The assumption that learning is a passive process is perhaps the single most entrenched myth I run into on a daily basis. Almost all of my students, and almost all of their parents seem mired in the belief (contrary to years of personal experience) that one only learns from good teachers, that is teachers that are good at the act of teaching itself. According to this model, a teacher either has the skill to spray facts all over the learner in a way that makes those facts stick, or they don't. This version of what I do makes me out to be a kind of pitcher. If I through a good enough pitch, information will bypass the batter (all the available distractions that might interfere with learning), sail over the plate (meaning the catcher/learner will not need to move at all to catch it) and into the glove/mind of a catcher who merely needed to kneel in the right place...
Most of you understand this to be a silly idea. Setting aside the fact that the catcher must get up, get to school, and open his/her glove (none of which is a given)... most of us understand that more is required of the catcher than his or her presence. Unfortunately, most of the discussion of school reform, and many of the school reform efforts in place around the country serve to solidify rather than break apart this myth. When we hear positive news about teachers, it tends to revolve around the idea that a dedicated teacher can produce miraculous gains on test scores in a school year. This assertion, though strictly accurate from a certain point of view, is far from benign. To the extent that a teacher is capable of helping students produce gains, the teacher is almost always skilled at convincing students that what they are teaching has value, and thereby convincing them to aid in its teaching. In this model the teacher is delivering more of a sales pitch than a baseball pitch.
I have realized this summer that my own sale's pitch requires some work, in that I want to show the students the extent to which learning is an active and social process. In order to achieve this, I must break down the myth that if I simply explain things in the right way, students will "get it" and score well on exams. My inclination is of course simply to explain all of this on Day 1, that intelligence is fluid, that learning is a social process requiring of engagement, and hope that it sinks in. Of course then I would be actively promoting that which I sought to destroy.
This is a problem that plagues my teaching throughout the year, how to convince students to find information, rather than just giving it to them. We all know that we learn from one another. We know what it looks like when we do. We know when we are learning nothing. We also know that "Do as I say, Not as I do" is a method that usually fails. So lecturing about being an active participant in learning is doomed to fail; leaving me 5 weeks to figure out a different approach.
How does one manufacture an authentic situation in which a group of people learn that they are integral to the learning process?
That question is not rhetorical, and I would welcome any suggestions.
Monday, July 19, 2010
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Try to stop saying things in the classroom altogether? Seriously, I think this is what I'm working towards. Point at stuff (very simple rubrics?), shake your head yes or no, reward active learning and interesting work with a grave nod (and a B+)...
ReplyDeleteHi Justin,
ReplyDeleteThis final question you pose has been central to the education course I am finishing up now. I recently came across an incredible third grade math teacher's classroom, in which students are truly at the center of the process of knowledge construction. Please have a look at these clips when you can. Even though it's 3rd grade math, the elements of instruction and learning are exemplary for all levels and subjects. The question is, how did Ms. Ball do it?
http://bluestream.dc.umich.edu/ams/video/A1001001A10B23B65758B11315/A1001001A10B23B70209B97449/seannumbers-ofala_video.mov
http://bluestream.dc.umich.edu/ams/video/A1001001A10B23B70210G66024/A1001001A10B23B70357D77225/betsyproof-start.mov