Friday, August 31, 2018

august 31

JOURNAL TOPIC: ["Walking in LA" by Missing Persons; "These Boots Are Made for Walkin" by Lee Hazelwood/Nancy Sinatra]

On your walk home a dog starts talking to you.  As soon as someone else walks by, the dog stops.  He only talks when you're alone.  And he tells you a secret that can save the world.  But to share it, you'll have to divulge your source, and that might make you sound crazy.  What will you do?

AGENDA:
1. Journal

(PLEASE REMEMBER TO LEAVE YOUR JOURNAL IN THE BOX FOR YOUR PERIOD!!!)
2. Hopefully you've made progress this week.  Please write about your experience as an independent learner and post it on your blog (Title: I AM GSD).  If you didn't get things done, write about that too, because I will be back on Monday and looking to rev up.
3. Who can log into Read 180 and who can't?  Let's all try so that I can make a list and get us some help.
4. Catch up on missing posts
5. Literature analysis (due Friday, 9/7)

Thursday, August 30, 2018

august 30

JOURNAL TOPIC: [today's tunes: "You Talk Too Much" by Run-D.M.C.; "Communication Breakdown" by Led Zeppelin]

So many phrases say the same thing: Talk is cheap. A picture's worth a thousand words. It's not what you said, it's how you said it. Since words are so easy to create we tend to mistrust them. We use our intuition to "read between the lines" and determine what someone really means.  Describe how we listen, read, and learn without depending on words.

AGENDA:
1. Journal
2. Big Questions
3. Prep for Hack to School Night
4. Literature Analysis
5. Read 180

Wednesday, August 29, 2018

hack to school night




(my t-shirt from OSCON)


To be clear: the word hack has been associated with definitions ("sharp cough, "cut with unskillful blows," & "illegal/unauthorized computer access," e.g.) that do not describe what we do.

We make connections and facilitate conversations that help people learn.   We build, analyze,  evaluate and modify tools and working conditions to make them better.

You know how they say, "[So'n'so] just can't hack it?" Well, maybe [So'n'so] can't.  We can.

So, at Back-- er, Hack to School night this Wednesday (8.28) evening, we are at it again. Get here whenever you can. Bring whoever you want. Offer them the benefit of what you know and find a way to learn from them too. Share new ideas about technology and how you can use it to get ahead in life.

Here is the program:
1. Learner-led conference (see below)
2. Periodic "Intro to OSL" presentations
3. Sign-ups for "friend of the course" events and "digital drop-in" nights

Here is the process:
1. Think about these questions and your answers to them;
2. Bring someone who cares to Hack to School Night;
3. Have them ask you these questions, be suitably brilliant in your replies, and demand that they take notes so that you know they're paying attention;
4. Turn in their notes to me, get your extra credit, listen to me brag about you briefly;
5. Go home and finish your homework.

Here are the questions:
1. What is this class about?
2. What is the easiest part of this class?
3. What is the hardest part of this class?
4. What have you learned so far?
5. What is your Big Question?


august 29

JOURNAL TOPIC:
Please reflect on your independent work process.  Are you getting stuff done?  What about your working environment is helping you achieve?  What's holding you back?  What are you going to do next in order to succeed?

AGENDA:
1. Journal
2. Read 180
3. Reading/ Literature Analysis
4. Reading together
5. Preparing for success

HW:
1. Make sure your notes are organized
2. Create a post for your blog in which you describe your routines for organizing your school stuff,  managing your time, and learning/remembering new information (title: HOW I LEARN)

Monday, August 27, 2018

august 28

JOURNAL TOPIC
What does it mean to "fit in" with people? How important is it to be accepted by others, even if it means changing the way you think and act? Explain your answer.

AGENDA
1. Journal
2. Read 180/ Literature analysis
3. Writer's conferences

how to get youtube embed code on an android

Some of you have had challenges getting the embed code from YouTube so that you can post it on your blogs.  I just did some research with Samantha and we figured it out!

