Posts

Showing posts from November, 2018

Choice is Best

Image
In my last blog post I asked the question, "Who's driving in our classrooms?" The question is really about who is the one making the educational choices and learning decisions. In order to engage our students and give them the ownership they need to feel valued, it should be our students doing the driving, while the educators are helping navigate and coaching them along the way. While I think this model of teaching and learning sounds great, I am having a hard time envisioning it in action in my classroom on a daily basis. The biggest obstacle I see right now is that I mostly teach 6th grade students. It's honestly frightening to try and trust them behind the wheel! They just don't have the experience yet. But I want to see them so engaged with the material and the learning journey that they get excited about science and see how valuable learning can be. So, I'm continuing on my own learning journey, trying to implement student choice into my lessons and givi

Who's Driving This Car?

Image
Have you ever been a passenger in a car, headed to a new location, being driven there be a person who knows where they're going, but it's not anywhere that looks familiar to you? You have no idea where you are, turning at unknown streets, just going along for the ride. If you aren't particularly interested in the destination, perhaps your mind starts to wander, thinking about a challenging student you're trying to reach, lessons you need to design, or even what you'll be making for dinner. Maybe you're chatty and you carry on a conversation with the other people in the car, not thinking about where you're going or how you're getting there. As a passenger, you become passive, not really engaging with the world outside of the car, not concerned with the landscapes, the traffic, or what street you're on. You're in passenger mode, just along for the ride. I wonder how many times our students treat learning as if they are in "passenger mode&q