April 25, 2011

Our New Favorite Blog: “Happy Birthday, Author!”

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by J. A. Ginsburg

"Happy Birthday, Author" - a blog that celebrates children's authors; Illustration by Kevin O' Malley from Stuart's book, "Too Many Kangaroo Things To Do!"

April 25 is always a pretty darn happy day around here: It’s Stuart’s birthday and he loves a good party—even when it’s not for a birthday! In fact, he loves planning parties sooooo much, it has become a recurring theme in many of his books:

This year’s birthday, though, was made extra special by a fabulous post on the Happy Birthday, Author! blog. The brainchild of Eric Van Raepenbusch, a former teacher turned stay-at-home dad to three children (a five year-old, a three year-old and the baby, now 10 months), HPA celebrates the work of various children’s authors on their birthdays. It certainly is a present to the authors, but a present to readers as well. Eric’s archives are a filled with treasure:

HPA is also a great way to learn about authors with which you may be less familiar.

Clearly, the blog is a labor of joy for the entire Van Raepenbusch family. Stuart and I were absolutely delighted that Eric’s wife, an early elementary special education school teacher, wanted to try some I See Learn books with her class.

When she saw the videos on the I See I Learn series she was ecstatic. She thought,”Finally, an off the shelf, specific, visually-based way to teach social and behavioral skills.” My wife teaches with the philosophy that children sometimes need to be explicitly taught skills that we as adults take for granted like sharing, dealing with frustration, and handling emotions. The I See I Learn series breaks down these skills in a kid-friendly, visually-based format that can easily be used with any child. (The I See I Learn Resources Page show many of the visuals used in the books.) My wife was also excited to see these concepts are not being specifically targeted for students with disabilities but to all children.

On behalf of Stuart (who is celebrating Italian-style this year—read the post for details…), Happy Every Day Van Raepenbusch family! Thank you!

You can follow Happy Birthday, Author on Facebook and on Twitter, too!

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Filed Under: "I See I Learn", Mathstart, Pre-K, Visual Learning | Tagged; , , , , , , , , , , ,

April 19, 2011

Project Noah: Taking Attendance on the Ark

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by J. A. Ginsburg

on the inspirations of childhood, why many heads are better than one; the nature / tech connection; & visual learning and science

a crowdsourced nature guide

When Project Noah’s, “Chief Leaf,” Yassar Ansari was a boy, he was fascinated by reptiles and amphibians, keeping many in his room—much to his mom’s dismay. “It kept her out,” he recalls with a laugh. Although wise enough to humor her nature-loving son’s penchant for the scaled, spined, slimy and cold-blooded, she never could have guessed where his interests would eventually lead.

Fast-forward a few decades and Ansari, now armed with degrees in molecular biology and bioinformatics, finds himself at a career crossroads after stints the Salk Institute’s genome analysis lab and at telcos Qualcomm and Kyocera (where he worked on everything from hand-held radiation detectors to mobile gaming apps). So it’s off to the Interactive Telecommunications Program (ITP) at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts, a.k.a.,“an Alice in Wonderland version of graduate school. It is the kind of place where Photocell 200K light sensors are stocked in the vending machine along with more traditional geek gorp. It is where techies go to dream.

“I took a class called ‘Social Activism Using Mobile Technology,’ where we were asked, ‘What are our causes?’ I really wanted to use mobile technology for a more meaningful purpose. I wanted to build something that was based on impact. Impact as the bottom line,” says Ansari.

His “big hairy audacious goal”? Creating a “common platform for recording all the world’s organisms.” Project Noah (Networked Organism and Habitats), the world’s biggest crowdsourced nature guide, was born. He had come full circle, determined to spark in others the same kind of wonder that his bedroom menagerie had sparked in him.

What began as a glimmer in Ansari’s eye in early 2010 is now available as a free app for smart phone (iPhone and Android), which has been downloaded over 100,000 times. While many use the site as a resource, nearly 24,000 photos have been uploaded by “citizen scientists” —including some from a class of second grader beta testers in Maine. And no less a “wow!” than National Geographic has come on board as an investor. Even more of a “wow!,” staff from the National Geographic regularly peruse the sight and about once a week choose a photograph to hare with five and half million Facebook fans.

Project Noah is still very much in its early stages (the search function on the website will, no doubt, improve), but the rallying cry of “No Child Left Inside!” is a siren song. This isn’t just about the world beyond the classroom: This is the world as a classroom. This is students as scientists, making observations in the field and sharing them in ways that simply weren’t possible before. Now, anyone anywhere can contribute data points of genuine value to researchers.

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(credit: PopTech / summer 2010)_____________________

Although envisioned as a mobile app, you actually don’t need a smart phone to contribute to Project Noah. Just sign on to the website and you can upload photos from computer files. You don’t even to know the name of what you’re looking at to contribute. Experts surf the site to help fill in the blanks. Just do your best to describe what something looks like, where it’s located, the time of day, the weather: Every details helps.

Also, unlike traditional field guides that focus solely on plant / animal identification, Project Noah can be used to analyze changes over time for specific species or areas. For example, a class could document all kinds of details about what’s “growing on” in a school garden or nearby park. Plants, of course, but also insects, worms, squirrels, rabbits, dogs and cats, too. When did the first bloom appear? When did the last leaf fall? Even in the middle of a city, it is possible to nurture a deep and textured relationships with Nature. Who knows? The next E.O. Wilson could be one of your students!

Select "Local" in the Field Guide section and see everything that's been tagged in your area. I uploaded a description of a daffodil near Northwestern University. Click on the photo and you can view a close-up. That's a LOT of data in your pocket!

