Showing posts with label education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label education. Show all posts

Education means all round development of the child

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Education means all round development of the child. Education is a power to change the society. To discussing about educational reforms, we have to understand the objectives of the education. Actually education is a continuous process. In our school, we generally focus only on curricular based learning. Generally teachers think that if they completed the course, it was enough, while other parts of education remains neglected.  A child is the clay to be molded in the hands of a teacher and curriculum should cater to all the needs of a child.
It is another argument for homeschooling. If education is the growing of a complete and well functioning adult, than they need to have a close relationship with an adult, not be crammed into an environment where peer dependence is their most common mode for decision making. Well made Curriculum can serve to assist the teacher/parent. In this post we will discuss about objectives of education. We want to start a discussion about "How to develop the students personality?" How to make sure the all round development of a child? We will talk about the different aspects of education, teacher's role in student's social learning, student's behavior management and the other. What do you think? Your ideas are also invited.
इस पोस्ट में हम शिक्षा के उद्देश्यों के बारे में चर्चा करेंगेयहाँ क्लिक करें, पूरा ब्लॉग पढ़ें
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Is internet changing our Education System?

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        Is internet changing our Education System?


     
Since last few years we have been watching many changes in education and educational management system. We see that computer technology as well as internet revolution increased the speed of data and information very quickly. It became by the help of internet, online education management system and by e revolution. Hence we are discussing about internet education, education and internet and use of computers in education.

The impact of internet on education:

       We have been realizing that internet is a very effective tool in education. Now there are various e learning software and online training software are available easily on the internet. Internet brings a technological innovation in education. It make possible to use the latest technology in education. Internet makes a digital revolution in educational technology. Now several educational institutions have to develop the computer and internet based learning management systems. Internet brings new aspects in education. Now education through internet is not only a dream, but it is the more common and more relevant. We can say that the Technology changed the education. Now different schools and universities are using latest technology for education. It is the great scenario of the “Education of the 21st century”. There is a lot of importance of the use of internet in education today. Now android and tablets are in the market. They have a lot of online e learning opportunities so.

      Now several information sends by e mail, online feeding or by another electronic medium. So transfer of data became easy, quicker and sometimes cheaper.



     When we see such type changes in educational management system and find that it will be so usual, we have to think the another coming modifications in our education, Because technology changes several habits, trends and working system. In our society, use of internet is becoming very common by the mobile revolution. Now everyone puts internet in his pocket as a mobile phone. Internet is being more popular in villages also.

Mobile and androids brings a great innovation in internet revolution


      Mobile companies are providing high speed internet services, so it became easier to be online. There are a lot of fully multimedia mobiles available in market at a very low prices. Android and tablets are now very easy to afford. These new generation devices have a wonderful e learning and online learning opportunities also. The next generation "digiclass" and "digischool" is not so far away.Several universities made their management system innovative with the help of internet. Now it is possible to study online or to attend a lecture of a reputed university at the home by the help of internet. Our schools are also being innovative. In several innovative schools; teachers have been using multimedia supported teaching learning system for many years. Now they may able to arrange online classes. Imagine if in a school of a distant and rural village, how wonderful it will be to take part an online two way class attends by the student. It will be more exciting if those students see tow way online video chatting first time in their life. 



         If online two way classroom teaching learning system is success; then there may be start another discuss about this way of teaching learning system. The discussion may be classified into two categories: first online teaching learning system in a classroom and second the online teaching learning system out of the school. It will decide the direction of internet based online education and internet based teaching system. However we have to search the positive, teacher friendly, student friendly and society friendly teaching learning systems and we have to modify our education as the changing time.

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Smart School: Smart Class

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Smart school: Smart class


        It is a new vision in education. The use of Education technology can bring a huge change in education. Internet and e learning devices can make class room environment extremely amazing. Teaching through computer, internet and multimedia devices will be a common thing in future. Now a day’s different multimedia lessons are available. By using these multimedia lessons teachers may teach the students very easily.

SMART SCHOOL SMART CLASS: THE SMART WAY OF LEARNING



In these day smart class and smart schools are very interesting dreams for students, teachers and the students. Students are very interested abut the smart school and smart class. Several institutes are making their classroom smart and modern. They are working on "Smart School Project". In modern e learning and online education based system, the smart class and smart school are not an unknown thing, because in a smart class there will be computer enabled education system. Smart class provide a platform for online e class. We can say it "White Board e Evolution" in education. The question is that what is smart school and what is smart class and what is smart class education. There is a question also "What is smart school management system?"



