Category Archives: Education

Tomorrow

Remember to Blog For Sex Education. Put this logo on top of your post if you like. Then paste your permalink in the comments of this post and Renegade Evolution will put together a linkfest.

More than just Resistance to Science

In the May 18th issue of Science there is a revew paper by Paul Bloom and Deena Skolnick Weisberg. An expanded version of it also appeared recently in Edge and many science bloggers are discussing it these days.
Enrique has the best one-sentence summary of the article:

The main source of resistance to scientific ideas concerns what children know prior to their exposure to science.

The article divides that “what children know prior to their exposure to science” into two categories: the intuitive grasp of the world (i.e., conclusions they come up with on their own) and the learned understanding of the world (i.e., conclusions they absorb from the adults around them):

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Blog for Sex Education on June 4th

It’s simple. Just write a post on June 4th that has something to do with sex education. Add this logo on top of your post and leave your permalink in the comments of the logo post.
Spread the word….

Open Classroom – learning about Holocaust by making a podcast

Survivor Testimonies Engage Students in Holocaust History:

Through a program funded by the Claims Conference, a group of 8th graders in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania who had never before learned of the Holocaust found themselves deeply affected by these first-person narratives during a month-long educational unit on the Shoah.
Victoria Monacelli, a teacher of reading and language arts at the Warren G. Harding Middle School, incorporates technology into her curriculum in order to engage students. As part of her literacy program, her students produce a monthly “podcast,” a recorded oral presentation on a specific topic for which the students conduct extensive research in order to produce a script. The podcasts are reproduced on websites and can be downloaded into MP3 players.

Click here to listen to the podcast. More info here.
Related: Storyblogging
Hat-tip: Mom

No matter how carefully you teach ABOUT religion…

…someone (guess who?) will feel persecuted:

…. One student objected that I was singling out Christianity. Another objected to what I was implying about the religion. I’m not sure I even used the word “Christian” in my description of the above examples, but I certainly wouldn’t argue it. But I found it fascinating that connecting Islam with 9/11 was acceptable, but for certain students (both born-agains), the idea of connecting Christianity with bad behavior was unacceptable. I also found it interesting that despite accusations of insulting Christianity, I never made a value judgment. I stated what certain people had done and presented evidence pertaining to the factualness of their claims. If a listener comes to the conclusion that these people were behaving badly, that would be their judgment, not mine.

…and it is hard to teach a person who does not live in a world of facts and reality:

He’s a continuing source of frustration because he cannot objectify anything. He turns every writing assignment into a propaganda and/or evangelizing piece (including random Bible quotes) at the expense of the actual assignment. I’m always super-defensive about being able to justify every single point I take away from him so that he can’t cry religious persecution.

A case for teaching about religion in school

The case is made by an atheist, of course – Amanda – but the important part of the post is the explanation of why is it impossible in the current educational system in the USA and why is the current system inherently conservative.

Network-like Mode of Thinking

I am so glad to see that conversations started face-to-face at the Science Blogging Conference are now continuing online (see the bottom of the ever-growing linkfests here and here). While some are between science bloggers, as expected, others are between people who have never heard of each other before and who came from very different angles and with different interests. The cross-fertilization we hoped for is happening (and if you had such an experience, let us know)!
See, for instance, what a casual chat over lunch at the Conference did to David Warlick – made him think about education and about online technologies from a – new to David – perspective of someone who watches the way scientists think:

…He said that science used to be reductionist in nature. I asked what that meant, and he said that science was about drilling down to components, cutting out and examining bits of the world, reducing it to its barest fundamentals. He said that the younger scientists spend more time synthesizing, that they seem much more interested in systems and networks, not so much how things operate independently, but how they operate as part of a larger organism, ecosystem, or cosmos.
I suspect that all kinds of speculation might be made about why science seems, at least in the eyes of this science communicator, to be shifting, and one could probably make a case relating it to younger scientists’ digital experiences. The connection that occurred to me, however, was with schools, which seem to me to be in a reductionist mode still…..
——–snip————-
My own state, for one, has been teaching and testing computer skills for more than ten years. However, it is a reductionist response to the need for digital literacy (what I call contemporary literacy). We have reduced computer skills out into their own list of standards, separated again into objectives, and performance indicators. We’ve reduced it down to components that can be discretely measured.
I don’t think that this happens entirely because of the industrial mechanized environment that many of us come from. I think it’s just easier to separate things out and teach them in isolation, especially when we believe that our job is to simply teach.

Read the rest…then go and comment on his blog with your ideas. Cross-fertilize some more!
Technorati Tag:

Teen Parenthood for the X-box generation

Teen Parenthood for the X-box generationParenting is hard. Are you ready (re-posted from October 20, 2005)

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“What God Created on the Fourth Day?” is not an SAT question, sorry!

