Monday, February 20, 2017
Open Education - "Our Doubts are Traitors"
I couldn't resist this quote from Measure for Measure. It encapsulates my relationship toward using the open online communities. (See the photo below of a 19th century production.)
I am afraid of making a mistake or trying to cling to my hubris that I have the 'best' solution to a problem. David Wiley calls this overcoming your inner two year old. He goes further to encourage us so that we can light others' candles without getting rid of our own light. Indeed, we will become better teachers by sharing. However, we need to be aware of seeing this as a silver bullet. Teachers need to be able to determine how good a teaching resource is that he or she finds. A guide for this can come from history - the printing press and its history. Better access to information means that we need better consumers who can sort.
We also need to demand change in the way courses are offered through online communities. Why do course management systems not work like Facebook? Why is information no longer accessible at the end of a semester. The answer comes from a need to protect and that it is not in a company's best interest to save information over time. We, as educators, need to figure something out to meet demand for access to education. We continue to have one of the best educational systems and we need to figure out how to get more people of the world access to it.
Additionally, I need to get more comfortable with sharing and openness. When I have a lesson that I think is particularly effective, I can share it. Others can adapt it for their classroom and impact those beyond my own classroom with my good work. The Open Education video shows this particularly well. Open educational resources also help to provide quality education to the world. I think we can start adding this to our own educational networks by sharing and using resources. Already, I am in an instructional design course this semester. As I was planning, I Googled and found some excellent online resources for teaching the Middle East. I found some great resources including this one from the University of Arizona and this one from the University of Chicago. I ended up 'borrowing' a few ideas from the University of Chicago's resources. You can even find some news magazines online with excellent teaching resources. Once I am finished with my lesson plans, I think I will share them on this blog so others can have access.
I also think an open access classroom build assignments that encourage students to publish and interact online in a safe way. One might consider using blogging instead of journaling or worksheets.
I have been having conversations with my adviser about the need to reform social studies classrooms to be more inclusive. Students need to see themselves in the past so we can build a better future. It seems that open educational resources could help with this. Additionally, using open educational resources help fight the consumerist model of education. This can even lead to better ways of organizing technologies, social movements, and many other things through open thinking. However, I wonder if the existing governmental and funding structures we have encourage this type of collaboration. As we have a school system built around funding through local taxes, isn't what taxpayers are buying is better resources and teachers? Is this open resource system a way of fighting that?
As we look toward the future, who knows what lies ahead? There are a number of entirely online schools being developed to offer K-12 education. Will this mean the death of traditional schools? I don't think so. I still think there is value in the face to face interactions offered by brick and mortar schools. However, I think that we are just at the beginnings of what that revolution will bring. I do think we will see the eventual death of the textbook. The costs of textbooks are better spent on providing technology. Textbooks themselves take so long to print and acquire that they are almost out of date when they arrive. Plus, as the article indicates, using outside readings increases engagement and allows for more diverse points of view.
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Very well stated in many ways. We lose site of all the stuff we have borrowed along the way. One of my students many years ago taught Shakespeare in high school. Students struggled with the language (because it is meant to be spoken aloud) so she formed the class into teams with the task of preparing for a 'curse-off' that used only Shakespearean language. One team would speak aloud a curse to the other team who would have to respond in kind and the best curse won. Oh- and they had fun and finally began to 'hear' the text.
ReplyDeleteI am always amazed at how Shakespeare continues to enlighten so many different aspects of life. Teaching him can be so much fun.
DeleteWhen you wonder about open resource being a way to fight paying for teachers and resources, are you thinking about the "free stuff" replacing teachers and classroom supplies? I find myself worrying about all of the uncompensated time teachers might put into sharing their lesson plans and other materials, though one hopes that they would make up that time by borrowing from others for other lessons/subjects. I don't want to be mercenary, but I do want teachers to make a living wage!
ReplyDeleteThanks for asking me to clarify. First, I think sharing resources is a way to make all education more equitable. If we all share, then even school districts that are not as well funded can have access to high quality resources. I do worry about compensation and intellectual property in this world of sharing. I think you make a great point about uncompensated time for teachers in prep work. I think I worry about a master teacher providing free resources and how that might be giving away 'trade secrets.' I'm not sure that I have a much more formulated idea than that. Thanks for helping me think through this.
DeleteWell done, one other diversity issue could be hispanics in America, a huge interest. Check out this timeline:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/18-major-moments-hispanic-history_us_55f70275e4b042295e370d3c
Hopefully it will work! I am not sure if my replies are working, so sorry if this is a repeat!