“Smart school and smart class” is an innovative concept in education. Now a day’s we are living in the age of internet, so our education system is also going to be online. In this environment e learning and online education is the need of this time. Use of internet in schools and education is not only a dream, but it is the necessity of the time.
             In a smart class there will be computers, projectors, internet connectivity and other multimedia devices such as home theater etc.  The role of a teacher may be modified in such new environment. In a smart class students may use internet and this activity can change the old thinking about the students and the learning theory. In beginning, it should be launched as a pilot project in a few schools. The experience and result of these schools leads the future planning. To make a new project in smart school vision, it is very important to invite the expert teachers to play a great role in policy making.

THE SMART LEARNING ENVIRONMENT IN SCHOOL

“Smart school smart class” is a very attractive concept in education. It is an innovative concept in education. Smart class needs smart teaching learning environment. In a smart school there may be innovative working system for teachers and in school management. An attractive classroom environment is needed for such type smart and innovative activities. Smart school class will be more attractive, innovative, student friendly, healthy and more interesting class. In a smart class it may possible there to aarenge "online class' by internet. Smart class is a plateform for e smart class and online IT class.

Smart School: Smart Class: The creative concept for the 21st Century's Teacher


School managers have to make an effective classroom management system and a well planned classroom arrangement also. They are going to teach in smart classroom of the Smart Classroom. In a smart classroom, they have to use smart classroom arrangement ideas. It is really amazing to teach in a global classroom. Teachers have to manage classroom behavior management in 21st century classroom. There may be something different classroom activities in 21st century smart classroom.

Education on line, e Learning and “Smart Class” concepts need innovative and effective classroom management because it is the beginning of “21st century smart classroom”

What is "Smart Class"?

Smart Class is a Smart concept for Smart Educators of Smart Schools. “Smart Class” includes Smart Learning Techniques, Smart classroom management, Smart Learning environment and Smart Learning Materials. Internet, projector and another multimedia devices are the main parts of smart classrooms. We can say smart class as "White board classrooms". Now blackboard and chalks is replacing by white board, projectors and the pointer. Really it is an amazing than traditional teaching learning system. Smart class is a class of modern age. There will be fully multimedia enabled audio-visual classrooms in a smart classroom. It will be quite different than traditional class. In a smart classroom the teacher works as a facilitator in learning.

Smart Class: The upgraded kind of education:

This upgraded kind of education is very interesting for children! it is an innovative idea to change our boring system into a smart and innovative system of teaching-learning activities. Smart School: Smart class is a more fascinating model in the world. In a smart school teachers have to develop the skill of learning from experiences. There are some countries and some states are a role model in "Smart School Education".


Online learning software, e learning tutorials, online multimedia lessons, educational websites, online training, online two way conversation, online video chatting, high speed internet speed, 3 G service and online classes are very easy in this time by the development of internet technology. This e revolution makes the concept of “e-class” and “smart class” possible. There are a need to train the resource persons; such as school teachers, academic and administrative staff. Now it is also become simple by online training. So don’t be surprised to see this e revolution. Be preparing to the smart school, smart class, smart teaching and smart learning.  

About this blog: This blog is for education, innovative education, educational articles and innovative education methodologies. In this blog there are few post for teacher’s tips, teaching methodologies, innovation in education (shiksha me navachar), smart school class concept, smart and innovative classroom vision, smart school vision etc; while some interesting posts are also published on nice lines, Hindi nice quotes. Please send your valuable suggestions about this blog.

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Anil Sahu’s Education Blog
View other posts in this blog: e Learning: The Digital Innovation in Education Social networking websites in education

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Health Tips For Examination

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During examination period students are in very pressure. They have to do a lot study. Due to very hard work sometimes they became ill. Here we are discussing some useful tips about how to maintain our health during exam period:
1)  A proper sleep keep maintain our body healthy. Students should take proper sleep and rest as well as.
2) Take fruits and salad in your diet. Fruits keep our body healthy and fresh. Healthy food and healthy lifestyle keep you healthy and sound during exams. Good health tips are always helpful for students.
3) Maintain light and fresh air in your study room. If you ignore these things you may be in trouble.
4) Take intervals during your study. It will be very useful to refresh your mind and your eyes.
5) Maintain light entertainment and games in your daily routine. It is useful to recharge you.
6) Avoid oily food, because it may become you ill.
7) Do your work, do not take tension.