Most of our anti-Creationist battles are over efforts to infuse Christian religion into K-12 education. One common battlefield is the courtroom where our side has (so far, until/unless the benches get filled with more clones of Priscilla Owen) won. But another place where we can stop them is the college admission office.
Sara Robinson of the Orcinus blog (which everybody should read daily) revisits, in more detail than I ever saw on any science blogs at the time this first started, the legal battle between the University of California and the Calvary Chapel Christian School over what constitutes permissible educational standards:

The battle started back in late 2005, when UC reviewed Calvary’s courses and decided that several of them — including “Special Providence: Christianity and the American Republic and “Christianity’s Influence on America,” both history courses; “Christianity and Morality in American Literature,” an English course; and a biology class — did not meet their curriculum standards, and would not be counted toward the admission requirements when Calvary students apply to UC.

Sara goes on to say later on something that I expect our resident science philosophers, historians and ethicists to chime in on:

When it comes to the history and English courses, they’re absolutely right. We all look at language and history through the filters of culture. The subjects lend themselves to multiple interpretations, depending on your perspective. Understanding this, and being exposed to the full range of perspectives in these fields — including religious ones — is an essential part of secondary and undergraduate education.
But nobody, save the Christian schools, teaches science or math that way. There is no African-American or Latino or feminist or Jewish or Russian science (Hitler and Stalin notwithstanding). There’s just a method, and a group of techniques, and the skill-building and knowledge base required to use them well. Scientists do their best — with varying degrees of success — to uncover their cultural biases and move beyond them. The greatest ones regard bias as a dangerous source of error: it can blind you, and lead you to draw the wrong conclusions from the observed facts. For that reason, any textbook that starts off by telling you to believe a 2,000-year-old religious scripture over your own lying eyes is not teaching science. It’s putting students on the path to a Christian version of Lysenkoism.

But the whole essay was prompted by Sara’s initial sense of despair she felt before discovering this case:

I’ve been saying for a long while now that the power to end the Intelligent Design fiasco, firmly and finally and with but a single word, rests in the manicured hands of the chancellors of America’s top universities. The message is short and simple: “Teach what you like, it’s all fine with us. But if you put ID in your science courses, we will not accept those courses as adequate for admission to our campus.”
Making this kind of public statement would be one small step for a university chancellor; and one giant leap for American science education. Somebody, somewhere, needs to set a firm standard. If our universities — which bear responsibility for training our professional scientists, and maintain the labs and faculties responsible for much of our best research — won’t stand up and draw that line, then we really are well and truly lost.

Well said. Feel free to add comments either here or over on Orcinus .
Technorati Tag: teaching-carnival

EduBlogging of the week

The 102nd Carnival of Education is up on Dr.Homeslice
Carnival of Homeschooling #55: Parents’ Meeting Edition is up on Dewey’s Treehouse

Grading Exams

I did not have time to go through all the posts on all of today’s carnivals, but Larry Moran discovered a real gem on today’s Carnival of Education. Check the comments as well. Then come up with your own system.

EduBlogging of the week

The Carnival Of Education: Week 97 is up on Education Wonks.
Carnival of Homeschooling – Week 50 is up on Apollo’s Academy.

What to say (and not say) in a science classroom?

Ms. SuperScience loves to include anecdotes in her science classes. Now she wonders, how much personal information may be over the line. An interesting ethical (and pedagogical) question. And some creepy comments – go add some more of those!

Bringing Our Schools Out of the 20th Century

TIME%20cover.jpgDavid Warlick and Sicheii Yazhi comment on the next week’s TIME cover story,
How to Bring Our Schools Out of the 20th Century:

This week the conversation will burst onto the front page, when the New Commission on the Skills of the American Workforce, a high-powered, bipartisan assembly of Education Secretaries and business, government and other education leaders releases a blueprint for rethinking American education from pre-K to 12 and beyond to better prepare students to thrive in the global economy. While that report includes some controversial proposals, there is nonetheless a remarkable consensus among educators and business and policy leaders on one key conclusion: we need to bring what we teach and how we teach into the 21st century.
Right now we’re aiming too low. Competency in reading and math–the focus of so much No Child Left Behind (NCLB) testing–is the meager minimum. Scientific and technical skills are, likewise, utterly necessary but insufficient. Today’s economy demands not only a high-level competence in the traditional academic disciplines but also what might be called 21st century skills.

Will Richardson summarizes the article in four bullets:

1. Teach kids more about the world.
2. Think outside the box.
3. Become smarter about new sources of information.
4. Develop good people skills. (Communicate, collaborate)

It is a long, but very good article. Lots to ponder about. I’d really like to know what people think about it. Fire off in the comments.
Update: David has more reactions and commentary.

Passion-Based Learning

David has some great ideas:

I suggested that the best thing we might do with video games is to figure out what it is about video games that makes them such a compelling learning engine, and try to integrate those elements into the classroom, rather than trying to integrate the games into the classroom. One of the elements that I suggested was identity building — that players typically develop an identity in their games. They choose and sometimes make their own clothing, their house, select the powers they value, and become a recognizable identity in the game. It’s how the games are designed and programmed. Might we program our classrooms to encourage identity building?