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FISH, SCHOOLS, CROWDS & NETWORKS

One after another, the educator / presenters at TEDxNYED last month hammered home three messages about modern education:

  • To succeed, indeed survive, in the 21st century, students must learn how to collaborate and network, and to sift through, sort and connect-the-dots from gushers of information.
  • It is no longer about teaching children how to be taught, but teaching them how to be learners
  • Technology is not a gee-whiz add-on—digital frosting to the analog cake of basic learning—but part and parcel of daily life for nearly all 7 billion people on the planet, rich and poor, urban and rural. It is how we function, almost as basic as breathing.

They could just as well have been talking about scientists. Social network tools are not only changing the way they work, but in many cases turbocharging it.

When a team from the Smithsonian recently found themselves at the Guyana border with an urgent need to identify 5,000 specimen fish quickly in order to secure an export permit, they uploaded thousands of photographs and called on their ichthyologist Facebook friends for help:

In less than 24 hours, this approach identified approximately 90 percent of the posted specimens to at least the level of genus, revealed the presence of at least two likely undescribed species, indicated two new records for Guyana and generated several loan requests. The majority of people commenting held a Ph.D. in ichthyology or a related field, and hailed from a great diversity of countries including the United States, Canada, France, Switzerland, Colombia, Peru, Venezuela, Guyana and Brazil.

Now there is even a special network, a “Facebook for scientists,” called ResearchGate. Boasting nearly a million users so far, it promises a new way to reach out beyond the lab cubicle to others working on similar issues around the globe. Scientists can post research papers and send out inquiries. Although it doesn’t replace the richness of conferences with old fashioned in-person networking, panel discussions and poster sessions, it makes it easier for researchers to connect with colleagues outside their fields. Biologists can reach out to chemists, and geologists to structural engineers. New paths for collaboration are possible.

To paraphrase Ratatouille’s wise if ghostly chef Gusteau: Anyone can do science. Observe. Recognize. Interpret. Perceive. Express Ideas. Again and again and again. Visual learning skills are science skills (which delights us no end here at vizlearning…). The collective power of millions of new smart phone and digital camera “eyes,” connected by new digital platforms and social networks, means we can know more about more and faster than ever before.

So what are you waiting for? It’s Spring. Earth Day week, in fact. Go out there and pay attention!

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RELATED READING / VIEWING

“Earth Day—Hooray!” / vizlearning archives

“Eco-Comedy / Eco-Tragedy” / J.A. Ginsburg, TrackerNews editor’s blog

“What the hell is that?” / Steve Martin & Bill Murray, Saturday Night Live (video)

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Filed Under: Environment, Social skills, Visual Learning, eduation, science, technology | Tagged; , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

April 11, 2011

NCTM 2011: Teacher Mathfest in Indy!

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by J. A. Ginsburg

Spring is in the air and if you happen to be of a math teacher, that is particularly welcome news. Yes, flowers, sun and warmth, but also the season of NCTM, a.k.a. math teacher heaven!

From April 13 though 16, thousands will gather for the annual National Council of Teachers of Mathematics conference held this year in Indianapolis. The toughest problem? How to fit in as many of the 650+ presentations as possible.

We, of course, hope you can make it Stuart’s talk on Thursday, April 14: See the Math! 
Sharpening the Definition 
of Visual Learning Practice (Convention Center Hall F/G).


I have long defined visual learning as how students acquire information from graphs, charts, diagrams and other visual stimuli. That definition still holds. But after years of practical application and ongoing research, the time has come to redefine visual learning according to the benefits that it provides.

High quality visual learning practices support:

  • Mathematical Practices of Common Core State Standards
  • Development of critical intervention strategies
  • Differentiating classroom instruction

Visual learning is a powerful teaching tool!

And what better way to demonstrate than to feature real classroom projects? We will look at several wonderful and creative examples provided by teachers Cindy Cliche, Cathy Kuhns, Marrie Lassater and Dr. Kim Mueller; and by librarian Debbie Diaz from the Beijing City International School. (MathStart in China?  Yes!... )

Stuart will also be signing books:

  • at the EAI Education booth on Thursday morning, 4/14, from 10 to 11 a.m., and Friday morning, 4/15, from 9:30 to 10: 30 a.m.

____________________________________

Recently, we updated the MathStart website. Now there are pdf activity pages for all 63 books!

Check out the “MathStart Book of the Day!” feature on Stuart’s new Facebook page and Twitter updates @vizlearning.

We also revamped our free e-newsletter and are rebuilding the mailing list from scratch. Please sign up and spread the word! Thanks!

And be sure to check out the fabulous new show, The Main Street Kids’ Club: A MathStart Musical! It was adapted by director Scott (“School House Rock Live!”) Ferguson through a workshop class at Northwestern University. Perfect for school tours and regional theatre productions—so get out your dancing shoes!

____________________________________

ALSO AT NCTM:

  • Movies and math: always a good combo. Jeffrey Travis, director of the new IMAX 3-D movie Flatland: The Movie, will show clips at the opening session, Wednesday, April 13, 5:30 to 7:00 p.m. in Convention Center Hall F:

  • We love art and we love geometry. Bathsheba Grossman combines the two in her talk, The Art of Geometry, at the closing session on Saturday, April 16, 12:30 to 1:30 in Convention Center Hall F. For a preview, wander her website: Bathsheba Sculpture
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    Filed Under: Education, Mathstart, Pre-K, Uncategorized, Visual Learning, math, schools | Tagged; , , , , , , , , , ,

    March 29, 2011

    Ready for Their Close-Ups: “I See I Learn” Children Featured in ALA’s “Book Links” Magazine!

