3.8.10 – A culture of “instant gratification” is making today’s schoolchildren harder to teach, a headteachers’ leader said yesterday.

Generation Y children are ‘harder to teach’

A culture of “instant gratification” is making today’s schoolchildren harder to teach, a headteachers’ leader said yesterday.

Youngsters live in a world dominated by reality television and celebrities “where success appears to come instantly and without any real effort”, John Dunford, the general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, which represents secondary school heads, told his annual conference in London. “It is difficult for teachers to compete,” he added. “Success in learning just doesn’t come fast enough.”

Dr Dunford cited research showing children spent a daily average of 1.7 hours online, 1.5 hours on computer gaming and 2.7 hours on watching television. “Against this background, the job of the teacher is immensely harder than it was even ten years ago,” he said. “To engage the impatient young people of Generation Y, something more is needed.”

He said children needed to be encouraged to use the skills they had developed to do more independent learning. Young people did not need to learn more but learn better, he said. “We have to move from dependent learning to independent learning.” He cited a report from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development which said “teachers need to be capable of preparing students for a society and an economy in which they will be expected to be self-directed learners, able and motivated to keep learning over a lifetime.”

Original resource from the Committed Sardine blog

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Guest Blog: Boosting teacher morale — from Edutopia.org

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The teaching profession reaches a crossroads — from NCTAF

“Teachers are reporting significant changes in their profession. These changes come at a time when the teaching profession faces multiple challenges, including the retirement of teachers in the baby boom generation, economic pressures, and a greater emphasis on teacher quality and student achievement. To address these challenges, career pathways in education are changing, the role of the teacher is evolving, and collaboration is being emphasized as never before!”

Posting references the MetLife Survey of the American Teacher.

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Digital Wish

Digital Wish

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Inside the March 2010 Issue of The Journal:

*DIGITAL VIDEO
Flippin’ Out

With its school-friendly price, user-friendly design, and project-friendly capabilities, the Flip Video camcorder is a must-have addition to your classroom technology arsenal.

*OPEN CONTENT
A Custom Fit
The movement toward open educational resources is gaining steam, empowering teachers to modify existing materials and create content that is a better match for their instructional needs.

*21st CENTURY SKILLS
An ‘A’ in Abstractions
How do you assess students on how well they can communicate, solve problems, and be responsible self-learners?  First step: Toss out your bubble sheets and multiple-choice questions.

Plus:
-Network Security – Identity Scramble
-Here & Now
-Policy & Advocacy – Was I Wrong on Obama?
-Drill Down – Digital Citizenship is Fundamental
-Product Focus
-Upcoming Events & Webinars

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PBS Teachers: 2010 Innovation Awards Gallery

The big questions: Now what? — from weblogg-ed

So as of today, 220 of you were kind enough to vote on what you thought were the 10 most important questions from the list that we generated at Educon. Here are the “winners” at the moment:

  1. How do we support the changing role of teacher? 116
  2. What is the role of the teacher? 110
  3. How do we help students discover their passions? 110
  4. What is the essential learning that schools impart to students? 109
  5. What is the purpose of school? 102
  6. How do we adapt our curriculum to the technologies that kids are already using? 100
  7. What does and educated person look like today? 97
  8. How do we change policy to support more flexible time and place learning? 97
  9. What are the essential practices of teachers in a system where students are learning outside of school? 92
  10. How do we ensure those without privilege have equal access to quality education and opportunity? 92

And here were the next three that didn’t quite make the cut:

  • What is preventing us from being adaptable to change? 79
  • How do you validate or evaluate informal learning? 77
  • How do we measure or assess the effectiveness of individualized self-directed learning outside of school? 68
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Becta is Fit for the Future (March 2010)
This project will identify opportunities that technology will bring to education over the next few years…

Fit for the future is an exciting new project which aims to identify the opportunities and challenges that technology will bring the education and skills sectors over the next 5-6 years and work with leaders, practitioners and the technology industry to develop practical, real-world solutions.

The rapid pace of change and innovation in technology means that the education and skills sector constantly needs to adapt to the technical and social impact of new developments. Fit for the Future is about looking several years ahead and making decisions today that will make us ready for tomorrow’s world (emphasis DSC — and a quick comment: this is a very smart strategy).

The project began in Autumn 2009 and will run until Summer 2011. Becta is currently working with key leading educationalists, technologists, thinkers and experts to develop propositions in response to the key trends identified in the DCSF-funded programme Beyond Current Horizons.

Focusing on five themes, the ideas that these response groups generate will then be tested in real-world situations to assess if and how they could work on a wider scale.

The five themes are:

Theme 1 – Learners’ personal cloud: this theme explores the capacity of learners to constantly connect or engage with a network or school at any time or place and investigates their experiences and expectations of personal virtual environments and personalised data.