Check out this website for more information:

http://www.tomsguide.com/faq/id-2327797/embed-youtube-video-website-android-smartphone.html

how to post a youtube video from an iphone

To show this, I'm embedding a video from my iphone!  But, to tell the truth, I only watched the first few seconds of this video, so please comment to this post and let me know if it helps.


august 27

JOURNAL TOPIC:

Recently I saw a motorcyclist get hit by a car and it made me think: What would you do today if you knew you would not live to see tomorrow?

AGENDA:
1. Journal
2. Catching up on the first two weeks
3. "Conscience of a Hacker"
4. Essay
5. Read 180

Friday, August 24, 2018

this week / next week

Here's a bonus post for your blog (title: THIS WEEK / NEXT WEEK)

Start by writing:

This week I learned...

and after you finish that, write:

Next week I plan to learn...

Thursday, August 23, 2018

august 24

JOURNAL TOPIC:

Choose your own.  You can write about whatever's on your mind.

AGENDA:
1. Journal
2. Audit blogs & reflect on the week
3. "Richard Cory" recitals (?)
4. "Conscience of a Hacker"
5. Read 180
6. Preview of coming attractions

Wednesday, August 22, 2018

why we share what we write

Sometimes we get so caught up in the technicalities of composition that we forget the original purpose of communicating.  This video of a musical composition is a powerful reminder.

august 23

JOURNAL TOPIC:

Do you see a difference between learning and being taught?  How do you learn differently when you're doing it independently?

AGENDA:
1. Journal
2. Memorize, record, & post "Richard Cory"
3. Catch up on any unfinished work
4. Add some design to your blog
5. Read 180

Tuesday, August 21, 2018

august 22

JOURNAL TOPIC
Many of us use the word boring to describe anything we don't like or understand. How can a book be boring to one person and interesting to another? Describe something you really like and imagine how someone else might think it's boring. Use a specific example.

AGENDA
1. Journal
2. Read 180 Reading Inventory
3. Work on "Richard Cory"
4. Catch up on any unifinished work
5. "Conscience of a Hacker"

HW: Write a response to "Conscience of a Hacker" and publish it on your blog.  Do you agree or disagree with the author?  Considering this was written when I was in high school, and today's young people will eventually lead this school and this country, what is important for us to remember so that we can make education better for the next generation?

august 21 [sigh]

It turns out the software is working, so period 3 will meet in the lab (Room 235).

If you finish the test early, check out the Big Questions page.

august 21 [UPDATE]

Apparently the testing software wasn't up to testing today, so we are meeting in 619 as usual.  

Please bring your brain.

Monday, August 20, 2018

august 21

JOURNAL TOPIC:

Why are there so many tests in school?

AGENDA:
1. Journal
2. Testing
3. Old Business: poem, post reading test to blog
4. Read 180



a seven year-old can pass this course

I just found this post from 2016 and thought you might like to see it. -dp



Today I'm home with my daughter.  So what am I up to?

Playing Legos and making chili con carne.


I have also been posting to the course blogs and answering emails from students.  Earlier my daughter was looking over my shoulder and saw the picture of her fish.  She read the post and cracked up (I already told her the story at dinner, but she didn't know it was online: "Daddy, you TWEETED that?")

When she saw the post my daughter noticed something else on the blog.  "Daddy," she said, "Why did you type that you never learned to read?"  I explained the reading assessment idea and showed her the video of me reading Fox in Sox. We had just finished a conversation about how learning should always be fun, even in school.  "Hey," she said.  "I can do that."

I answered with a smile: "Yeah? Prove it."

So she did.  And check out the look she gives me when she pronounces Dr. Seuss' name correctly.





Do your homework. For the grading period I may just make it simple: can you do what a 7 year-old can do? And the most important thing in this video and this post is what she DOESN'T do.

She doesn't get distracted by the dishwasher. She doesn't even look up when the timer goes off. And she never, ever, EVER gives up.

august 20

JOURNAL TOPIC: ("My Back Pages" by Bob Dylan/ covered by The Byrds)

Why is it that so many young people want to be older, and so many older people want to be young? How do you feel about your age? Be sure to explain your answer.

1. Journal
2. Socratic seminar (topics: remix/creative commons; socratic method; right to your opinion; "Richard Cory")
3. Read 180

HW:
Memorize "Richard Cory"-- due Friday, August 24

Why "Richard Cory" now, when most ELD courses start in chronological order with something else? 