Read the whole thing

Academic Blogging of the Fortnight

Teaching carnival #17 is up on silver in sf

Edublog Awards 2006

The third international Edublog Awards are now open for nominations.

College Presidents should blog

Brian says that College Leaders should blog, commenting on this NYT article.
Sure, there are pros and cons, a steep learning curve and the potentially huge benefits along with the risk. But in the 21st century, it just has to be done. A leader who does not embrace online technology to foster a two-way communication is irrelevant and will go the way of the dinosaurs. A leader who does will evolve wings and learn to fly, adapted to the new environment.
Brian offers to help any University President set up a blog and get started, gratis. Take him up on his offer if you are a Top Dog at your school.

Darwin in Serbia

Darwin in SerbiaTwo years ago, there was quite a brouhaha in the media when Serbian minister for education decided to kick Darwin out of schools. The whole affair lasted only a few days – the public outrage was swift and loud and the minister was forced to resign immediately. I blogged about it profusely back then and below the fold are those old posts:

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EduBlogging of the week

The 93rd Carnival of Education is up on What It’s Like on the Inside.
The 46th Carnival of Homeschooling is up on Sprittibee.

EduBlogging of the week

92nd edition of the Carnival of Education is up on NYC Educator
Carnival of Homeschooling – Library Edition is up on SpunkyHomeSchool.

EduBlogging of the week

The 91st Edition of the Carnival of Education is up on The Median Sib.
The 44th edition of Carnival of Homeschooling is up on Why Homeschool.

Not more scientists, but more science-literate citizens

Not more scientists, but more science-literate citizensA short but good article by my schools’ President (April 25, 2006, also here).

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Teaching Biology 101 (to adults)

Teaching Biology 101I just got the teaching schedule for Spring, so I decided to follow up on last week’s post by putting, under the fold, a series of short posts I wrote when I taught the last time, musing about teaching in general and teaching biology to adults in particular. These are really a running commentary on the course. The actual lecture notes are here:
Biology and the Scientific Method
Lab 1
Cell Structure
Protein Synthesis: Transcription and Translation
Cell-Cell Interactions
Cell Division and DNA Replication
Lab 2
From Two Cells To Many: Cell Differentiation and Embryonic Development
From Genes To Traits: How Genotype Affects Phenotype
From Genes To Species: A Primer on Evolution
What Creatures Do: Animal Behavior
Organisms In Time and Space: Ecology
Lab 3
Origin of Biological Diversity
Evolution of Biological Diversity
Current Biological Diversity
Lab 4
Introduction to Anatomy and Physiology
Physiology: Regulation and Control
Physiology: Coordinated Response

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Let them be wild!

Mark Pruett wrote something I heartily agree with:
Raise children with a wild streak:

A new report from the American Academy of Pediatrics stresses the importance of childhood playtime. It reinforces my own belief that many young adults have been cheated by years of excessive schoolwork and teamwork, too many extracurricular activities, and a straitjacketed “just say no to anything risky” upbringing. I am convinced that modern childhood generally does not build enough independence and thirst for knowledge.
————–snip—————
Is this someone that I’d be excited to have in my class? And is he or she open to being changed by my class? Class rank and extracurricular activities are less important than genuine individuality or enthusiasm. It matters not whether someone is bold or shy, worldly or naive. Is there a flash of determination, a streak of independence, a creative passion, an excited curiosity?
————–snip—————
Some students are team players and high achievers, but I’d trade them for stubbornly creative iconoclasts. Some students as children were taught to color inside the lines, watch Barney the purple dinosaur, and always ask permission. We need students who found out what Crayons tasted like, loved reading “The Cat in the Hat” and paid little attention to rules — students whose parents encouraged their children’s curiosity.
————–snip—————
The irony is that many students begin to perceive late in college that they’ve missed something along the way. They regret not taking risks with difficult professors, unusual courses or semesters abroad. They berate themselves by equating self-worth with grades, and they are saddened by the realization that they have only glimpsed the breadth of the university. They begin to grasp that their uncomfortable sense of passivity has its roots in the highly controlled existence foisted on them.
————–snip—————
Encourage studying but make them play hooky, too — partly to learn what it feels like to be unprepared and partly to foster spontaneity, irreverence and joy. Study chemistry together, then blow up a television in the backyard.

I bet Pruett would love my kids in his class one day. Read the whole thing
(Hat-tip: Ed Wonk)

EduBlogging of the week

The 89th Carnival of Education is up on Poor, Starving, College Student

Can Boobs and Yahoos plan for the Future?

Read these two one after another:
This is a new angle and thinking outside the box: Sara’s Sunday Rant: The Culture of Planning, Part I
Lance has a nice rant on politics and education: Yahoo culture

Teaching Biology To Adults

Teaching Biology To AdultsThis is what I do and this is how I think about what I do (from February 13, 2006)…

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EduBlogging of the week

The 88th edition of The Carnival Of Education is up on Educaiton Wonks.