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    by J.A. Ginsburg

    As Pickle the green bulldog would say, “Woof!” This is so exciting! The I See I Learn children—Camille, Carlos, Emma, Freda, Ajay and Percy—are featured in the March issue of American Library Association’s Book Links magazine (pdf).

    Stuart's article in ALA's "Book Links" magazine! (click through for pdf)

    The article, written by Stuart, begins with the tale of three year-old Grace, whose older brother, Robbie is in first grade and oh so eager to talk about school. “I go to school, too!” says Grace. Indeed, most three year-olds today have had at least some experience with formal learning—a sea change from 20 years ago.

    Sometimes it is a mix of preschool a few days a week and home-based activities and play time at early childhood centers on other days. More and more,  young children are “going to school” at an earlier age.

    To be successful in school, three-to-five-year-olds must master critical social and emotional skills, just as they are becoming developmentally mature enough to learn them. They are in a sense, “learning on the job, ” figuring out how to make a friend and be a friend, and how to play and work in groups…

    …It was these considerations—earlier school experiences, pre-reader visual learners, the need to learn basic life skills—that inspired my new series of books, Stuart J. Murphy’s I See I Learn. The series is organized around four domains:

    1. social skills
    2. emotional skills
    3. health and safety skills
    4. cognitive skills

    Simple stories, designed to be relevant to the lives of young children, focus on behaviors that help build specific skills in each domain.

    The article lists the first eight titles in the series (listed below with links):

    Emma’s Friendwich / making friends, a social skill

    Good Job, Ajay! /  building confidence, an emotional skill

    Percy Plays It Safe / playground safety, a health and safety skill

    Freda Plans a Picnic / sequencing, a cognitive skill

    Camille’s Team / cooperation, a social skill

    Percy Gets Upset / dealing with frustration, an emotional skill

    Freda is Found / getting help when lost, a health and safety skill (note: pub date—July, 2011)

    Write On, Carlos! / writing your name, a cognitive skill (note: pub date—July, 2011)

    ___________________________________________

    ___________________________________________

    Please follow us on Twitter (@vizlearning) and Facebook (Stuart J. Murphy). Sign up for our free e-newsletter, too! Thanks!

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    March 21, 2011

    Camille’s Team: Cooperation Rocks & a Little Girl with Executive Potential

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    a story about the cooperation, a social skill

    by J.A. Ginsburg

    I have a special place in my heart for Camille, the youngest of the I See I Learn children. Make no mistake—they are all pretty darn charming. But there is something about a “littlest” with the chutzpah to inspire and lead the bigger kids that leaves me cheering. Okay. I was a littlest, too. Big sister. Bigger brother. The last to get a word in edgewise at the dinner table. The first to be tucked into bed at night. Had there been I See I Learn books when I was younger, Camille would most certainly have been my role model.

    You go, girl!

    Camille’s Team opens with Camille and her mommy arriving at the beach (the legendary “Friendly Waves Beach,” which can be spotted on the See-and-Learn City map printed on the inside front cover of all the books). Trading in her trademark overalls for a sporty red swimsuit, matching beach clogs and signature pink bow, Camille is having a great time. She jumps in the water, combs the sand for shells and, armed with pail and shovel, sets out to build a fort.

    close-up section of official See-and-Learn City map; click to see full-size ma

    Soon her friend Carlos, who lives just two doors away on Long Lane (see map!), comes by, carrying his own pail and shovel. He sets about building a big fort, too.

    Percy and Freda, who think fort-building sounds like a lot of fun, join them. “Mine’s going to be the biggest fort of all,” says Percy with typical bravado.

    Alas, things don’t go well for any of children and a big wave sends them back to square one.

    This is when Camille shows us what she’s made of, her natural leadership abilities rising to the glum occasion. “What if we all work together? That way we could build one really BIG fort,” she says. The newly formed Big Fort Team gets to work.

    The storytelling—as with all of Stuart J. Murphy’s I See I Learn books—is kept simple and clear, supported by illustrations designed to provide behavioral models that teach an important life skill, in this case, the social skill of cooperation.

    Make a Plan. Work Together. Share the fun. And build a fort so big and pretty that everyone on the beach stops by to admire its imaginative leaf “flags,” shell defenses and perfectly dug moat. “Who built that fort?” they ask. “The Big Fort Team,” said Camille. “That’s us!” they all shouted.

    Camille. That girl has executive potential written all over her.

    TEACHERS! PARENTS! CARE-GIVERS!

    Click for free pdf poster! Perfect for classrooms & refrigerator doors!

    Each I See I Learn book includes a two-page spread called “A Closer Look,” designed to review key points of the story with an illustrated recap and a series of questions:

    • How do you cooperate with others?
    • Look at the pictures. What happened when everyone started to work together?
    • How is working together better than working separately?
    • Work with a friend to draw a picture of a fort like the one Camille’s team built.

    MISS CATHY RECOMMENDS:

    “Cooperative Games for Preschoolers,” from NAEYC’s magazine, Teaching Young Children Fun!

    “What Makes a Game Developmentally Appropriate?,” by Rae Pica, from NAEYC’s magazine “Young Children” My class at Ready Set Pre-K loves playing Cooperative Musical Chairs!

    “Pre-K Car Wash” Great idea from Millbrae Nursery School

    “Elephant Intelligence: Animal Learning On Par With Great Apes And Dolphins, New Study Reveals,” Huffington Post Wow! Elephants know it’s smart to cooperate! They would be the Really BIG Big Fort Team on the beach!