During examination time several boards of education run helpline facilities for students. Students may call them for exam related queries and can solve their problems. Students should use these help lines to solve their problems. Sometimes these helpline are toll free.
Examination Tips by Anil Sahu
In This Website you may read about
Education, innovative education, active learning
co curricular activities, school activity, educational tours
Hindi Shayari, Nice Lines, Inspirational quotes
Examination tips, Hindi rhymes and much more.
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Nice Thoughts: An Innovative Idea

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         It is a good idea to begin a new day. Nice Thoughts are very useful in our life, when all things become dark in life, a treasure of nice thoughts lights us. The right time should be after “Daily Pray”. When we finish National Anthem, National Song after that any student may say today’s Nice Thought. It will be very effective and educative if the teacher or the student explain it in own words.
A good teacher always try to use innovative education techniques in his school. There are a lot of innovative, good and attractive educational activities for any school. It is the duty of the teacher to adopt the most suitable activity in his school.
Actually the education is not only teaching, reading or learning. Education is a wide process to develop the students personality in various fields. Moral education is also an important aspect of our education. It may be given by books, activities and the another ways.
Our education process may be more activitiy based and practical.


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A teacher may develop student’s personality by various ways.




This year I started it in my school GNMS GHANA TUNDA and getting very positive results in school as well as student’s activity. I used inspirational thoughts given at the end of “Hindi” textbook of all classes, so it became an educational activity also for the students. There are a lot of inspirational thoughts in our textbooks and teachers may build a nice collection of these quotes. I am very happy about this innovative education activity.





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A Success Teacher........... A Good Leader

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       When a teacher works in a school or a classroom, he have to deal a group that may be other teachers, students or a community. His work is like a leader or a manager, because he has to manage a group. A good teacher should have a sound managing or leadership qualities. We may discuss this on different views:-
A teacher is in a classroom
       When a teacher is in a class room, he has to interact to different types of students. Some teachers are very hard worker, they work a lot of but they got very few output. And some teachers are also hard worker, but they do not work so hard but the find more output then other teachers.
Why do we find this change in output?
This change is by the way of dealing and way of managing. The second type of teachers knows the skill of good managing, or we may say they are a good leader. Actually we see in real life in any organization, the manager use a different type of techniques. Hence a teacher should use different motivational techniques in his classroom, so he may save his energy.
A teacher is as a school manager (Head master)
     When a teacher is as a school Head Master, his duty and responsibilities increases, because he has to manage the school and to prove himself as a good teacher also. Duties of a school Head Master, especially in a Government school are so critical if he have a quite untrained staff. Actually in this situation, teacher has to use good leadership techniques. A lot of work that may be done by other teachers should be given to other teachers. By doing this the Head Master consume his energy and may use his energy in other matters.

A good Head Master should be a good actor also. It is not necessary to express own real emotions to everyone. Some ideas should be keeping confidential and may be exposé on proper time. Sometimes he has to use a group vision and sometimes he may move with a personnel vision.

Do you want to read this...? Articles about Education

Over The Head
Simple Educational Puzzles


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Problematic Children

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In day by day teachers have to deal different types of students. Some students are the best, because they are very obedient, some are good because they are obedient. But some students are called Problematic because they are disobedient. Different teachers react to them different types. Who are Problematic Children? Problematic children are different from other students. They make several problems in classroom and school. They may quarrel with other students and may be disobedient. Some teachers feel this as a big problem, some teachers neglect such students, some teachers do not teach these students, some teachers punish hard these students, and some teachers say “cut the name of these students, they may not learn anyway.” But if we think positively we may find it is a failure of the teacher. I do not say that all the teachers may wrong. Sometimes the problem may be tuff to deal the teacher, but attitude of the teacher is a main thing. The teacher should know that the every child has the right to education. And to develop the efficiencies in students is the duty of the teacher. Before the searching the solution of the problematic child we have to understand the human psychology. Each person has the unique qualities in itself. Different person has the different types of qualities in different areas. We have to identify these qualities and try to enhance them in a desired way. In classroom teaching where we deal with a group, the understanding of group psychology may be very helpful to us. Teacher has to use some psychological techniques to deal them.