1. Because writers have ways of telling us things "between the lines" -- and this poem is a great example that's easy to understand.  Once you get the hang of decoding an author's message, reading becomes a lot easier and a lot more fun.
2. Because this poem is uniquely, tragically relevant.  I first brought it to a World Literature course when one of the funniest, most beloved people ever killed himself the day before school started.  And I'm concerned-- between 2007 and 2015, teen suicide rates doubled for girls and went up 30% for boys.  According to the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, on average there are 123 suicides in America EVERY DAY.   Please click the links & read the articles by the beginning of class tomorrow (Tuesday, August 21). Think about Richard Cory and come to class prepared to discuss how literature reflects the versions of ourselves that only we know.

I can't think of anything more important to learn than living.  Can you?

Saturday, August 18, 2018

put a creative commons license on your blog

Next week we're going to talk about creative inspiration and collaboration, and how writers get ideas.

As you probably know, the internet has made it easier than ever to find and use others' work as we create our own.  It's important to understand what is available for free, and what we have to license and/or pay for.  So, we will also talk about intellectual property and who owns what in the digital world.

For Monday, please post a Creative Commons license on your blog.  You can do this easily:
1. Open the Blogger dashboard
2. Open the Layout page
3. Click the blue +Add a Gadget box (mine is in the sidebar-right-1 section); this will open another window with a list of gadgets
4. Click the blue/white plus sign next to HTML/ Javascript; this will lead you to a screen that looks like a blog post, with spaces for the title and content
5. You can leave the title empty
6. Paste the code below into the content box

<a rel="license" href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/"><img alt="Creative Commons License" style="border-width:0" src="https://i.creativecommons.org/l/by-nc/4.0/88x31.png" /></a><br />This work is licensed under a <a rel="license" href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/">Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License</a>.

7. Click 'Save'

When we meet, I'll explain more about Creative Commons and this particular license.  Each of you can then decide whether to keep this license or to change the permissions you want to share with the people who see your work.

Thursday, August 16, 2018

august 17

JOURNAL TOPIC: [today's tunes: Fela Kuti's "Teacher Don't Teach Me No Nonsense"]

What qualities of a book make you interested to read it?

AGENDA:
1. Journal
2. The Right to Your Opinion (intro/ post a response on your blog)
3. Treasure Hunt/ Adopt-A-Friend
4. Finish posting video to your blog/ complete Member Blogs roster
5. Plan on reading


Wednesday, August 15, 2018

august 16

JOURNAL TOPIC: (today's tunes: "Move on Up" by Curtis Mayfield)

Hunter S. Thompson observed, "When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro."  How do you respond to challenges that arise from circumstances you didn't predict?
AGENDA:
1. Journal
2. Finish creating blogs and complete Member Blogs page
3. "I Never Learned to Read!"
4. Learn to read
5. Publish a blog post about learning to read -- include your past experience and your goals for this year

Tuesday, August 14, 2018

august 15

JOURNAL TOPIC:
Describe your most memorable moment from this class yesterday.

AGENDA:
1. Journal
2. Finish yesterday's work on blogs (create, send email with name/period, post welcome message)
3. "I Never Learned to Read"
4. Read 180

how to create a blog post

1. Go to the Blogger Dashboard
2. Click on "Create New Post" (orange box with the pencil icon)
3. Give your post a title
4. Write your post & include any pictures, videos or links you want us to see
5. Proofread!
6. Publish your post and make sure you like the way it looks
7. Sit back, relax, and enjoy that sweet, sweet feeling of success

will this blog see tomorrow?

It's an open question.  Think about our first in-class discussion, ask yourself what you really want out of this semester, and then comment to this post with your decision and at least one reason for it.  (NOTE: As Benjamin Franklin famously observed, "We all hang together or we all hang separately." We won't move forward unless all of us participate.

I've created an approach to learning in which students use 2.0 tools to create their online identities, express themselves, and show the public what they can do. 

I call the model Open Source Learning and I define it with a mouthful: "A guided learning process that combines timeless best practices with today's tools in a way that empowers learners to create interdisciplinary paths of inquiry, communities of interest and critique, and a portfolio of knowledge capital that is directly transferable to the marketplace."

