Thursday, May 29, 2014

A Moment of Clarity in a Digital World

Even though the digital format of a class can make aspects of it move faster, and more akin to the speed students like, there are times when digital technology cannot replace paper and pencil....establishing proof.

The research students have to C3B4Me...a process of having 3 people read their research papers for 1) did it answer the essential question?, 2) does it make the argument in a logical and methodical manner?, and 3) is it written in active voice with no spelling or punctuation issues?   The students use a community spreadsheet to let me know they are ready by listing the three people.

The papers I read this semester canNOT have been read by three people...even if they are peers, much less teachers and parents.  Some students forgot to tell them what to read for, or 'fudged' the names entirely.  We will be returning to the form that lists the requirements for the proofreaders and asks for their signatures.

Sometimes the old ways are the best ways, and a signature is more than a name.

Guess who wrote this signature?



Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Letters to Future Research Students

It is the end of the semester and the time when the research papers should be written, and are not; when the displays should be almost finished, and they are not; when the students should be preparing their eye contact and speaking skills with each other, and it is not happening.  What happened?

Gifted thinkers do procrastinate for several reasons, but mostly because they believe they can whip out the work at the last minute OR they cannot make a final decision because of the number of available options. When the research was being done on index cards and card catalogs, there was procrastination but not like this semester. In the first couple semesters of this digital study, there was procrastination, but not like this semester. Today, in a verbal jam session, one student said "With speed there is no hurry to hurry because there's more time to procrastinate and see if some new information shows up somewhere."

MmMmmmm...could speed be enabling procrastination?

The students have agreed to writing letters to next semester's research students. Like advice to the lovelorn, the letters would give advice about target dates, using their blog for the practice session it is meant to be, and when speed buys extra time, use it.


Sunday, May 11, 2014

Further Reflection about Digital Learning

Ruth Mellinkott wrote a cookbook
called Easy, Easier, Easiest Cookbook.
How to apply this theory to
teaching research to
middle school students!
Speed. The middle school students, almost 2 generations away from me, live in a fast and ever changing world. Although I intellectually knew this as fact, I now see I did not fully understand what that meant. Fast tools, a variety of access avenues, and individual access to information does not mean learning and/or teaching easier.  In fact, the students in the first semester of this study still had the memory of handwritten notes, and evenings of tallying surveys manually.  Each successive semester sees a growing number of students who expect more with less effort.  There is a fine line within the speed component to learning....and it's not an iPhone or a Chromebook, although those things can be part of the learning conundrum.

I see students waiting until they absolutely need knowledge before wanting it...and want the quickest avenue to get it. Asking me for the piece of information on the spot is most expedient way to access what's needed, but I am reluctant to be the parroting source of facts. I refer them to the class GoogleSite where all the rubrics, handouts, and flashcards exist along with my commentaries.  Eyeballs roll.

What's needed it seems, is a leaner GoogleSite, Blogger requirements, quizzes, and note making. Avenues where information can be accessed quickly, as needed.  The digital learning arena is a slippery slope toward student expectation that the research process should be easy, instead of easier.