Theme 2 – Learning beyond a single setting: this theme looks at how learning is increasingly taking place across multiple institutions or places (school, home libraries, museums, employers) and explores how technology can support this in a revised 14-19 curriculum.

Theme 3 – Making the most of data: looks at how technology can be used to make better use of the huge amount of data that is constantly generated in the life of a learner and increasingly being used to build profiles about them.

Theme 4 – New Knowledge Skills: Our future economy will be heavily reliant on innovation, research and development, problem solving and digital capability. This theme aims to better understand what competencies, skills and knowledge will be required of both students and teachers, particularly in relation to STEM (science, technology, engineering and maths).

Theme 5 – Education across borders: Learners and educators now have access to resources not just from their immediate surroundings but from across the globe. This theme explores the potential creation of educational franchises across national boundaries supported by technology-based resources and networks.

Beyond Current Horizons -- UK

Beyond Current Horizons -- 6 possible scenarios for higher ed

Incorporating innovation into strategic planning that will enrich learning — from the Innovative Educator

From DSC:
Some quotes that jumped out at me include:

As innovative educators, students, leaders, and families, are well aware, technology is just a tool. In and of itself technology does not equate to either innovation or greater effectiveness.

I’ve heard one too many educational leader, teacher or parent proudly state that they are part of an innovative school as evidenced by the fact that they have laptops or Smartboards in every classroom. That is not impressive. What is impressive is when the conversation begins with how student learning is enriched in new ways and learners are engaged with innovative tools and ideas.

Here are some ideas on how your school can get started on the road to developing a strategic plan for learning…

From DSC:
The keys here for me are to have a strategy on where and how you are going to innovate. The status quo must go.

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Web 2.0 Classrooms: Transforming the Culture (3/22/10 presentation) — by Alan November, November Learning & Steven Halper, Technology Coordinator/Chair, Rye Neck Union Free School District; sponsored by Tech & Learning and Lightspeed Systems

Also see:

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As schools lose relevancy, students take charge of their own learning — Project Tomorrow —Tuesday, March 16, 2010
Annual survey finds students moving ahead with learning on their own; offers insights for improving American education with emerging technologies

Washington, D.C. – In the absence of a more relevant learning process in schools, our nation’s students increasingly are taking their educational destiny into their own hands and adapting the various tools they use in their personal lives to meet their learning needs and prepare themselves for the future, according to the 2009 Speak Up survey of 300,000 students nationwide.

The 2009 Speak Up national findings provide compelling evidence that our nation’s K–12 students increasingly are taking responsibility for their own learning, defining their own education path through alternative sources and feeling not just a right but a responsibility for creating personalized learning experiences.

“Students are no longer waiting for policy changes within their schools, or from Washington, D.C.,” said Julie Evans, chief executive officer, Project Tomorrow. “Students want their voices heard by those making education policies, but we are now seeing them move beyond their attempts to share their needs with adults. They are taking the technology they have grown up with and using it to help them learn—inside and outside of the classroom.” (emphasis DSC; like water around a rock…which goes for all of us!)

Staying Relevant

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Blueprints and Broadband — from ednetnews.com by Anne Wujcik —Friday, March 19, 2010

…the Obama Administration released its blueprint to overhaul the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB), to mixed reviews. “A Blueprint for Reform” sets out the administration’s K-12 priorities and provides a bit more detail about how the various programs will operate.

The plan sets out six long term goals for the next decade, including calling for every American community to have affordable access to at least 1 gigabit per second broadband service to anchor institutions such as schools, hospitals and government buildings and at least 100 million U.S. homes to have affordable access to actual download speeds of at least 100 megabits per second and actual upload speeds of at least 50 megabits per second (emphasis DSC).

On first read, there doesn’t seem to be anything really unexpected in the administration’s blueprint for the reauthorization of ESEA. Talking to Congress, Secretary Duncan emphasized that the blueprint supports the administration’s three major goals for reauthorization…

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Mobile learning makes its mark on K-12 — from edweek.org

The use of mobile devices for learning is sparking a shift in the ed-tech landscape, but its impact on student achievement is unclear. One of the joys, and challenges, of covering educational technology is that the landscape is forever shifting as digital advancements carve new twists and turns. The latest shift in the landscape is the growing use of portable technology tools for learning. Mobile devices such as smartphones and iPods, still seen as nuisances or contraband by many schools, are now viewed by an increasing number of teachers and administrators as cost-effective tools to build and sustain 1-to-1 computing programs.

Students in Marc Schuler's World History class at Roswell High School can use their iPod Touch devices in plain site.

Students illuminate teacher Mark Schuler using iPod touch devices in a
World History class at Roswell High School near Atlanta.
—Pouya Dianat for Education Week

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