    Be sure to check out all of Stuart J. Murphy’s I See I Learn books! His Level 1 MathStart books are perfect for Pre-K. You can follow us on twitter and Facebook. Sign up for our FREE e-newsletter, too! (sample)

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    Filed Under: "I See I Learn", Play, Pre-K, Social skills | Tagged; , , , , , ,

    March 17, 2011

    Japan: 100,000 Children Affected & How to Help

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    Japan earthquake / tsunami, March 11, 2011 (click to link to full graphic

    An infant plucked from the rubble. An image of a baby swaddled in pink, shocks of dark hair, dark eyes, sweet precious cheeks.  A collective “awww” sighed around the world.

    The tiny unnamed girl defied the odds to survive days beneath the tsunami wreckage in Japan. Alone, literally buried alive in near-freezing weather, she managed—in that amazing way of babies everywhere—to send out a cry that cut through it all. Rescue workers couldn’t believe their ears, and when they found her, it was rare moment of pure joy in a landscape of gray desolation.

    According to officials, children account for 20% of the estimated half  million people directly affected by the one-two-three punch of a massive earthquake (now officially upgraded from an 8.9 to 9.0), tsunami (tsunami: from the Japanese words tsu, meaning port, and nami, meaning wave) and a still-unfolding nuclear catastrophe. That’s 100,000 children “displaced.” Some, inevitably, now orphans.

    In a tragedy so unfathomable, theirs is a story especially full of heartbreak and hope. Children are the ones most vulnerable, yet on whom the future depends. Inherently resilient, they risk life-long scars from the trauma.

    Many now face at least three months in shelters, and boredom has started to settle in. They want to be in school. They want to be busy. They need to have a sense of purpose.

    NAEYC (the National Association for the Education of Young Children) posted an interview with Save the Children’s Jeanne-Aimee DeMarrais about helping helping children through disasters and what we can do to help the kids in Japan:

    It’s important to get children back to a regular schedule as soon as possible even when they are living in temporary shelter. It’s also important to establish a child-friendly space. Child-friendly spaces are safe, supported environments for children where children can play with other children and be children themselves. These are not schools but over time they do become informal school settings until regular school is reestablished. They are safe places, clear from debris. And they are staffed with supportive adults who can provide children with caring support and opportunities to interact and play with their peers.

    Establishing emergency childcare is also a priority so parents can secure supplies or go back to the disaster area if possible to secure their homes without having to take infants and toddlers with them.

    Notably, most child care costs in Japan are covered by the government, which has requested time to assess what sorts of outside assistance would be most helpful.

    In the meantime, NAEYC recommends supporting UNICEF and Save the Children, both organizations with long track records of working specifically with the youngest victims of disaster all over the world. The NAEYC article also includes several links useful for parents, teachers and caregivers on emergency preparedness and coping with trauma in the aftermath of a crisis

    Even children an ocean and more away from Japan here in the US can be affected by the non-stop media coverage, according to psychologist Michele Borba. Young children especially are attuned to the stress levels of parents and care-givers.”If you stay calm, so, too, will your children,” she advises. Talk through concerns, research answers if don’t have them and help children express their feelings.

    For a list of more organizations involved in the Japan relief effort (along with advice on how to spot and avoid scams), check out Charity Navigator, a well-respected philanthropy vetting site.

    And for a child-friendly introduction to Japanese culture, visit Kids Web Japan to learn about everything from holidays to Manga comic books.

    Along with the rest of the world, our hearts are saddened by the tragedies in Japan and our thoughts are with everyone struggling to rebuild their homes and their lives.

    — Stuart J. Murphy  / J.A. Ginsburg

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    Filed Under: Environment, Health and Safety, disaster preparedness, empathy | Tagged; , , , , , , ,

    March 7, 2011

    TEDxNYED: Innovation & the Future in an Era of Cutbacks

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    "Empowering Innovation in Education"

    by J. A. Ginsburg

    On rethinking school, digitally transcending (crumbling) walls and preparing 21st century students for a collaborative, networked world

    The official theme of TEDxNYED 2011 was “Empowering Innovation in Education,” but it just as easily could have been the “The Best of Times / The Worst of Times.” On the 40th floor, in the gleaming glass aerie of the New York Academy of Sciences, a group of passionate, endlessly creative and deeply concerned educators gathered to talk about tech revolutions and tight budgets, boundary-blind collaborations and soaring drop-out rates, of potential and potential throttled.

    Clocking in at 17 speakers, one folksinger, a few hundred attendees and over 5,000 watching via livestream (last year, that was me, a whole Saturday spent unexpectedly tethered to a laptop after serendipitously catching an early morning tweet tip…), the day-long event was packed and intense. Perhaps a bit too packed. There’s comes a point—somewhere near 3 in the afternoon, when brains top-off for the day, the bell should ring and golly, isn’t it time for recess? What starts out as a bright-eyed idea-fest morphs into a marathon of determined paying attention. But by that time, you’re hooked, addicted, need—really need—to know what the next speaker has to say because, well, it could be great…

    This morning—the morning after—my brain having now diced and sliced its dreamy way to synthesized thought, and armed with a stack of just-shy of indecipherable scribbled notes, it is striking how many of the speakers delivered theme and variation on tha same core message:

    • To succeed, indeed survive, in the 21st century, students must learn how to collaborate and network, and to sift through, sort and connect-the-dots from gushers of information.
    • It is no longer about teaching children how to be taught, but teaching them how to be learners
    • Technology is not a gee-whiz add-on—digital frosting to the analog cake of basic learning—but part and parcel of daily life for nearly all 7 billion people on the planet, rich and poor, urban and rural. It is how we function, almost as basic as breathing.

