Archive for the ‘Rigor’ Category

VAASL – Day 2

Tuesday, July 24th, 2012

Battle of Spotsylvania

It’s day 2 of my Virginia Association of School Librarians road trip. Today, it’s the same agenda as yesterday, but the slide deck has been edited down a bit. Here’s the slimmer, trimmer slide deck.

Image: “Battle of Spotsylvania” by JimBowen0306 on Flickr. Used with a Creative Commons BY 2.0 license.

VAASL Presentation

Monday, July 23rd, 2012

Dawn on the lake

Hi, y’all, from Virginia! I’m here at Claytor Lake State Park to give a daylong workshop for the Virginia Association of School Librarians.

I’ve prepared a huge slide deck on inquiry, assessment, and rigor. We won’t get to everything, but as a former Girl Scout, I like to Be Prepared!

Image: Dawn on the Lake by VAStateParkStaff on Flickr. Used with a CC-BY 2.0 license.

Are Undergraduates Really Learning Anything?

Thursday, January 27th, 2011

That’s the question two researchers ask in a commentary for the Chronicle of Higher Education.

Now while the authors have come under a certain amount of attack, there are some very interesting points in this article that may point at why fewer people place demands on K-12 librarians to prepare students for college.

Is it possible … just a little bit … that some students aren’t getting the kinds of undergraduate experiences that require the diet of critical thinking and problem-solving that we anticipate?

If the researchers are correct, there’s a pretty low amount of cognitive growth happening for students. And why is that? The authors posit that it’s because everybody’s happy with how undergraduate education currently works. Students get time to socialize; administrators get a steady flow of tuition dollars; professors get time to work on projects; parents get a diploma to frame.

(Not sure I agree that everybody’s happy … I think most undergraduate professors at highly-ranked institutions are pretty happy, but I hear from ones at lower-ranked institutions that they see kids with poor study skills and little drive to learn … but then again, let’s get a reality check: nobody’s publishing my work in Chronicle of Higher Education.)

Take a minute to read this article in its entirety. Does it explain some of the placidity with which you see some parents, students, and colleagues when you make a plea for deep thinking activities? Does it explain why some governmental agencies and politicians don’t prioritize the very kinds of critical thinking skills librarians prize?

It’s a sobering essay, in any event. Read on.