Problematic children also have the Right to Education. They need teacher’s special attention.


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Over The Head

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 In primary and middle schools many teachers face different type’s difficulties in teaching students. The list of problems may be long such as student’s  previous learning level is very low, parents do not give proper to their children and so many.Innocent teachers say what to do?
How to teach these poor background students?
I am not saying that teacher is wrong? But if the teacher tries to change his own way of thinking, the way of teaching, or his attitude towards the students, his problematic question will be change.
If any student is very weak in any subject, our duty is to make student sound in that subject, not to blame the student.
Teacher’s duty is to teach the student from where he is?
Teachers try to teach, but they do not help the students to learn anything. Hence the solutions begin from here.
Teachers may be very intelligent, well educated, but they find the students very weak they try to blame the students, the system. But what is the mistake of the child? Is this that he is in that school………..?


f'k{kk ls lacafaa/kr vkys[kksas dks i<+us ads fy;s bl fyad ij ,d ckj vo’; tk;saA
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Reasons of Low Attendance in Schools

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Why do students not like to go to school?

It is a burning issue of almost all government schools that the attendance of the students is very low in the school, while government is giving more and more facilities to the students and spending a huge amount on education. The more important factor is that the schools have been facing this problem for recent one or two decades. 

The arising questions are:-

 Is our new education policy is fail to adjust to face the new generation society? Or
 Is our government is not able to administrate the education in changing environment?

   Rest it is not our matter to analyze the drawbacks of our education system. We want to discuss the reasons that are responsible to make a low attendance in the schools. If anyone discuss on this matter he blame to the teachers, parents, or society. But there are several factors affect to the students why he do not want to go to the school. 
We may classify the reasons into several categories: 

          Factors Affecting The Low Attendance In School

                                            I.            Home Environment

                                          II.            Social Environment

                                        III.            Teacher's Punctuality

                                        IV.            Classroom Environment

                                          V.            Teacher's Behavior

                                        VI.            Student’s Personal  Problems

                                      VII.            Teacher-parents Relations
                                    VIII.            Teacher-students relations
                                        IX.            Teacher’s way of teaching and Teacher’s attitude
                                          X.            Government policies
                                        XI.            Other


We will discuss on this topic later……

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Miracle schools, vouchers and all that educational flim-flam

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is the title of this piece by Diane Ravitch. It appeared at the website of Nieman Watchdog of the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University, as part of the "Ask This" which is subtitled "Questions the Press Should Ask." Oh if only reporters and writers on education were knowledgeable enough about education to ask questions such as those posed by Ravitch, perhaps we could cut through all the misleading and inaccurate information, the attempts to manipulate the public discourse on education to exclude the voices of those - including both Ravitch (a personal friend) and myself - who say that our supposed pattern of educational "reform" is like the emperor's new clothes - there is no there there, as Gertrude Stein once opined of Oakland.

You should read Ravitch's piece. To whet your appetite, let me offer Diane's first paragraph here, and then explore a bit more below the fold:
Be skeptical of miracle schools. Sometimes their dramatic gains disappear in a year or two or three. Most such claims rely on cheating or gaming the system or on intensive test prep that involves teaching children how to answer test questions. These same children, having learned to take tests, may actually be very poorly educated, even in the subjects where their scores were rising.


Please keep reading.

Diane offers some very tough questions to consider. Understand that as an educational historian and as someone very involved in policy questions, the questions she poses are derived from the record, from extensive reading/research into the information that is actually available. For example:
When a charter school reports miraculous results, be sure to ask about the attrition rate. Some highly successful charters push out low-performing kids and their enrollment falls over the years (and the departing students are not replaced). Recently Arne Duncan hailed a “miracle” school in Chicago—Urban Prep—where all the students who graduated were accepted into college. But 150 students started and only 107 graduated. The 107 graduates had much lower test scores than the average for Chicago public school students. The school did a good job of getting the students into college (perhaps that was a miracle) but they were not better educated than students in the regular public schools.

In another instance, one of the “amazing” schools singled out by the 2010 documentary “Waiting for Superman” admits 140 students, but only 34 graduated. That’s a 75 per cent attrition rate. Some miracle.