    BETTER / DIFFERENT

    Curriculum designer Heidi Hayes Jacobs wryly notes most schools are preparing kids for 1991, perhaps because “we were happier then.” But tech as a stand alone isn’t the answer. “We can do dumb things with a smartboard.” Rather than school reform, which only tweaks things, Jacobs proposes a new form of school, a complete rethink not only of what is being taught and how, but also how it is assessed. “Students should be futurists, now.”

    Jacobs is a veritable volcano of assignment ideas that sound like so much fun, I’d like to give them a try myself:

    • Put “geo” in front of everything you teach: geo-history, geo-science, geo-literature. Now tag, map and go!
    • Ask “What does a quality fill-in-the-blank look like? (a quality blog? a quality podcast?) Create one.
    • Pretend you’re Ben Franklin and it’s the night before the start of the Revolutionary War. What would you tweet? (h’mmmm, isn’t that Wael Ghonim?)
    • Create a Facebook page for Julius Caesar complete with status updates and wall posts (“Get out of town in March…”)
    • Build an app

    In short, enough with oral reports and pen-to-paper multiple choice tests. Use digital media for all the new ways it allows us to learn, understand, communicate and share.

    CURRICULUM SHIFT

    As education consultant Alan November points out, children are going off the curricular script on their own already, in all kinds of impressively imaginative ways. He tells the story of a gifted, prolific young fan-fiction author writing Harry Potter riffs in the style of J.K Rowling, only eeking by in school. When he asks her about the disconnect, she responds with a mix of practicality and mission: She can either write for her teacher or publish for the world. Smart girl. No doubt her impressive digital portfolio of well-written stories and impressive social network will take her further than an good grade in a soon-forgotten class. She didn’t fail school. She “failed” her school for failing her.

    Citing Daniel Pink’s book Drive, November notes, “Purpose is everything.” When children—and adults for that matter—feel they are creating content that adds value, they work harder, longer and produce better work.

    So basic is this need, it is hard to believe it needs to be stated. Yet it has become an epiphanous meme of modern educational research. Kids—no surprise—can smell a boring there’s-45-minutes-I’m-never-getting-back lesson from miles away, seizing the opportunity to master the fine art of zoning out. Give them a challenge that plays to their interests and brilliance almost predictably ensues. The projects become catalysts to learning: All roads leads to math…and science, reading, history, literature and art.

    Consultant Gary Stager tells of a juvenile detention center in Maine where a collection of boys considered to be hopeless cases, many with learning disabilities, thrive in a constructivist learning setting. One boy wants to build a guitar. Five-hundred hours and considerable collaboration later, the hand-crafted, meticulously engineered guitars are used to create music. Another child, declared a non-reader ADHD-package-of-trouble by age 7, finds his way through a combination of the internet, NASA and tinkering with electronics, and writes a 13,000 word autobiography.

    Discipline problems, a once-daily occurrence, dropped to near-zero. The boys had context, purpose, focus. They were simply too engaged to cause trouble. The take-away, says Stager, is that education needs to be “less us, more them.”

    IN THE CLASSROOM

    Following and nurturing a child’s interests is, of course, music to the ears of Dennis Littky, who has made it his life’s work, founding schools designed to do just that (Big Picture Learning, The Met School and College Unbound). Littky starts his 15-minutes in the TEDx spotlight flinging little pieces of green paper from a bag onto the stage. Each piece represents a student who has given up and dropped out. As an aggregate, the the confetti on the floor represents the number of kids who had dropped out just that morning: one every 13 seconds for a total of 800 (and counting…). Each a private tragedy. Collectively, a public catastrophe.

    While Littky starts by asking kids about their interests, Steve Bergen, a veteran math teacher-turned-edu-activist, CIO (Chief Information Officer) and computer teacher at The Children’s Storefront, an independent Pre-K – 8 school in Harlem, focuses on the mix of hardware, software and “humanware.” Skills are key, including such hands-on practical skills learned through reconditioning old computers (also see Tech Saturdays and the Summercore program).  His is really another door to the same house: learning by doing. Bergen also wants children to develop “Plan B” skills,” so they know what do when they get stuck.”

    Given the incredible ever-shrinking school district budget, we could all use some “Plan B” skills. Brian Crosby, a grade school teacher from the small city of Sparks, Nevada, near Reno, has plenty, and is happy to share. Technology, notes Crosby, can make all sorts of things possible, but it is the pedagogy that provides substance. No longer must students passively sit at their desks, watching the teacher. They are active learners, using the web for research, skyping with classrooms all over the world, collaborating on projects via Google docs, documenting progress via video and blogging, blogging, blogging. They are reading and writing more, networking and collaborating more effectively and globally, thinking more deeply and “learning how to be learners.”

    “What if school was the best seven hours of a kid’s day?” asks Stager. In Crosby’s classroom, they just may be.

    ASSESSING ASSESSMENTS

    At this point, making sure kids have web access is “almost a moral imperative,” says consultant and author Will Richardson. “In this moment, kids can learn what they want, pretty much whenever they want to.” Richardson’s daughter downloads a video to a rock song to help her learn how to play it on the piano.  A teenager in Toronto learns about video editing via the web, his videos develop a following and a promising career begins.”Kids are not waiting for curriculum. …There are billion potential teachers out there.”

    Yet assessments still rule when it comes to the nuts and bolts of American public education. Funding, and sometimes teachers’ salaries, rise and fall based on test scores. The eternal quest for standards, says Richardson, is fast turning teaching into test prep.