Help Durham Literacy Center

Durham Literacy Center is in trouble and needs your help.
Mold in DLC Office:

For several years, the presence of mold in the DLC building has been a nagging but manageable concern. In the past 4 years, DLC has spent more than $15,000 to contain and destroy the mold that grows in the building’s damp basement and the attic. Unfortunately, conditions worsened significantly early this fall. The occurrence of allergic symptoms associated with mold increased. When it became clear that staff were having allergic reactions to the mold, we asked two environmental engineers to assess the building. The engineering report is pending. Although we have not yet received the report, they have clarified that the office is inundated with mold.

Literacy Center without a home:

Mold is forcing the Durham Literacy Center out of its home on West Chapel Hill Street. The nonprofit agency that helps about 500 people each year learn to read, get a high school equivalency or find a job is looking for a temporary home while the problem is addressed.
“We desperately need temporary office space,” said Reginald Hodges, the center’s executive director. “It’s an emergency situation for us.”
Hodges said the center has spent $15,000 over the past few years battling mold at its 3,000-square-foot home, built as a doctor’s office about 1950 and donated to the literacy center about seven years ago. But worsening symptoms among staff and students over the past few months led to the discovery that the problem was worse than thought. Classes have been suspended at the center while its leaders figure out what to do next.

Brian Russell explains how you can help.

That’s one Cool Prof!

‘Hip Happy Prof’ teaches over MySpace, bosses protest:

N.C. State Professor Tom Hoban is offering Sociology 395-M, “Social Movements for Social Change,” on the popular social networking site that claims to have 100 million active users worldwide. But administrators say it’s the wrong space for teaching a university course.
Hoban says he received approval over the summer from his department head to teach via MySpace. But last week, Katie Perry, senior vice provost for academic affairs, told Hoban to move the course to university servers.
Hoban has refused.
“N.C. State’s distance education is primarily oriented toward what I would say is pushing information into students’ brains and then trying to get them to prove that they’ve learned it,” Hoban says. “I want my students to build relationships, to build friendships and to build trust in one another. No one can show me another tool. I’ve told the university, if they can show me one, I’ll move.”
A tenured professor, Hoban is citing academic freedom, saying the university’s applications don’t include social networking components that are essential to the course. He taught it last year using the university’s WebCT Vista site, but found it “impossible” to create social interaction.

Ah, but there is always more – the true reason he is in trouble is because the worst rightwing scum in North Carolina, the John Locke Foundation, does not like his politics:

There’s another aspect to controversy over SOC 395-M: the content. Hoban is both a scholar and a proponent of 1960s counterculture. Students are expected to participate in a social movement as part of the course. Hoban’s syllabus suggests they pursue issues such as “animal welfare and environmental issues; consumerism and healthier eating; peace in the Middle East and social justice; racial equality and spiritual tolerance; sensible drug policy and medical marijuana.”
Then there is Hoban’s reputation. He refers to himself as the Hip Happy Professor, and his personal profile on MySpace–which he makes clear is not affiliated with the university–features a background image of pot leaves, reggae music on the audio player and videos of himself and a young woman taking hits of marijuana and singing songs such as Bob Marley’s “No Woman, No Cry.”
Last October, a profile of Hoban and his “apologetics course on hippies” ran in Carolina Journal, a publication of the John Locke Foundation, a conservative group that criticizes what it considers to be liberal bias in higher education.

Gotta love the guy! I hope he wins this and I hope his classes are always full!

Podcastercon2006 – the Teaching Session

Podcastercon2006 - the Teaching SessionBrian Russell is organizing the 2007 Podcastercon. Let me show you how much fun the last year’s Podacstercon was by reposting this January 16, 2006 post (also cross-posted on Science And Politics) about the exciting education session led by David Warlick of 2 Cents Worth blog:

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EduBlogging of the week

The 87th edition of The Carnival of Education – A World-Wide Carnival – is up on The Current Events in Education. It is a lesson in geography.
The 40th Carnival of Homeschooling is up on HomeSchoolBuzz. It is a lesson in history.
Oh, and in case you missed it, the 13th Teaching Carnival is right here.