Or try the brief paragraph before what I just quoted:
Whenever a district has a dramatic increase in test scores, look for cheating, gaming the system, intensive investment in test prep. Testing is NOT instruction. It is meant to assess instruction, not to substitute for it.
Take this points one at a time

cheating - explore the recent USA Today examination of test results in DC public schools under Michelle Rhee

gaming - the so-called Texas miracle on their state tests, given in tenth grade, was accomplished by holding back lower performing kids in 9th grade. Some were held back several times until they dropped out, and if they said they MIGHT get a GED, they were listed at having transferred to an alternative educational program, not as dropouts. Or perhaps after having been held back one year they were skipped to 11th on the grounds they had made so much progress. In either case, they were not tested. All this was documented BEFORE No Child Left Behind was passed into law, and people in Congress cannot say they were unaware. Walt Haney of Lynch College of Education at Boston College wrote about it, as did others, and a number of us passed on the literature to key people in Congress. Yet somehow Rod Paige won a superintendent's award and got promoted to Secretary of Education, in part because of a claimed 90% graduation rate in Houston schools, when in reality only a bit over 40% of those entering 7th grade graduated with their cohorts.

intensive investment in test prep - these seems to be the pattern in a number of charter schools and some public schools claiming significant gains. But what evidence there is that the "gains" on tests are not maintained in subsequent grades, and students as they ascend the educational grades arrive less and less prepared to do the kind of work necessary to be successful even in a high school course of students, to say nothing of what is necessary in colleges, which is why post-secondary institutions have had to expand the number of places in remediation courses.

Ravitch remind us - at least those of us who have been paying attention - that improving pass rates on state tests may mean merely that states are manipulating their cut scores. It is possible to pass some state tests with less than half the questions answered correctly. Since all that are published are scaled scores, converted from raw scores, unless one can see the conversion formula, the scaled scores are subject to manipulation for all kinds of reasons, including the state (or school district for district wide tests) wanting to be able to show "success" or to avoid the politically unacceptable prospect of large numbers of students not being promoted or not graduating from high school.

Not all "studies" are peer-reviewed by independent scholars. Some are not even rigorous, as Ravitch points out about the claim by Carolyn Hoxby that students who spent 9 years in a NYC charter could close the achievement gap differential between, say, Harlem in inner city NY and Scarsdale, perhaps the wealthiest of the New York suburbs. As Ravitch writes:
The press gave that study huge attention and credibility, but no one noticed that there were very few students who had attended a charter in NYC for nine years or that Hoxby did not provide a number for the students who had closed the gap. It appears that her study was an extrapolation, and it was an extrapolation based on NYC and NY state’s inflated and unreliable test scores (see above). When NYC’s charter scores are reported, they range widely from very abysmal (a six per cent pass rate) to exceptional (100 per cent pass rate).


Ravitch also reminds us of the wisdom of the words spoken by Hal Holbrook in "All the President's Men" - Follow the Money. In the case of education, we have the likes of Philip Anschutz, a billionaire who advocates for free market solutions (and for whom, I might mention, Michael Bennet worked before becoming Superintendent in Denver, and then a US Senator, and now apparently the successor in waiting to Arne Duncan as Secretary of Education). He was a funder of "Waiting for Superman" as was a man "previously CEO of a string of for-profit postsecondary institutions." Similarly, the so-called Democrats for Education Reform has a board full of Wall St. hedge fund managers and big real estate moguls. Ravitch suggests asking why they are so interested in charters, and how they are connected with other 'reform' groups such as" Education Reform Now, Stand for Children, the state CAN organizations (e.g., ConnCAN), and a host of other groups promoting privatization and de-professionalization?" She also reminds us, as she did in her book, about the influence of the 'billionaire boys' club" of foundations such as Gates, Broad and Walton.

No high performing nations, as Ravitch reminds us, are pursuing the kinds of approaches we are seeing advocated by such groups and foundations, and unfortunately by the Obama administration. She challenges the administration with a number of questions, on continuing Bush administration accountability problems, on school choice, on merit pay (which lacks any supportive research base in education or in industry, and has clearly been shown to have no effect on test scores, which of course are the measurement of choice of the so-called reformers). Given the President's recent remarks at Bell Multicultural High School in the District, in response to a question from a student, it is worth noting this question from Ravitch:
Why does the president publicly say he is against standardized testing at the same time that his administration is demanding more emphasis on standardized testing?