    It is time to stop trying to do schools “better” and do schools “different.” …None of this is the stuff of test prep. It is the stuff of life prep.”

    Luyen Chou, a former private school teacher and administrator now focused on working with public schools, thinks the problem isn’t so much assessments per se, but rather what is being assessed. He envisions project-based assessments (a la Heidi Hayes Jacobs), coupled with Google-style analytics. In fact, he says, assessments could help the cause, showing how a constructivist approach to teaching leads to students with better critical thinking skills and better test scores.

    Don’t see assessment as the enemy. Embrace it. If you do it right, we’re in a position to tell a story no one has. Viva la Revolucion!

    ON A THRESHOLD

    With those stirring words, my thoughts drifted to Wisconsin, where exactly one week earlier I had been in Madison at a massive rally of teachers and other state employees protesting legislation threatening their rights to collective bargaining. Yet even if they win what has shaped up to be long and bruising battle, municipalities—and their school districts—throughout the state face draconian budget cuts: an estimated 20% in Madison itself. Whether such severe cuts are the start of a nationwide trend remains to be seen, but it is doubtful that there are very many places where school budgets are increasing.

    Beyond all the finger-pointing (Bill Gates’ TED talk last week, which singled out states’ wacky accounting practices and ballooning pension and health insurance obligations, received a notably mixed-to-sharply-negative reviews from the TEDxNYED crowd), the economic reality for teachers is stark: Lower or stagnant salaries. Higher expenses. Often working in buildings in need of repair or upgrading. In some states, no right to strike and limited input. College debt. The teacher “churn” rate is currently 25% at three years, which means that 1 out of every 4 teachers drops out of the profession just as they are starting to get the hang of it. At the other end of the career arc, experienced Baby Boom-generation teachers are retiring. And caught in between are mid-career teachers, now faced with the specter of annual lay-offs.

    So we are poised between two trends. The first, tech-driven, brimming with innovation, imagination and possibility. The second, a crumbling bricks-and-mortar analog infrastructure. How these two weave together, perhaps creating a better third answer, remains to be seen.

    But the times, most definitely, are a’changing.

    TEDxNYED 2011 Videos: Direct Links to Speakers Referenced in this Post:

    RELATED ARTICLES / RESOURCES

    Posted by J.A. Ginsburg | Permalink | 5 Comments
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    March 3, 2011

    Just One of Those Days: Percy Gets Upset…and How We Can Help Him!

    by J. A. Ginsburg

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    a story about the emotional skill of dealing with frustration Stuart J. Murphy's I See I Lean series

    Who hasn’t been there? Percy is hurrying to get dressed. He wants to go have fun! And everything is going perfectly until a shoe goes missing. Sure, he finds a toy truck parked under a blanket, but it just isn’t fair! “Where is is my shoe? I can’t find it! I can’t find it!”

    Percy Gets Upset, a new addition to Stuart J. Murphy’s I See I Learn series, focuses on the emotional skill of dealing with frustration.

    Percy, an otherwise sweet little boy who loves to go to Ready Set Pre-K and play with his friends, is having a rough day. First he can’t find his shoe. Then his mommy wants him to come home for dinner—right when he’s in the middle of playing a game of hide-and-seek with his very best friend, Freda. Then his daddy wants him to eat the dinner. Then both his parents want him to go to bed! Grmph!

    Percy is beside himself. Stamping his feet. Scowling. Feeling cranky. It’s no fun to feel this bad. In fact, it’s just awful.

    Throughout the story, his ever-patient mommy and daddy try to help Percy by suggesting things he can do to calm down: Take a deep breath. Stop and think. Talk about it. Count to ten.

    The storytelling—as with all the I See I Learn books—is kept simple and clear, supported by illustrations designed to provide behavioral models that teach an important life skill. Children who are better able to manage their emotions can work through feelings of frustration and anger faster. They can move on to something that’s a lot more interesting and fun.

    H’mmm…such as reading Percy Gets Upset, over and over again?

    Blogger and mother Shara Lawrence-Weiss writes:

    Have they met my daughter? Sheesh. As we read Percy Gets Upset together, Mini Human #2 (my 4 year old) said, “Mom. Percy is just like me.” Ahhh…yep. Percy gets MAD at things and at people and has a tendency to react rather than respond. My daughter asked me to read the Percy book to her three times in a row, until she had it memorized. Then she went to her father and told him what the book was about.

    She was quite impressed by the idea that a story had explained her own personality so well…

    And just like Percy, we hope “Mini Human #2″ woke up the next day in her cute little pajamas, her favorite stuffed-animal buddy in hand, and came running into the kitchen, with a big smile and a shout, “Guess what? I’m not upset any more! I want to have fun!”

    Click for free pdf poster! Perfect for classrooms & refrigerator doors!

    TEACHERS! PARENTS! CARE-GIVERS!

    Each I See I Learn book includes a two-page spread called “A Closer Look,” designed to review key points of the story with an illustrated recap and a series of questions:

    • What do you do when you’re upset?
    • What helps you feel better when you’re frustrated or angry?
    • Draw a picture of how you feel when you’re grumpy.
    • Draw a picture of how you like to feel.