Teaching Carnival #13

Welcome to the thirteenth edition of the Teaching Carnival where we discuss all things academic, from teaching to college life, from HigherEd policy to graduate school research. Last time, I separated the Two Cultures in a way. This time I want to keep them mixed – both sides of campus often deal with the same issues anyway. There are tons of links, so let’s start right away…
SATs and getting into college
Chad Orzel of Uncertain Principles commented on the top SAT essays published by the NYTimes. He argued that writing a decent essay in 25 minutes with a prompt not known in advance is harder than we think. In the comments, Dave Munger disagreed, so Chad wondered how would bloggers do on such a test. Out of that exchange, the Blogger SAT Challenge arose. Dave and Chad set up an SAT-essay-like online test and chellenged the bloggers and commenters to write an essay that is better than the NYT examples. They got real-life SAT scorers to grade the essays and had a huge response. The essays will be graded both by professionals and by readers (in a Hot-or-Not method), and the results will be revealed tomorrow. Can’t wait to see them. Update: Here it is! And, as Dave and Chad note – the kids did better than bloggers!
Jennifer Ouellette comments on the SAT Challenge and moves on to strategies in becoming a science writer. Includes fashion advice.
Getting out of college…
Chad again, on sports and graduation rates.
…and into Graduate school
Chad again: should you apply?
Bill again: How to hold an effective (lab) meeting.
Quod She: To professionalize or not to professionalize – Is there really any question? JJC responds. Yellow Dog comments on the exchange.
Cheating and plagiarism
Joseph of Corpus Callosum found a study that breaks down the attitudes towards cheating by major. Can you guess which students think cheating is OK?
Turnitin news triggered quite an outpouring of blogging over the past couple of weeks. It’s hard to summarize each post individually – one needs to read them all to get the feeling for the overall range of responses, so please, do read them all: Steinn Sigurðsson of Dynamics of Cats, Senioritis on Schenectady Synecdoche, John Walter of Machina Memorialis, Concerned Professor, Michael Bruton of Kairsonews, Linda on Kairosnews, Lanette Cadle of Techsophist, Clancy of CultureCat (and again), Jerz on the Literacy Weblog, Mike Edwards on Vitia (and again) and Joanna Howard of Community College English.
The invisible sexism in (science) academia
The whole avalanche of heated blogposts started when Chad wrote about the Pipeline problem in physics. He got many angry (and not so angry responses) both in the comments and on other blogs, including not one but four posts by Susanne Franks of Thus Spake Zuska – here they are: One, Two, Three and Four and then another one on the same topic. Bill Hooker of Open Reading Frame chimes in with two excellent posts. Kate of A k8, a cat, a mission and Jessica of Bee Policy have more. The referee, Janet of Adventures In Ethics and Science puts everything together in two posts here and here. All of those posts also got many comments, well worth your time to read.
Don’t ever call my daughter a coed, says Jo(e). Or a friend?
Teaching and getting feedback
Abel of Terra Sigillata reports on a speech by Dr Bruce Alberts, recently departed president of the US National Academy of Sciences on the needed changes in science education at colege level. This one is a must read!
Mike Dunford of Questionable Authority got parachuted into an Intro Biology class and was dismayed by the results of his first quiz. He asked his readers for feedback: was he doing something wrong? And the commenters responded – oh, did they ever! Sandra Porter wrote an excellent post in response (another must-read of this carnival!). In the end, Mike comments on how much he has learned from the blogospheric response.
Dr. Virago of Quod She asked if it is OK to teach the reseach paper in a lit. class and received useful responses. New Kid On The Hallway chimes in on the topic.
Susan Marie Groppi is having difficulties with her students’ understanding of Darwin.
EL of My Amusement Park is wondering about High-culture vs. low-culture in the syllabus in Crisis of Conscience: Teaching Pop Culture.
Pilgrim/Heretic asks for advice on teaching history class.
Lab Cat is teaching writing in a science class.
Jo(e) is excited because her students are excited about Jane Goodall.
Geeky Mom: Teaching Is Hard!
Ryan Claycomb of Raining Cats and Dogma gets feedback with his undergrads’ First Papers and then has to deal with grading just before the Five-Week Slump. Oh, and the physical arrangement of the classroom is important.
Refrigeration!? Anne thinks it is fascinating.
When the quest for fairness becomes a tyranny of unfairness.
Parts-n-Pieces on Learned Helplessness: New Media Writing and Underprepared Writers (part 2)
White Bear: How do you know you’re done reading? (including reading a blog post before commenting)
Respodning to error – grammar checker?
Carrie Shanafelt of The Long Eighteenth: How to reach the unreachable. Or should they be called coolers?
Flavia of Ferule & Fescue: Does my advice matter?
No Fancy Name on getting started. I was a kid like that. Blogging cured my problem.
Dr.Crazy: Independent Thinking in the Freshmen Writing Classroom and More on Students and Analysis.
Rob MacDougall: The Secret Syllabus.
Blogging, Technology and Education
Chris of Mixing Memory is asking how can his blogging be more useful to educators.
Jenna of Cyebrspace Rendezvous wrote Reasons to Blog #249: Practice makes homework easier
Josh Wilson comments on the evolution of peer-review. So does Anthony of Archaeoblog.
StyleyGeek tested an assessment simulation and found it lacking.
Lanette Cadle is using blogs in her class.
Timna: this online thing, perhaps it is working too well? and how do you grade it?
Jill/txt on citing Wikipedia. How about citing properly?
Geeky Mom on the use of technology in the classroom.
Gina Trapani on taking good notes. Heck, just taking notes at all.
Liz Evans: Using Student Podcasts in Literature Classes.
I am organizing a Science Blogging Conference, which will have a strong educational flavor.
What is Higher Ed all about?
Teaching – process of outcome? Jenny D and EdWonk comment.
From Dean Dad, always an interesting perspective: Hooray! It’s Defective!
Michael Berube is having great fun with the reception of his book here, here and here (warning: snark and satire abound).
Fun in the classroom (and just outside)
David Silver in sf went on an eye-opening Field trip. So did Emily Louise Smith.
Cliches in the classroom.
In-between serious posts about lab meetings, neuroscience and photography, Jenna collects classroom quote here, also here and here.
This is how quotes originate in the first place.
How to stay in grad school (Via)
Revere reports that the beginning of the college year is also high season for the condom industry (this is a different meaning of the word “fun” in the subsection title of this carnival). Perhaps because of the new meaning to the phrase Raging hard-on. And this is not fun, but it fits topically in this section: Effeminate women.
Profgrrrl: fun and games with students: electronic version
Jo(e): The Devil Wears Satin.
And that is it for this edition! We’ll meet again on October 15th at m2h blogging.
In the end, I have to bitch again… It took me about an hour to put together Tar Heel Tavern last night. It took me about twenty hours (and the weather outside was so beautiful today, while my wife and kids wanted to spend time with me as well as use the computer!) to put together Teaching Carnival. Sifting through about 100 delicious tags and Technorati tags takes so long. Each of the tagged posts first has to be checked for date (because search engines do not care), and if it already appeared in a previous edition of the carnival. Is it a blog post at all, is it appropriate for the carnival? Then I had to read them all to see in which subsection they belong. Then I had to look around the blogs, including some usual suspects of this carnival, to find tagged posts that were not caught by search engines, as well as posts that were (apparently) not tagged but deserve to be included. Out of 540 carnivals, this is the only one that uses tags. Submission by tagging is a cute idea but it does not work. Why do academics have to be the ones to do stuff in a complicated way when e-mail and blogcarnival submission form are so simple, easy and reliable ways of collecting entries? Nobody should spend this much time and effort in hosting a carnival. BTW, thank you to people who sent me their entries by e-mail – about 10 entries out of a hundred.
Technorati Tag: teaching-carnival