Read Ravitch. Perhaps pass on the article to the editors, editorialists, and reporters dealing with education at your publication of choice.

Ravitch concludes her piece with simple statement:
Principles for reporters: Be skeptical; don’t believe in miracles; follow the money.


Perhaps were these principles followed, we might actually be able to have a meaningful public discussion on how to address the real needs and issues confronting our schools and our students.


Perhaps were these principles followed, we might actually be able to have a meaningful public discussion on how to address the real needs and issues confronting our schools and our students.
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Teaching 2030: an important book on teaching by teachers

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this is slightly modified from the original which appeared at Education Review

Berry, Barnett, and the Teacher Solutions Team (2011). Teaching 2030: What We Must Do for Our Students and Our Public Schools — Now and in the Future.

In all of the public discourse of what we need to do to fix public schools and educate our young people for the future, one set of voices has until now been conspicuously absent. It is the voices of teachers.

This new book, put together under the auspices of the Center for Teaching Quality established by lead author Barnett Berry, and with generous funding from the MetLife Foundation, is an important attempt to include the voices of teachers in helping frame the discussion of how we address our educational needs.

Those of us in classrooms, unless we choose to be oblivious, recognize that our profession needs to be redefined. We lose too many good teachers from classrooms because too often the only path for professional and financial advancement is through administration. In the meantime, we see the students arriving in our classrooms changing as society changes. Often we are prevented from changing what we do in order to meet them where they are. We know this has to change.

This book is the product of an extensive discussion among professional educators. Much of it was conducted online. The final product list 12 authors besides Berry, all themselves notable classroom teachers. They are the ones who sat down with him to put together the book as we have it. But that final product also included material offered by others in online discussions through the various arms of the Center for Teaching Quality, especially its Teacher Leaders Network, of which I am member. Thus while I was not part of the actual author group, I appear 3 times in the work. I do not think that disqualifies me from examining the work and encouraging others to read it.

The teachers participating in this endeavor collective bring a diverse set of experiences to it. Renee Moore taught English high school students in the Mississippi Delta, where she now teaches at a community college. Ariel Sacks and Jose Vilson teach in New York City middle schools. Laurie Wasserman has almost 30 years as a teacher of special education. After a distinguished career in a classroom, Shannon C’de Baca has spent a number of years doing online education. Jennifer Barnett now functions as school-based technology integration specialist in rural Alabama. Kilian Betlach is a Teach for America alumnus who was well-known as a blogger and is now an elementary school assistant principal. Carrie Kamm is a mentor-resident coach for an urban teacher residency program in Chicago. Among these and others in authoring group are winners of State Teacher of the Year (including one finalist for National Teacher of the Year), Milken award winners, Lilly Award winners, and so on. All have experience in trying to improve the teaching profession beyond the reach of their own classrooms. One finds a similar range of diversity and an equal amount of accomplishment in the 33 teachers who are also thanked for their contributions in the online discussions in which we took part.

In addition, those functioning as authors were able to participate in webinars with a number of outstanding experts from across the nation, including on expert from Australia.

The result is a book rich in insight, analysis, and suggestions for the future, one that has already received praise from many notables associated with education and teaching. Of greater importance, it is a book that will speak to a wide range of audiences: those who prepare our new teachers, those who administer our schools, those who make policy, and most of all, to those of us who teach now or may teach in the future.

In his Prologue, Barnett Berry makes a couple of key points that help a reader understand the thrust of the book. The authors
...have come together, in harmony if not always in lock-step, about an expanded vision for student learning in the 21st century and for the teaching profession that will, in myriad ways, continue to accelerate that learning. (p. xiii)


They get to this point by examining what works now in order to describe what will likely work and be needed in the schooling of the future. The vision “emerges from a student centered vision” that takes advantage of new tools, organizations and ideas. It is based on four “emergent realities”:
1. a transformed learning ecology for students and teacher
2. seamless connections in and out of cyberspace
3. differentiated paths and careers
4. “teacherpreneurs” who will foster innovation locally and globally

These rely on six levers for changes: 1. engaging the public in provocative ways
2. overhauling school finance systems
3. creating transformative systems of preparation and licensure
4. ensuring school working conditions that they know promote effective teaching
5. reframing accountability for transformative results
6. continuing to evolve teacher unions into professional guilds

Each of these levers and each of the realities could be a separate volume. Thus the authors cannot fully explore the dimensions of each, yet they provide more than enough to lay out a vision that is clearly possible. In part that is because of the experience they collectively bring to the task, and what they have absorb from the webinars and from the exchanges with each other and with those who participated in online discussion.