    ______________________________________________________

    MISS CATHY RECOMMENDS:

    Anger Management for Kids by Michele Borba / “Realty Check” (blog)

    Building Emotional Intelligence by Linda Lantieri and Daniel Goleman (book website)

    Children and Coping with Transitions by Nicole Grant / “The Fun Mum” (blog)

    Kids are very visual learners. From a very young age, they can recognise symbols and attach meaning to pictures. Create a visual schedule that shows them what their routine will be for that day…

    —Nicole Grant

    Posted by J.A. Ginsburg | Permalink | 2 Comments
    Filed Under: "I See I Learn", Emotional skills, Visual Learning | Tagged; , , , , , , , , , ,

    February 10, 2011

    The Third Teacher: On School, Memories, Low-Hanging Fruit, Lessons from the Past & Better Ideas for the Future

    by J. A. Ginsburg

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    "The Third Teacher: 79 Ways You Can Use Design to Transform Teaching & Learning" / OWP/P Cannon Design / VS Furniture / Bruce Mau Design

    Close your eyes. Think back to when you were in elementary school. What do you remember?

    For me, it’s the smell of mimeographed hand-outs, still damp with purple ink, and tall windows with tan shades. It’s polished terrazzo floors and my desk with a lift-up top. It’s the certainty of bells, the slam of lockers, the echoes of kick-balls bouncing in the gym. It’s the smell of a bologna sandwich in a brown paper bag and the challenge of eating “strawberry” ice cream from a little plastic cup armed only with a thin hourglass-shaped sliver of wood.

    Construction paper. Pencil sharpeners. Crayons. Manila folders. Paste. On the swings, trying to touch the sky with my toes, and climbing metal monkeybars, giggling with my girlfriends.

    It’s walking six blocks to and from school every day with my older siblings, navigating snowbanks in the winter and watching cottonwood seeds drift by come spring.

    It’s the light in the classroom on a rainy day and listening to my teacher read the class a chapter from Stuart Little.

    My memories of actual in-class instruction are rather dim, even though I spent thousands of hours in school and always did well. Somewhere in there I learned how to read, write and “do” math. A few wonderful teachers—and one utter disaster—stand out, but most of the memories have to do with places and senses: what I felt more than what I thought.

    I was surprised by what had faded from memory and what had managed to cut through with such stunning clarity. Yet it makes sense from the perspective of a young child, for whom learning, like breathing, is just something that happens. Whether a child is learning how to read or figuring how to navigate a difficult classroom, she is learning…

    And, unlike adults, who tend to think “thinking” is a neck-up activity, young children are much more tuned into “multiple intelligences,” gathering and synthesizing information from all their senses. Divisions between mind and body are blurrier. To think—and to learn—is to move, smell, touch, see, hear.

    THE THIRD TEACHER

    I took this meander back to childhood after reading (make that “gulping”) The Third Teacher, a book / “collaboration project” created by:

    • VS Furniture, a Germany company with a rich century-plus history that  includes working with Maria Montessori herself
    • Bruce Mau Design, a Canada-based consultancy known for combining a “design-thinking” approach with a futurist perspective

    The eponymous “third teacher” is the environment, a reference to the Reggio Emilia interactions-based approach to education: adults, peers, surroundings. School buildings and classrooms have a profound impact on how we develop and what we learn. Or what we don’t learn.

    As common-sense as that sounds, it is too often overlooked, with especially dramatic and potentially tragic implications for young children.

    The Third Teacher, which developed through a series of workshops in the United States, Canada, Germany and England, is split into eight sections, covering “79 Ways You Can Use Design to Transform Teaching & Learning.” It begins at the beginning with Maslow’s basic needs and a two-page spread of gobsmacking statistics:

    • Students with limited classroom daylight were outperformed by those with the most natural light by 20% in math and 26% on reading tests
    • Asthma is the most common chronic disorder in childhood, currently affecting an estimated 6.2 million children under 18 years of age
    • Many classrooms feature a speech intelligibility rating of 75% or less. That means listeners understand only 75% of the words read from a list
    • American school children missed 12 million days of school due to the asthma

    Clean air. Good light. Good acoustics. It doesn’t seem like too much to ask, yet nearly a quarter of US schools are in serious need of repair.

    Even the most inspired educators  are stymied when forced to do battle with their classrooms. It is a waste not only of precious time and effort, but also of precious money. This is classic “low-hanging fruit”:  Green schools aren’t just better for learning, they are also cheaper to run:

    • The financial benefits of greening school are about $70 per square foot, more than 20 times as high as the cost of going green
    • Schools in the US spend $7.8 billion on energy each year—more than the cost of computers and textbooks combined
    • On average, green schools saved $100,000 per year—enough to hire two new teachers, buy 200 new computers, or purchase 5,000 new textbooks

    FUTURE / PRESENT / PAST

    The need to design for the future is an underlying theme throughout the book. Technological capacity doubles each year, notes Bruce Mau. That means “…children starting kindergarten this fall will have…a million times greater capacity to shape the world around them by the time they finish university.” One look at at an iPad—a device that didn’t exist before 2010—and instinctively you know this staggering fact to be true.

    But it is goes much deeper than ever-gee-whizzier tools. Schools are charged with preparing children for a world none of us can entirely imagine, for jobs that don’t yet exist, for a future full of uncertainties. How will climate change affect...everything? Will the planet’s natural resources be able to support a global population expected to punch through the 8 billion mark by 2020’s, a 30% increase from 2000?

    In order to “shape the world around them” wisely, today’s children first have to understand it, which leads to a second major theme running through the book: environmental awareness and ecological thinking. Schools for the future need to be designed for all sorts of connections: technological, social, neurological, physical, cultural, environmental. And some of the best answers for how to do this come from the past.