Teaching Evolution Successfully

Teaching Evolution SuccessfullyFirst posted on December 12, 2005 on Science And Politics, then re-posted on January 16, 2006 on The Magic School Bus and most definitely worth reposting again here…

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Hey, at least it is not Intelligent Design!

But this Science Fair project comes really close…
(Hat-tip: Pratie Place)

Teaching Blogging

Teaching BloggingRight after last year’s ConvergeSouth I tried to get my school to let me teach a class on blogging. Posted on October 13, 2005 here and again on January 16, 2006 here.

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From DonorsChoose:

I have some great news to share. Thanks to an amazing outpouring of support in the first three weeks of The North Carolina Back to School Challenge we have raised over $24,569 for North Carolina kids!
When we started this campaign, we knew we were setting the bar high. But we’re counting on you. And we know you won’t let us down.
Fund a proposal before the campaign ends a week from Saturday–many proposals are ‘almost there’.
Imagine the students that will be left out in the cold if we DON’T reach our $50,000 goal. Without your support today, some classrooms just won’t get what they need this fall. We don’t want to let that happen.
Scores of exciting proposals have already won the hearts of our donors. We’ve been madly purchasing supplies, and they are already on their way to North Carolina classrooms. Others need just a few more dollars to come to life!
You’ve funded projects for outstanding public school teachers all over North Carolina. Let’s face it: these teachers are heroes. Every single one of them, just by posting on DonorsChoose, has gone above and beyond for their students. If not for the generosity of supporters like you, some would be paying for these supplies out of their own pockets. Others couldn’t afford it, and students would simply go without.
Our ambitious campaign will mean MORE learning for MORE students. But only with YOUR help.
Bring us one step closer to reaching our goal.

EduBlogging of the Week

Carnival of Education #85 is up on The Median Sib
Carnival of Homeschooling Week 38: The Five W’s and One H, is up on The Thinking Mother

This is a really cool science class

In Ormond Beach Middle School:

Developed by teacher Tucker Harris and School Resource Deputy Karen Pierce, the investigation program is an innovative way to teach sixth-grade science students the scientific method. The CSI class takes students out of the classroom and into a crime scene orchestrated by the deputy.
Pierce developed a fictional situation involving a property theft at the school. During the class, Pierce “briefed” the students on the crime, and the students received written statements from the victim and three suspects. The students then visited the crime scene, where they gathered evidence to take back to the classroom, or “police station.”
The students are applying the scientific method to solve the crime. Two more situations will follow — one involving drugs, the other battery with bullying — and each will become more intense, said Pierce. All 290 sixth-graders will participate.

This is so cool. I use crime-scene detection kits for hair-type and blood-type, as well as a DNA-fingerprinting exercise when I teach the Into Bio lab.

The First Year Teacher, now in her fourth year of teaching, suddenly becomes famous as a blogger

Unfortunately, not in my neighborhood any more, the First Year Teacher gets portrayed, quite positively, in USA Today in an article about teachers-bloggers.