The aforementioned Prologue is titled “We Cannot Create What We Cannot Imagine.” It is followed by two chapters that can be considered introductory:
1. The Teachers of 2030 and a Hopeful Vision
2. A Very Brief History of Teaching in America.

The next four chapters explore the four Emergent Realities, each in some specificity. For example, Chapter 5 explores the 3rd of these Emergent Realities, Differentiated Pathways and Careers for a 21st-Century Profession. In just over 30 pages the authors explore four subthemes:
1. Outgrowing a One-Size-Fits-All Professions
2. Redefining the Professions for Results-Oriented
Teaching
3. Teacher Education for a Differentiated, Results-Oriented Profession
4. Professional Compensation for Differentiated Profession

After these four chapters the book spends almost 40 pages exploring the six policy levers of change before concluding with Taking Action for a Hopeful Future, with a subsection on “What You Can Do to Build a 21st- Century Teaching Profession.”

Perhaps the power of the book can best be understood through the notion of “Teacherprenuerism” as it is explored in Chapter 6. The term first appears near the beginning, with the idea of teacher entrepreneurs serving in hybrid positions that don’t easily fit the normal way we classify teachers. Allow me to offer the paragraph from p. 7 which first presents the idea in some detail, after setting the stage by reminding us how already teachers, many National Board Certified and comfortable with using the tools of the web, are de-isolating teaching and offering cost-effective ways of propagating exemplary teaching practices:
The fruits of those labors have been realized in 2030. About 15% of the nation’s teachers - more than 600,000 - have been prepared in customized residency programs designed to fully train them in the cognitive science of teaching and to also equip them for new leadership roles. Most now serve in hybrid positions as teacherpreneuers, teaching students part of the day or week, and also have dedicated time lead as student support specialists, teacher educators, community organizers, and virtual mentors in teacher networks. Some spend some of their nonteaching time working closely university- and think tank-based researchers on studies of teaching and learning - or conducting policy analyses that are grounded in their everyday pedagogical experiences. In some school district, teachers in these hybrid roles earn salaries comparable to, if not higher than, the highest paid administrators.


Lest one think that a pie in the sky belief about the future, several members of the team that wrote this book - and several of those who like me served as additional resources - already partially function in this fashion. The book posits a day where such teachers would not only be known to wider audiences of parents, community and business leaders and policy makers, but would be respected and listened to. Some of those participating in this process already have that kind of respect, for example, Renee Moore, who has served on the boards of both the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards and as the first educator still in the classroom on the board of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching (California). John Holland has served as a classroom teacher, a blogger for the Pew Charitable Trust blog Inside Pre-K and moderates an online community of accomplished teachers. Others have similar experiences of attempting to create hybrid roles where they can leverage their expertise and knowledge while remaining at least partially classroom based. They use their experience to project to the future they envision. The process has begun already, but the authors are talking about something more than selling one’s good lesson plans on E-bay. As John Holland notes in Chapter 6,
The combination of self-publishing and the use of the internet as a platform for communication has already given rise to the “communities of practice” around topics ranging from lessons in how to teach fractions to using brain research to perform the teaching act as the highest levels. Teacherpreneurs will increasingly be leaders in these communities, which will stretch far beyond the confines of their school or district - a virtual domain where they are able to impact the profession on a large scale. (p. 143)


As more teacherpreneurs appear they will serve as a primary agents in developing connected learning. As we get more teachers who have greater facility in using the power of the web, not only will teachers be less isolated, but the nature of teaching will begin to change, and radically, as Emily Vickers notes
Teachers will, in fact, be orchestrators of learning - a concept we talk about today, but one that will force itself upon most everyone who expects to be a teacher in 2030. (p. 145)


In part this will be because students will be accustomed to different ways of obtaining information. We are already seeing this among our current students. They know how to quickly obtain information, although we may still have to guide them in how to evaluate the information they obtain. They are comfortable building websites and increasingly also putting together wikis. It is incumbent upon the educational professionals to adapt what we do not only to meet our students where they are now, but also to anticipate how much this will change the nature of what we do. Teacherpreneurs will be key to a successful transition to a new approach to education.

