter. Is this relaxing? Funny thing is that it is for me, but it is clearly not the chosen way for most people to relax! No one else here is on ‘a device’!
What does this mean? Is my behaviour part of a new wave or am I an abberation amongst my peers?
I haven’t had much time to write in the long winter term – but there’s a good reason! I work at a fantastic school with terrific teachers and equally fantastic leadership, all of whom do not shy away from addressing learning challenges – albeit in a timely and appropriate manner.
So TWO really exciting things are happening within my scope during the remainder of the year.
The first revolves around the library learning spaces at ‘Joeys’. The Brother Liguouri Resources Centre was built with an amazing vision that still holds true – the facilities work! and the services are great. It’s just the physical environment that needs an overhaul. So I am involved in great planning with our architect, and we expect to undertake the refurbishment starting late November, early December. Woot!

The second revolves around our trip to Melbourne next week for the official launch of the Australian cohort of the international Powerful Learning Practice program being run Sheryl Nussbaum Beach and Will Richardson.
Powerful Learning Practice offers a unique opportunity for educators to participate in a long-term, job-embedded professional development program that immerses them in 21st Century learning environments. The PLP model is currently enabling hundreds of educators around the country to experience the transformative potential of social Web tools to build global learning communities and re-envision their own personal learning practice.
PLP’s learning cohorts are led by internationally recognized voices and practitioners in the field of educational technology.
I love working with Will, and can’t wait to begin to work with Sheryl too on a regular basis in this program.
We have a great team from school which includes our adventurous Director of Teaching and Learning; my explorer buddies Gary Molloy and Anthony Rooskie (explorers of Wiimote in our Classrooms); and two new teachers (from English and Social Sciences) ready to jump right into this wonderful experience. We will be a strong team.
In addition I am excited to be one of 10 educational leaders called 21st Century Fellows within the Program, which will allow me to work with schools around the world and expand my own knowledge and understanding of an integrated approach to 21st century learning. The Fellows serve as facilitators of online professional development activities and can be “go to” folks if the teams have questions or need help!
For more information, visit the International PLP Wiki.

The twitterverse, nings, wikis, blogs, and more are full of great ideas being shared by teachers to promote ideas and innovation in learning and teaching. It’s great to see the information networking take place, and the discussions happening formally and informally, such as the Oz/NZ educators.
But I would like to urge teachers and teacher librarians to do more than join social networks, chat in flashmeetings, or blog their collaborative ventures.
Please consider contributing to your professional association in some way. Join a committee, become an executive member – do something! Our professional associations are the ones that lobby on behalf of our subjects and profession, respond to government papers and initiatives, profide first class professional learning opportunities – in fact, do so many things that represent the best interests of teachers and students.
It is not enough to ‘get into’ social networking. It is more important to be a contributor via active professional bodies in your state or country. I have always helped if I can, locally, nationally and internationally via a number of associations. Last week, I added another small contribution to my weaponry (because that’s what it is – weapons to forge a better future) by volunteering to become an ISTE Docent.
What a treat it is to be in charge of helping others at ISTE HQ, even if only for one short hour each week.
It constantly surprises me that people hesitate to take this step to volunteer with their preferred professional association. I hear all sorts of excuses. Yet the real gains we have made in education have often been driven by those who work tirelessly via their associations.
Next time you see nominations, or are asked to contribute in some way – please – give it a go. This is your chance to put other interests ahead of your own and make sure that we are ‘going somewhere’ in education.
Term break means a time to relax, a time to reflect, and a time to regroup! It is also inescapably time to stop and reflect on professionalism. My head has to stop spinning and my mind has to stop being excited on the one hand, or screaming with frustration on the other.
Like many others in my personal learning network, I am passionate about the changes in the learning environments of our students – at least the possibilities if not always the actualities. I’ve been blogging about this and the information frameworks, tools, concepts, and activities since May 2006. Yes, I know that’s not long, but it’s longer than some and long enough now to know when I am hearing or reading rubbish!!
Doug Johnson in Continuum’s End said
It seems to me that that the continuum between reactionary educators who still find overhead projectors a cutting edge tool and progressive educators who seem to master each tool and philosophy du jour is stretching ever longer every year. As a classroom teacher in the 70s and 80s, we all taught pretty much the same way, with the same sets of tools.
The question of importance to me is not the mastery of tools, but the underlying processes that are important. This is the rub – there are those who, rightly or wrongly, are amongst the elite in terms of commentary or influence on directions in education, who it seems to me have become what my own family constantly remind me not to be…..they are ‘clique-bags’.
“Those” clique-bags are the smart ones – not me, not you – but people who make decisions on our behalf.
Finally I have had enough of the clique and rhetoric!
I’m churning my way through a ton of books on digital schooling, digital kids, 21st century society etc etc.
And its always the same – rattle out the cliches, dismiss everything about the past, bang on about the digital generation and bingo you have 21st century learning frameworks.
Don’t get me wrong – it’s not that I don’t agree with some of the key elements – I wouldn’t be a blogger if I didn’t have my headspace in the 21st century – but please slap me with a cold fish if I ever start saying the following:
In many ways, schools as we have all experienced them, are offspring of the industrial age. So powerfully influential were industrial processes and their effects on all aspects of society, that schooling was actually modeled on these processes, designed to meet the needs of a particular society in a particular point in history……..G. Whitby in “Leading a Digital School: Principles and Practice” ed Mal Lee and Michael Gaffney
What has happened with cliques is that educationalists have been ranting about ‘industrial age’ schooling, related to the economic and communication environments that shaped society in the 19th and 20th centuries. So with the globalisation of world economies and the emergence of the flat classroom concepts, the thought leaders have adopted the ‘industrial schooling’ argument as the reason for wholesale deconstruction of education structures across schools or systems.
I would suggest that we not forget the history of education in society. Unique combination of technological, cultural and economic factors led to the Industrial Revolution and a spinnoff in this era was the eventual emergence of the right to education for all. The much criticized ‘industrial age’ of schooling of the 20th century was in fact the endpoint of an age of great achievement where education was sought after and available for every child in western society. It was an age of great sacrifice, of economic battles for the right to either secular or religious education, it was an era that carried forward the ideals of knowledge first cemented by the Greek philosophers, and valued throughout history and the transitions wrought by the age of the printing press and beyond.
The ‘industrial age’ of schooling was the pinnacle of many achievements. My children’s grandfather rode a horse to school, had no electricity or running water at his home, yet without basic technology or the accouterments so urgently demanded for all our students, was able to learn so much that made him the thinking man he is today, who can hold his own and challenge the ideals and deep knowledge of his geeky young grand kids.
It was a major achievement to be able to educate all young members of our society. In third world countries, this right is still being won! It is not technology or web 2.0 or fancy new ways of arranging staff and learning spaces that makes the real difference. It is what we say, how we say it, and how we support deep knowledge that makes it possible for our students become good social, ethical and moral citizens of the world.
No more cliques please. Rather, acknowledge the value of past efforts, and build on them to create future opportunities – which incorporate the demands that our 21st century makes on us. If I go back to John’s post The Continuum’s End – I’d venture that the continuum between reactionary and progressive education spans many centuries.
Unfortunately there are some amongst us that are so poorly read themselves that they can’t see how silly it is to tout 20th century ‘industrial age schooling’ as the reason for educational change. Oh but they are probably the same people who run your education system, or institution and are good at verbose cliques to justify their actions.
Yes, there’s a lot that needs to change about schooling. Let’s focus on the facts to get there. Cliches are born of ignorance – that’s all. Focus on the revolution not the rhetoric!