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Building On Swampy Land - CCK08



What is it with Monty Python and finding those excellent analogies needed to get a point across simply and accurately, with the just perfect amount of humour.  This week in CCK08 we are discussing the concept of Instructional Design, and how in our new world of new world literacies (if you believe in that kind of stuff), how we present (I mean guide students) information needs to be rethought and redeveloped from the ground up in many cases.  That is an excellent notion, however we are forgetting an important piece of the puzzle, the ground itself.

A lot of attention gets focused on the classroom, the curriculum, the students, the stake holders in an educational community, and how we can improve these individual elements to improve the overall atmosphere of education, the learning.  Again this approach is fundamentally flawed it ignores the real issue, our formal education system is flawed, we are failing our students, are we preparing them for their future or our societies dreams?

The number of students that enter higher education is very low compared to the actual number that graduates.  And the number that enter higher education and actually leaves with a diploma is even lower.  But our educational method for most of North America is geared towards everyone is going to graduate and everyone is going to go to college and most likely university, and we throw in some classes of autobody and word working for the few that won't.  This is our fundamental problem, or structure of education it is not supporting the majority of our students, if it was everybody would be a doctor or lawyer or accountant for that matter.  Regardless of what innovations I try within my classroom this fundamental hurdle will be very difficult and/or impossible to overcome.

Here lies the real challenge, wipe the slate clean (And yes I mean slate, this is my classroom boards, not even whiteboards let alone smartboards), and start from scratch.  The first thing we need to ask is how do we best serve our students, School needs to be designed with the end in mind, some nations around the world are already employing this model.  I realize some have an issue with streaming the students, but very few really need Bio 30, many need skills or trades when they graduate.  Personally I taught a student that thought with the end in mind and realized this point.  I taught him Science 9 and then again Science 23, I asked him why he did not focus on getting a 30 level in either Bio/Chem/Physics, his answer was quite well thought out.  "I want to be a mechanic, I only need Science 23, the rest of the time I spend in the mechanics bay taking as many modules as I can".  This student even within the confines of our own highly structured system of formal education completed his own work around, to facilitate his own learning needs.  And the work he completed for my in Science 23 was excellent, did not slack off, always questioned and participated, he realized the importance of education because he made education important to himself.

So therein lies the problem, the structure of education needs to be revamped to allow students the opportunity to find out why education is important to them.  Force feeding this insight will only invite resistance, and unlike the Borg, Resistance in this case is not futile.  Students regularly turn off.  Do not get me wrong, I am not advocating entirely open education, where the students meander and learn bits here and there like some are openly suggesting.  Sometimes I think people forget what K-12 is like, the majority need structure and guidance, but this could be lessened if school provided the education they needed.

So now hypothetically, I have magically fixed the education system at its base, how does one fix the delivery of material...

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Posted by Tom Whyte 

Comments (2)

Oct 23, 2008
Jason Green said...
Tom, I still worry about what you call "streaming". I think of all the people I know who didn't know what they really wanted until they were 20 or 25. I agree that we can probably do more to support those who know early on that they want to be a mechanic or a plumber. Do we have enough resources to have the two approaches side by side?
Oct 23, 2008
Tom Whyte said...
Is that a problem that could be solved by proper exposure in education? I think so. Students are not exposed to what is out there, so it takes them that long to find out what is.

As for the streaming, it's not a dream, its a matter of choice. Other countries like Germany start the process at the age of 10.

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