We still have a way to travel to even come close to such a radical rethinking of the teaching profession. The book points out how much we already know, and how we can begin to move in such a direction, even if the path may change over the next several decades from what even the most imaginative of our current teachers can foresee. A key to this is that others with whom teachers interact will need to rethink how they do their jobs. Administrators will need to spend more time in classrooms, even teaching, and most certainly embrace the idea of teacher leadership. Unions will need to rethink how they serve the teachers who are their members, being more open to diverse roles and with those diverse roles different models of compensation. Policy makers will have to be willing to support and invest in the development of the kinds of hybrid roles necessary to implement the kind of teaching we will need. University-based teacher education will have to change, being more connected with what is happening in classrooms, and working together with community-based organizations, as education moves to be more firmly integrated in the communities in which are schools are located.

There are the first five points listed in the concluding chapter. By themselves they represent a major rethinking of how we have been approaching education and teaching. There are examples of these kinds of changes. I teach in a school that serves as a professional development school for a local state university, and we have had an increasingly close relationship between those who serve as mentor teachers and the university faculty. The next step is for more of those who are skilled mentors moving into a hybrid role where they not only mentor within their own classroom, but perhaps serve as adjunct instructors in the university environment, overcoming the artificial divide between learning about teaching and learning how to teach.

For this to work requires three additional points, also covered in the final chapter. The communities must become more involved, helping encourage the new roles of teacher-leaders even as administrations and unions have to redefine their relationship with one another. Parents and students must be willing to advocate on behalf of the effective teachers, providing the support that will enable teacher leaders to help redefine the conversation about teaching.

Most of all, teachers will have to step out of the isolation of their individual classrooms. They will
... need to band together to document their professional practice and assemble both empirical evidence and compelling stories about what works in their classrooms and their communities - and, therefore what matters most for public policy. (p. 210)


The book is intended as a starting point for ongoing conversations. The authors do not presume that they have imagined every possibility. They want to encourage further discussion. They encourage people to visit them at either of two websites, that of the Teaching 2030 social networking site and by connecting with other teachers from the Center for Teaching Quality’s New Millennium Institute.

I am as I write this in my 16th year of teaching. I have been a participant in the discussions of the Teacher Leaders Network for the past few years. I have gotten to know electronically a number of the authors of this book, and have been fortunate enough to meet both Barnett Berry and John Holland. I know how seriously all of the authors take the profession of teaching, and how much they already give of themselves to try to make the teaching profession a more effective way of serving our students, which is ultimately the goal.

For too long the voices of teachers have been systematically excluded from the public discourse about education. In part this book serves as an important corrective, or at least the start of one.

I am not only a teacher, but also one who engages in policy. Like the authors, I wear several hats besides that of classroom teacher. Here you encounter me as one who regularly writes about books on education in order to encourage others to read them. Like many of those who authored the book, I regular write online about education. We are bloggers; it is part of how we connect with one another.
Our expert teachers are a resource that we should value beyond what they accomplish in the classroom, as important as that is. We need to tap their expertise and insight, we need to hear their voices.

If you read this book, you should get a sense of not only how important the teacher voice is, but also how much we all gain from including it in the discussions.

What the authors have proposed is in some ways radical. It has the promise of moving us in a far more productive direction in how we approach the future of teaching. Since I am in my mid 60s, it is unlikely I will still be teaching in 2030. Several of the authors will be. They are helping reshape the profession to which they are dedicating their lives.

I feel as if I should end with the voice of one of the authors. Each offers some closing words at the end of the final chapter. The last are offered by Renee Moore, whose work I greatly respect. It seems appropriate to end this review as the book ends, with the words she offers on p. 214:
We stand on the cusp of a great opportunity to end generations of educational discrimination and inequity, finally to fulfill the promises of our democratic republic. I believe the noblest teachers, students, and leaders of 2030 will be remembered by future generations as those who surged over the barriers to true public education and a fully realized teaching profession - while myopic former gatekeepers staggered to the sidelines of history.


I too am dedicated to improving the teaching profession for the benefit of the students entrusted to our care. It is because I am that I fervently hope Renee Moore is right. Read this book.
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