Archive for June, 2010

Check out my UM students’ work in Media Spectrum

Thursday, June 24th, 2010

I’m off to ALA.  If you can’t make it, here’s some summer reading for you.

The Michigan Association for Media in Education has taken its journal, Media Spectrum, online.  The new issue went live this week!

Contributors you may know include Evelyn Freeman, Marsha Lambert, Buffy Hamilton, and Karen Lemmons. And be sure to turn to pages 20-22 to see some of my students’ manifestos on media and resources for children and young adults, a project I first blogged about here.
 

Packing Tips for ALA: Roll It!

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

Are you about to head to DC for ALA Annual? Want to travel without checking a bag, with a little bit of extra room to spare for those books you can’t do without?

Check out this New York Times story about packing tips, as well as the accompanying slideshow of advice for how you can pack 10 days’ worth of fashion variety into your carryon.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/06/business/06PACK.html

Packing Tips From Professional Travelers – NYTimes.com via kwout

“Patient Problem-Solving”

Monday, June 21st, 2010

Jeff, my UM School of Education co-lecturer, sent me a link to a TEDxNYED video by California high school math teacher Dan Meyer, which focuses on “patient problem-solving.”

I was blown away for many reasons.

First, he quotes a director, David Milch, who says he only does period work — not sitcoms — because he feels that sitcoms wrap everything up too neatly and simplistically, and he thinks that impacts the brain.  He quotes:

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“Impatience with irresolution.” Isn’t that mind-bending? Isn’t that exactly what we report seeing in students as they speed their way through Wikipedia-based research? Isn’t that sometimes what we identify in our colleagues and in one another when we have reticence in committing to a process rather than a product?

Next, he talks about how textbooks are taking away much of the student engagement in the process.  Over-scaffolding has taken away student curiosity and interest, so he rewrites the questions to take away some of the prompts so that students linger in the problem space for longer.  My co-author and I had similar thoughts when we wrote our science notebooking book: that one thing science notebooking does so well is keep kids in the problem space for longer.

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This book was really hard to write, but I learned so much about how to ally our school libraries with rigorous inquiry work in non-humanities subjects.

But back to Dan Meyer … or, rather, to Einstein …

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Aha! Again, the clear connection to the difficulty we have moving from “researching to find” to “researching to learn.”  It’s again why we need to stay in what Meyer might call the problem-creating phase or what we might call the questioning or wondering phase.  Figuring out what the issue is based on what we know or are learning? That’s much more important than plugging in answers. 

Are we too focused on answers?

Next, what struck me was that we librarians often get in a rather myopic zone and think that we’re the only ones in the building doing this kind of cognitive heavy lifting. But wow – imagine sitting in the lounge with this guy at lunch and what you’d learn.  (Well, you probably wouldn’t be sitting … or in the lounge.  You’d probably be designing some kind of lesson. Watch the video and you’ll see what I)

And finally, I realize that I haven’t really thought much about math instruction lately. I watched a great, free Deborah Ball Webinar a few months ago (highly recommended), but other than that, it’s been a pretty math-free world for me lately. Which probably means I could have been doing more to support math in my building.