    My elementary school was not built to be green (in fact, it was ultimately torn down due to asbestos). But those tall windows not only let it wonderful light (back when light was light and not “daylighting”), they also easy to open, too. How delicious to smell a  spring breeze or hear the rustle of falling leaves in autumn. The daily walk to school, though a trudge in winter, guaranteed that we all spent some time outdoors. Recess—we had three, two 15-minute breaks and and a full period for lunch—gave us a chance to run around and explore. By contrast:

    • 7% of first graders (in the US) now get no recess at all, with many more having their minutes drastically cut; the poorer the school, the less time is dedicated to it.
    • On average, children of primary school age spend 9 hours per day sitting.
    • While 71% of adult Americans say they walked or rode a bike to school when they were a child, today less than two in ten (17%) of school-age children walk.
    • The percentage of children who live within a mile of school and who walk or bike to school has declined by nearly 25% in the last 30 years. Barely 21% of children today live within a mile of their school.

    This is not helping the cause vis a vis the obesity epidemic, either.

    Notably, many of the of the ideas presented in The Third Teacher have dovetailing “goods”:

    • School gardens double as living science labs connecting children to nature while producing tasty vegetables for a healthier lunch
    • Playgrounds are places for exercise and imagination (“Logic will get you from A to B. Imagination will take you everywhere” – Albert Einstein—perhaps my favorite quote from this quotalicious tome)
    • Desks and chairs designed to work with young fidgety bodies, rather than restrain them, help release nervous energy, making it possible for children to think better. The mind-body connection is particularly important in the young. Movement plays a key role neurological wiring.
    • The school itself as community “teacher,” a working example of how to to upgrade to greener design

    All 79 ideas, along with a selection of case studies, are available for free on the Third Teacher website, but the book is the better package. Each idea is paired with a case study or a short essay by a delightful range of experts, spanning the famous—Ken Robinson, Raffi, James Dyson—to the famous-in-their-communities—teachers, parents, students. Studies a-plenty are excerpted and quoted. The insights of Maslow, Piaget, Gardner, Dewey and Toffler infuse the conversation—and a conversation it is.

    This is not a standard book with page after page of identically laid-out text, with a few illustrations sprinkled in. This is a design extravaganza that manages to mix an astounding amount of information onto every page (hence the plentiful post-its on my well-thumbed copy pictured above…) The Third Teacher is a reference designed to engage, culminating, of course, with idea #79: “Add to this list.”

    So get to it. The future is coming fast and there’s no time to waste.

    related links:

    The Third Teacher Facebook page

    Trung Le’s “Redesigning Education” articles, Fast Company magazine

    Bruce Mau  / “What is the Centre for Massive Change” (“the content of experience / the experience of content”) / video

    Ken Robinson on educational paradigms (live link / embed below may not appear on iPad)

    Posted by J.A. Ginsburg | Permalink | 2 Comments
    Filed Under: Education, Environment, Play, Uncategorized, eduation, schools, technology | Tagged; , , , , , , , ,

    January 5, 2011

    If You’re Coming to ALA / Midwinter…

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    Preschool Roundtable on libraries and school readiness: Sunday, January 9, 4:00 – 5:30, Room 30B, SD Convention Center

    While Stuart prepares for an incredible trip to Qatar, India and China (MathStart in Chinese!—but that’s another post for another day…), I will be heading to San Diego for the American Library Association’s Midwinter conference.

    It’s no secret that here at vizlearning we love librarians. Indeed, I am the daughter of one (officially retired, but an active member of a legendary 50+ year Great Books group). I remember learning how to sign my name just so I could get my very own library card. Rites of passage don’t get better than that.

    So I was thrilled when Sue Nespeca asked me to talk about school readiness and Stuart’s new series, I See I Learn, at the Preschool Discussion Group roundtable.

    Just like MathStart books, I See I Learn stories use visual learning strategies to reinforce learning.

    Visual learning and young children are a natural fit. Long before children can read, or even speak many words,they are accomplished visual learners. They understand illustrations and photographs with ease, as well as more abstract representations such as symbols and graphs.

    Each book focuses on a specific skill from one of four domains:

    • Social
    • Emotional
    • Heath and Safety
    • Cognitive

    Stuart’s stories are modeled on real life situations and, just as in real life, often involve more than one skill. For example,”Freda Plans a Picnic,” is about sequencing, a cognitive skill, but the picnic itself is a social event. “Percy Plays It Safe” focuses on playground safety skills, but playing successfully in a group requires self-regulation, an emotional skill.

    Jill Bickford, from Michigan’s West Bloomfield Township Public Library, will also be presenting: “How Libraries Can Help Parents Get Their Children Ready for School and Partnering with Schools.”

    I sat in on the roundtable at the ALA conference in DC last summer, taking lots of notes. It was fabulous!. After the official presentations, everyone in the group of about 10 librarians had a chance to share ideas about outreach efforts, including ways to weave in the use of digital tools.

    If you are a children’s librarian, or a librarian interested in children’s books, please join the group:

    Sunday, January 9, from 4 to 5:30 p.m., in room 30B of the San Diego Convention Center.

    Although I am not quite Stuart, I promise treats for all! Please spread the word!

    * The I See Learn books will be available at the Charlesbridge booth, #1808. Please stop by.

    Come meet us at the Preschool Roundtable, Sunday, January 9, Room 30B at the San Diego Convention Center!

    __________________________________________________

    FREE NEWSLETTER

    Please sign up and tell your friends!

    We recently sent out a small test run of Stuart’s newly revamped newsletter. For those who remember the MathStart newsletters, there is more about more and much more to come!

    Also, Stuart now has a Facebook page. We are just getting started. Please share with all your FB friends. Thanks!

    And, of course, we are on twitter @vizlearning, too.

    See you in the cybersphere!

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    Filed Under: "I See I Learn", Mathstart, Pre-K, Uncategorized | Tagged; , , ,