And so it begins . . .

    I’m sitting here at my desk at work listening to the opening Fireside Chat of the first K12 Online Conference.  I’ve never attended a live Elluminate session before — and I can simply say that I’m blown away.  We’re talking to and with the world.  After all the podcasts and webcasts and blogging and wikis and connections with others, I’m always struck by just how powerful and amazing these connections are.
    Wow.  Just wow.

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Network, Not Group Work

    While I’ve been moving to the notion for some time now that what I should be doing as a teacher is to help individuals work their way into learning networks, I certainly haven’t been thinking so in isolation.  One person that’s really, really helped me to clarify my thinking on the matter, as well as to help me rediscover some of the passion that’s been missing from my work in the last couple of weeks, is Stephen Downes.  His podcast from his recent excursions into New Zealand has really been useful.  Defniitely worth a listen, maybe at least two.   I’ll probably be returning to that piece of audio a few more times.  I dig his passion.  Lots.   

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Lots More Voices

    While I’m watching the progress indicator ("Only five more minutes" for only half an hour  an hour  a really long time now — installing software is like going on a road trip with my dad.) move ever onward towards the moment where I discover if I’ve managed to save my data, I’m taking a few minutes to scan some of the new blogs from my friends, teachers, and colleagues that I’ve been involved with over the last few weeks.

    Here’s Donna, CSUWP teacher-consultant, my colleague and the other half of my school’s language arts department:

I’m wondering how teachers stay excited all the time. I know there’s so
much to learn but here I am in my classroom again. Talking memoir or
study habits and maybe I’m just disheartened because a kid who touched
my soul has somehow decided she should drop out.

Here’s Jason, a long-time collaborator and teacher in the CSUWP:

I so often pose questions to my students that either I don’t know the
answer to or choose not to share. An example of this is "The Mystery
Cube", a well-known Nature of Science activity that I’ve put my own
spin on to help teach Atomic Theory. It involves a cube with language
and symbols on each side. Their role is to then figure out, based on
logic and data collection, what the bottom of the cube says. I never
actually tell them if they are correct. Funny thing is… I have kids
that will approach me THREE years later and ask me to tell them what
was on the bottom of the cube. After a lesson that is based in thinking
critically, sharing data, and scientific community, why is that
students can not let go of the verfication they so desperately need
from their teachers. Frustration is a beautiful tool, especially in a
science classroom, primarily because it is so real.

Here’s Cindy, the CSUWP director and my teacher of so many subjects over the last eight years or so:

My reason for establishing this new blog is connected to my conviction
that I should be practicing the same professional habits I’m asking of
my students. In the process of doing so, I’m hoping that we can learn
from and with one another and that their increasingly insightful ideas
can move beyond our classroom to be shared with whoever else cares to
read them.

There are so many other good, rich, interesting voices emerging all over the place right now.   Everyone that I’ve seen honestly and openly approach blogging has added something rich and  vital to the conversation. 
    Of course, I’m both excited and scared to death about the development of more and more online conversation.  In the end, I am so selfishly glad to have these voices to plug into my learning network, but on the other hand, as more and more people come to the blogging party, it’ll become more and more difficult to stay on top of it all.
    Of course, being able to include the other teachers in my area  in these conversations is a downright fantastic feeling — imagine how interesting things will get when teachers might be required reading for each other, when we can finally peer into the classrooms and the minds of passionate people that are just down the hall or the street from us, but that we never "have time" to see teach or to engage in conversation with. 
    Can you imagine the strength in those connections?  Now add our students into the mix, writing and thinking and learning from and with each other.
    Sounds too good to ever be allowed to happen, doesn’t it?  Allow me some hope tonight.  I know that connectedness and writing don’t solve all the problems of the world. 
    But they’re both a good first step.