Finding readers in the most unusual places

The coooolest thing ever!
My son’s science teacher broke his shoulder so he had to be out for two weeks (he’s the one who was instrumental in the district adopting the science textbook I like, and he teaches evolution “straight-up”).
During that time, they had a substitute teacher. She gave them their first assignment – to find something interesting science-related and write a short report.
Then, she started listing which sources are legit and which are not. Then, my son raised his hand and asked if they were allowed to find information on science blogs, for instance on one his Dad writes.
She asked:”What’s your Dad’s name”.
He said “Bora”.
She yelled:”Nooooo waaaaay! YOUR DAD writes A Blog Around The Clock!!!!”
I guess this blog is popular around here….
Well, being a sub, she is not in school any more, so my son cannot just say Hello, but she reads this blog – now I know this! I’d love to get a comment or e-mail….

Can blogging raise your SAT scores?

Don’t know, but we can test this hypothesis.
Go to Cognitive Daily and/or Uncertain Principles and take the test (and read what they have to say about it, each from his own perspective).
It is just the essay part of the test. You get the prompt. You write. After 20 minutes (you are typing – kids who write with pencils get 25 minutes), it is over. You can choose to submit your essay or not once you are done.
Dave and Chad will score the results and have the essays graded by professionals (English teachers, hopefully some real-life SAT scorers), as well as blog-readers. Then, they will post the results (and essays) and we can all discuss them.
I have not done mine yet – waiting to have guaranteed 20 minutes of peace and quite – but I am afraid.
With blogging, we choose our prompts. If I want to react fast to some breaking news, I post a link, a quote and a one-liner.
Longer, more thoughtful essays sometimes go quick, but more often take days to write – thinking about it and writing it in my head first, then doing online research looking for additional info and appropriate links, then the actual writing (which usually does not take long), then quick spellchecking and editing, then posting. It takes more like 20 hours than 20 minutes. How about you?

The best of Higher Ed blogging

Teaching Carnival #12 is up on Scrivenings.
Next time, on October 1st, the carnival will be hosted by me here. I will be posting an official ‘call for submissions’ in a few days, but in the meantime, if you write a post that has something to do with Academia and Higher Ed, please try to remember to tag it with the “teaching-carnival” tag. Still, since the tagging technology is unreliable at best, you can only be guaranteed the inclusion of your entries (and yes, multiple entries are welcome) if you e-mail them to me at: Coturnix@gmail.com. Put “Teaching Carnival” in the title and inquire again if you do not get a Thank You note from me within 24 hours.

Pledge Of Allegiance

A few days ago, my son told me that one of his teachers (he is in 8th grade), after decorating the whole school with American flags, announced that they will be reciting the Pledge of Allegiance every morning.
I was not aware at the time that this is a new State Law, snuck under the radar during the summer. But it is. It was enacted on July, 12th 2006, as a change in general powers and duties of the state concerning the educational system. You can see the history of how the statute was changed here and the final version of the bill here (PDF).
The press only noted this the other day. Some were good, i.e., using precise language of the law, e.g., the Raleigh News & Observer, which stated correctly:

A new state law requiring schools to schedule time each day for students to recite the pledge has revived a tradition right out of a Norman Rockwell painting.

On the other hand, every newspaper that carried the Associated Press article got it wrong:

A shortage of flags, questions about patriotism, and confusion among teachers have greeted a new state law requiring public school students to recite the Pledge of Allegiance in the classroom.

The latter would be unconstitutional, according to this Supreme Court decision (which is a great read actually).
Apparently, the bill was snuck in so silently that even our local bloggers, who are usually very alert to everything happening at the state and local level, missed it. Only Dave commented at the time, with the predictable and correct outrage, and suggested an alternative version that reflects reality in a less ambigious way:

I pledge to honor and defend the flag, our nation, and the principles that make them great: the right to choose our leaders, freedom to worship, freedom of speech, and justice for all.