Students use Open Source Learning to create a wild variety of personal goals, Big Questions, Collaborative Working Groups, and online portfolios of work that they can use for personal curiosity, self-improvement, or as a competitive advantage in applying for jobs, scholarships, and admission to colleges and universities.  You can see a sample course blog here, some member blogs here, and sample masterpieces here and here

Several members of the first Open Source Learning cohort made this video about the experience:



In an era when it seems like all you hear about school is how much it sucks, it's nice to see student achievement make positive waves.  Check out this Open Source Learning interview with students and Howard Rheingold, the man who literally wrote the book on The Virtual Community 20 years ago. 

The defining characteristic of Open Source Learning is that there is no chief; all of us are members of a network that is constantly evolving.  Another key element is transparency.  What we learn and how well we learn it, how we respond to setbacks, and even some of our favorite inspirations and habits of mind are right out there in public for everyone to see.  Readers will rightly perceive what we curate as the best we have to offer.

And all this is Open.  In thermodynamics, an open system exchanges substance, not just light and heat.  To us, the important idea is that the network can change in composition and purpose.  Every time you meet someone new and exchange ideas, you're not only enriching each other, you're changing your minds and contributing opportunities for others to do the same.  In other words, you're learning and teaching* (*one of the most effective ways to learn).

We're not limited to one source for curriculum or instruction.  We have a full slate of online conferences scheduled this year including authors, authorities on the Internet and social media, entrepreneurs, and others.  A few years ago a mother/daughter team presented a lesson on class distinctions in Dickens & Dr. Seuss online.  Ricky Luna invited a champion drummer to talk with students online about music and its connections to literature and life.  If we read something that makes an impression we can reach out to the author.    As you get the hang of this you'll come up with your own ideas.  Testing them will give you a better sense of how to use the experience to your greatest advantage.

No one knows how learning actually works--what IS that little voice that tells you what you should've said 15 minutes after you should've said it?  How does a subneuronal lightning storm somehow account for our experience of being conscious?  We are not sure how to account for the individual experience and demonstration of learning.  We are also not sure what exactly the individual should be learning about at a time when factoids are a search click away and the economy, the environment, and the future are all increasingly complex and uncertain.

Maybe this is why learning still seems magical.  Maybe it shouldn't be.  Maybe if we learned more about how we think we'd be better off.  After all, how we think is a powerful influence on how we act.  If you think of your blog work as a list of traditional school assignments/chores, you will treat it that way and it will show.   Your friends will miss your posts and worry that you've moved to The House Beyond the Internet-- or that you're still at your place but trapped under something heavy.  At any rate you'll be missing the whole point.  This work should help you connect the dots between the interests that drive you, an academic course that derives its title from words hardly anyone uses in casual conversation, and practical tasks like applying for scholarships and college admissions.  The general idea is for you to: do your best at something personally meaningful; learn about how you and others learn while you're in the act; and fine-tune your life accordingly.  In addition to mastering the core curriculum, improving your own mind is the highest form of success in this course of study.

As you well know (Put that phone away or I'll confiscate it!), many people are worried about the use of technology in education.  They are rightly concerned about safety, propriety, and focus: will learners benefit or will they put themselves at risk?  The only way to conclusively prove that the benefits far outweigh the risks is to establish your identities and show yourselves great, both online and in meatspace.  As we move forward you will learn how the Internet works, how you can be an effective online citizen, and how you can use 2.0 and 3.0 tools to achieve your personal and professional goals.  You'll also learn a lot about writing and the habits of mind that make readers and writers successful communicators. 

Because Open Source Learning is a team sport, this is all your call.  You have to decide if you want to pursue this new direction, or if you want to invent another possibility with or without digital and social media, or if you prefer the familiarity of the traditional approach.  There is admittedly something comforting about the smell of an old book, even if it's a thirty-pound textbook that spent the summer in a pile of lost-and-found P.E. clothes.  My perspective may be obvious but I'm just one voice.  Please add yours with a comment below. 

thank you

As often as I say it, I feel like I don't say it often enough: Thank You. Thank you for your effort, your insight, your willingness...