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Inconvienient, Not Problematic

    I’ve never, ever, ever had a hard drive fail on me.  In fact, a little while back, I was able to resurrect my "dead" iPod by unplugging the drive and plugging it back in.  So far, works fine — knock on wood.  So, like I said, I’ve never had a hard drive fail.
    Until yesterday.

    Not really the best week for such shenanigans (thanks for the countdown , y’all), but in the midst of real world struggles and frustrations, I keep reminding myself that it’s only an inconvenience.  Not a problem.  In fact, pretty much every issue that I’ve got at school and at home falls into the former category.  Thanks to Robert Fulghum for helping me to realize the difference:

If you break your neck, if you have nothing to eat,
if your house is on fire, then you got a problem. Everything else is
inconvenience.
 

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Preservice Bloggers

    I’m writing tonight to provide a good starting point for a group of preservice teachers and their professor who are all about to take the leap into the edublogosphere/blogosphere/world of weblogs/whatever it is that we’re calling ourselves these days.

  I’d like to welcome Cindy‘s preservice teachers to this blog.  Look around.  Be sure to check out some of the members of my learning network.  You’ll find links to them on the right hand side of the page. 
    If you’re a preservice teacher, or you’re working with preservice teachers, could you please leave a comment telling us where the preservice teachers are blogging?   I’d love to be able to connect this bunch of students with others around the world who are learning about teaching and blogging.

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Yarn. Again.

    Thanks for those of you who made suggestions, both on and offline about how I should handle Saturday’s blogging workshop.
    Turns out, I ended up using the yarn again. What is it about yarn and blogs? 
     Let me explain. 
    After a quick introduction, I asked all of the participants to raise their hands if they had done something interesting in their classrooms in the last 30 days.  Not surprisingly, every hand went up.  I then asked someone to briefly tell us what they did.  After my volunteer went, I handed her the end of a skein of yarn and asked anyone who was interesting in learning more about what she had to say to raise their hands.  I then instructed the volunteer to hang on to one end of yarn and to toss the skein to someone with their hand up.   That new "volunteer" then shared, and we repeated the process, grabbing the yarn and tossing it along to others who were interested in what was going on in our respective classrooms. 
    It didn’t take long for us to notice two things (as I expected):
1.  Pretty much everybody in the room was doing something pretty darn interesting.
2.  We were all invested/interested in/curious to know more about each others’ classrooms.

    The reason for the yarn?  I wanted people to see the connections that they have to their colleagues — connections of interest, of investment, concern and curiosity.  The yarn was a tangled mess of connection that was a strong visual suggestion of the network that forms when teachers begin to blog and to share their work online.
    Participants wanted me to show then how to blog and podcast with their students — I rejected that idea.  The best only way to learn how to create learning networks with students is to create a personal learning network yourself.  Once that happens, let’s work together to create experiences for students.  (In fact, there was talk of doing some long-term training around technology, but that’s a story for later.)
    As we worked for the rest of the afternoon, reading about learning (good timing, Will!), creating blogs via Blogger and subscribing to each other via Bloglines, the yarn network was there, and we all felt gentle tugs as we typed or when we tried to cross the room to ask a question.  (Actually, I tripped over the network at one point, and just about hurt myself.)  At the end of the day, I asked every participant to share one goal that they had for their blog over the next several months.  Many said that they’d be blogging and reading blogs in their aggregator once a week for the next few months.  I thought that was a reasonable goal.
    It sounds hokey, but the heart of the matter is that, with blogs and feeds and the connections we’re making, we’re really connecting with other people (and their ideas and experiences) in ways that just weren’t as easy, or as possible, a few short years ago.  Adding pictures, video, and audio boost the connection.   
    That’s why the Read/Write Web is important, because of how it allows us to build relationships and share ideas and solve problems.  And that’s why we should be teaching (in/through) it.
    If you’d like to meet our new bloggers, head over to the CSUWP blog and check out the links to Active CSUWP Teacher Blogs.  Some are new — some have been blogging for a little while now. 

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