Even Will Raymond, who is a watch-dog and hound-dog of local politics missed it until this week. He provides more detail on the history of the way the bill was worded.
Not everyone is outraged, of course.
Although the NC House is controlled by Democrats, the bill passed with only one “No” vote. The lone dissenter is State Representative from Durham Paul Luebke (more here and here). I am assuming that he is in a very safe district and I am not sure if he even has an opponent this Fall, so he probably does not need campaign contributions (though you can ask). But you can send him a thank-you note if you wish at: paull AT ncleg DOT net.
As a naturalized U.S. citizen, I follow the stereotype of foreign-born citizens knowing American history, geography, civics and law better than many locals (because I had to study it, instead of just organically grow in it), so I was quite aware what the constitutional/legal issues are regarding the recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance in schools.
So, I told my son that he has several choices: go along and recite it (with ot without the salute); recite the original version by skipping over the 1954 “under God” insertion; or remain silent (while either standing up, sitting down or exiting the classroom). I told him that the Constitution gives him the choice and that nobody could take that choice away from him. It is the “under God” clause that bothers him the most and he wanted to make sure that he had the right to omit it on the days he decides to say the Pledge, as well as right to not say the Pledge at all on days in which he is not in the mood to do so.
On Monday, after I picked him up, he was really distressed. He chose not to say the Pledge. He told the teacher that he is an atheist and does not believe in that stuff and does not wish to say a pledge that includes “under God” in it.
She threatened to made him call his parents if he does not shape up and he immediately went to the classroom phone and started dialing, but she stopped him. At the time, I was still at home and she would have gotten an earful from me, as you can imagine.
Then he told her that his Dad told him that he has the right to remain silent. In the end, after much questioning and threatening, both in front of his friends and out in the hall, she FORCED him to say the Pledge, every word of it. She was giving him mean looks for the rest of the first two periods.
Yesterday morning I went to school and talked with the vice-principal. She was appalled that such a thing happened in her school, apologized profusely, and reassured me that she will make sure that such a thing does not happen again. This made me happy – the system DOES work.
After all, one of the main reasons why people from the area, no matter if they work in one of the big companies or institutes in the Research Triangle Park, or at NCSU, UNC, Duke or other local colleges, choose to live in Chapel Hill despite outrageously expensive housing – the Chapel Hill-Carrboro school system is the best in the state and one of the best in the country. This is an island of sanity in the ocean of irrationality. But this incident goes to show that such things can happen even in the most enlightened of places.
And I agree, my son’s school is excellent, I love all of his teachers of the past three years, and he is really thriving there. The teacher who did all this flag-waving is a brand new hire and you cannot really blame the school for not knowing she would be a frenzied, jingoistic nationalist and a rabid evangelical, frenetically worshiping a piece of cloth that stands as a symbol of the state instead of the people.
In the meantime, my daughter is in the 5th grade. Her teacher, who is just absolutely fantastic (she was my son’s 5th grade teacher as well), told the class in advance what their rights were. Some chose to say it, some chose not to. My daugther chose to stand up and remain silent – she could always have the excuse of being shy to speak out loud in front of other people.
Tuesday morning at Pledge time – I guess someone told my son’s teacher something in the meantime – she told the kids to exit the room if they did not want to recite the pledge and ALL but one kid went out, with my son in the lead (it’s a small elective class – so it is not like 25 kids walked out, more like 5). She is still not 100% right, though, as they had the right to remain inside the classroom if they so desired and remain silent. I will see what happens today, after she has been briefed by the vice-principal.
I am so proud of my son for thinking about the issue with his own head, getting the relevant information and acting according to his rights. All I provided was information and support – all choices were his. It takes guts to do so.
Also, see Ed Brayton’s take on this here and here.
Update: Will R, Lindsay Beyerstein, TNG, Timelady, Northstate Science, Alon Levy and Faux Real have commented on this and you should also check out what their comenters say.

EduBlogging of the week

Carnival of Education #84 is up on The Current Events in Education. It is organized like a newspaper.
Carnival of Homeschooling #37 is up on Principled Discovery. It is organized like an international flight.

Don’t Know Much About History….

Don't Know Much About History....
A short personal post, first written here on August 13, 2005, then reposted here on January 16, 2006…

Continue reading

DonorsChoose

You may remember back in June when ScienceBloggers successfully raised over $30,000 for various science & math teaching projects in schools around the country. Now that the school year has started, the materials this effort helped fund are in use in classroom and we are all receiving e-mails of gratitude from teachers who often work with disadvantaged children in poor school districts.
If you wish, you can always continue adding to the funds for the science projects – just click on this button:

Alternatively, you may want to pick your own from around the country, or from a particular state. Since I am in North Carolina, and a number of my readers are local to me, here is a button for our state’s challenge:

Teacher-philosophers in a fast-changing world

George Siemens of Connectivism blog wrote:

We have designed education to promote certainty (i.e. a state of knowing)…we now need to design education to be adaptable (i.e. a process of knowing).

David Muir of EdCompBlog picks up on that an adds:

Education should not only be about what you know – how many “facts” you can recall and write on a test paper. If that’s how we view education, we could end up turning schooling into a version of The Weakest Link.
————snip————–
I remember, many years ago, a professor at Jordanhill saying, “Knowledge is like fish – it goes off!” A couple of my colleagues got quite upset by this, but I think he had a point – especially in the fast moving world of technology.
————snip————–
It’s like the definition of intelligence I came back from SETT with last year: “Intelligence is knowing what to do when you don’t know what to do.”

David Warlick of 2 Cents Worth picks up on both (I really like the movie analogy!) and adds:

Believing that we can find the success in teaching by measuring what students have memorized in their classes is the height of arrogance, in my opinion. Yet, preparing our children for a future that we can not even describe requires of educators more than we have ever expected before.
————snip————–
It is not a time for teacher-technicians, trained lab clerks who observe a deficiency, and prescribe a scientifically researched strategy. It’s a time for teacher-philosophers, who love their world, love what they teach, love their students, and who love what their students will be.

Read all three posts for yourself.

Higher Ed

Teaching Carnival is back from summer break and the edition #11 is up on WorkBook.