Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Thing #1: 7 and 1/2 habits of Lifelong Learning

At nearly 50 years old, I have decided to seek a Master's in Curriculum and Instruction with an emphasis in technology.  I am beginning my third course on this quest, which will require me to blog  "things" that can be done using the web.  My first assignment has asked me to evaluate the 7 1/2 habits of lifelong learning and determine areas of strength, areas in which I can improve, and complete a learning contract.  So here it goes:

Begin with the end in mind:
We live in a society where information about almost anything is at our fingertips.  Without asking specific questions or working toward specific goals, it’s easy for attempts at learning to become a problematic distraction. 

Accept responsibility for your own learning:
Whether in a traditional classroom environment, or in a situation where seeking your own answers to relevant life questions, a true learner must be engaged in the learning process.  A teacher can teach all day, but if a student is uninterested or unmotivated, her efforts are futile.   If we wait for others to teach us without engaging actively in the learning process, we will also be limited by the knowledge of the teacher.  Accepting responsibility for our own learning allows for development of new ideas, experimentation, and an expanded understanding of our world. 

View problems as challenges:
Challenges create opportunity for innovative resolutions.  Even Einstein said, “It’s not that I’m so smart, it’s just that I stay with problems longer.”  Many people who are successfully impacting change in our world are simply people willing to look the hardest for a solution.

Have confidence in yourself as a competent, effective learner:
This trait is one that I find I deal with quite often, not necessarily for myself, but in those I am teaching and coaching.  In the classroom setting, I spend a great deal of time helping students understand that I have high expectations for their work, for them to always give their best.  Most want specific requirements.  They are not confident in their ability to produce a well-written narrative essay.  They want to know how long it has to be or can the adventure include their dog.  They struggle to understand that some stories can be told well in one page, while another may require 4 pages to be adequately written.    As a technology coach, I have the same struggle with teachers.  Many consider themselves to be technology illiterate.  They are afraid to push a button, or introduce technology to their class when they may not 100% understand a program or how to handle every question that might be asked.   They are reluctant to initiate innovative ideas because they doubt their own abilities to experiment and learn something new.

I think this is the trait with which I struggle the most.  As an educator, test scores are often a primary factor in determining whether I am a successful teacher.  Although my administrators have always complimented the innovation and student ownership of learning in my classroom, I have often felt an overwhelming sense of pressure based on standardized test results.   Since most of our classroom populations aren’t standardized, and most modern guiding educational philosophy emphasizes personalized learning, I have often found myself doubting my own understanding of literature, especially when learning has occurred in an independent environment.

Create your own learning toolbox:
I feel like this trait aligns nicely with the first one, begin with the end in mind.  As a classroom teacher, I knew that I would encounter various challenges daily.  I typically had several English Language Learners, some students with attention deficit disorder or other behavioral challenges, while others may be enduring personal challenges at home.  These needs required a toolbox.  The needs of each year aren’t the same, so the toolbox has to continuously grow.   By starting with specific questions to achieve clear goals, I am consistently growing my personal resources.  This year, I am building a new toolbox as I seek to support teachers rather than students.  Every day, I am asking myself new questions and seeking new information through books, the internet and a spectacular team of fellow coaches. 

Use technology to your advantage:
We are not at a loss for technology to use in our life.  It has become a much bigger challenge to determine which technology is the most effective for an individual task.  This is a huge part of my job.  I get to help teachers evaluate a variety of ways to present information, avenues for students to ask and answer questions, and determine multiple ways students might demonstrate mastery of knowledge. 

This is my strength, my passion, what gets me excited.  In my classroom, students were constantly buzzing, many due to technology. Others might have been utilizing markers, color pencils, or even post-it notes.   Some lessons were flipped while some offered opportunities for blended learning.  There were often a variety of ways for students to present their learning.  No lesson was the same, few acquired knowledge exactly the same, and no student product was identical.  I loved going to work and students loved coming to class. 

Teach/mentor others:
Teaching others solidifies the learning process.  By mentoring others, students are able to motivate peers, justify thinking or ask new questions, and encourage learning in others.  This experience isn’t isolated to children.  Teachers who have built successful toolboxes and mentor other teachers create school cultures that are good for kids.  Again, knowledge is shared, old ideas are challenged, and knowledge is sought.  Often times, we learn that old ideas are still good ones (kids need to memorize their multiplication facts).   Sometimes, we learn that there are new and better ways (kids should learn math processes rather than just memorize algorithms).  Either way, our toolboxes are continuously developed and improved through collaboration and mentorship.

Play:

Learning is fun.  Life isn’t a standardized assessment.  It’s a continuous process of living, asking questions, seeking answers, and implementing change.  It doesn’t all have to be linked to success or failure.  Fun resides in the messy process of learning for life!  In my younger days, I struggled quite a bit with this trait.  I am quite goal driven and necessity required me to keep a focus on work and accomplishment.  As I’ve aged and become more confident and content with life, I find the process of learning, often through mistakes, to makeup a great deal of the joy in my journey.

Click here to view my personal learning contract for this course.

1 comment:

  1. Betty! I can see the passion you have for teaching and I love the fact you allow students to facilitate their own learning while you guide them. Standardized tests can cause devastating pressure on us as educators but we must teach to the best of our ability to allow students to learn the "standards" and to express themselves and the way that each student learns.

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