Monday, December 31, 2012

tweet tweet, re-tweet

Okay, so I admit it... I am not a tweeter. And by no means am I interested in "re-tweeting" a tweet.
I have explored the tools and investigated different tweet hash topics. I took a bit of time investigating something of value to "re-tweet". Nothing! Well, that's not entirely true. But, what I think is interesting would not interest the people following me. I think my frustration comes from trying to obtain either something in my field (education and art) or in the field of those who follow me. Maybe it's more of a mind set...
Contributing to the "world" definitely is inviting. But what if my contributions are insignificant, childish, or just thought to be "ludicrous" by the friends or society out there? ...there in lies my conflict with tweeting or re-tweeting what I feel is important.... getting "labeled" as a "this or that" and it appearing more like "noise" on anyone's Twitter (again, it is probably a bad mindset on my part). To me, I feel it could be as bad as those people who tweet that they just finished eating piece of toast and are am off to the library... ya know what I mean?

Yea, I am still at the step of just being a consumer and it will be difficult for me to do the next step , like tweeting or re-tweeting. Of course the other issue is time. The more you become involved with this process, the less time you have for other things. As I continue with the "Connected Journey" class I am finding that the time issue can be curtailed a bit with the technology itself, thankfully.

 In case you are interested, these are some of the topics and people I have been currently following... #infowars, #healthranger,  #bibleprophecy, #EconomicCollapse, #Predictions2013 and the #2amendment. The beauty of the technology of our day is how quickly and how easily we can switch our interests and pursue the next big thing for us.

Thursday, December 13, 2012

Stop Stealing Dreams

(33). Who will teach bravery?....Can risk-taking be taught?

I believe it already is happening in the schools. When you consider music or drama or even art, students are constantly taking chances. Courage (and bravery) to perform, create, display, "try something new" are all inherently integrated with these disciplines. I don't agree that "Bravery in school is punished, not rewarded". I think Godin is over exaggerating the facts a bit here. I would go as far to say that students are being challenged (taking chances) throughout all the acedemics in the "more effective" classrooms, at least where I teach it is.


29. The other side of fear is passion 
43. How not to teach someone to be a baseball fan....
"The industrialized, scalable, testable solution is almost never the best way to generate exceptional learning."  (How true!)
109. What great teachers have in common is the ability to transfer emotion

I grouped these together for my response because I felt they connect

Most of us really need to find away to engage students, or provide the right circumstances for them to do it themselves. Students need motivation (other then a good test score) to desire to do their best, to be a true learner.
I remember a story, one of my old profs told me, that kind-of fits here. It is a bit off topic, but still relevant. When this prof was starting-off as a young elementary art teacher ("student teacher" to be exact), he had a problem. He was one of those art teachers that had no room of his own, so he would "roll" into the room with all the supplies for the day. Anyway, he had very little supplies to work with his students. In fact, the only thing he had was "blue paint", paper and paint brushes. He resolved the problem by his approach with the kids.  With that particular lesson, he began by slowly rolling in with his cart. Almost in a whisper, he begins saying..." Ya know what we have today (pausing, with a mischievous smile).... We have..... (with a shout) BLUE PAINT. WE GOT BLUE PAINT. And he ran around and around the room repeating the words... blue paint. He worked those kids up so much, that blue paint became the coolest thing in the world... nothing else mattered.The lesson was irrelevant, because the kids would have settled for the worst he could have given.... the paint was all they could think of.
The moral of my story is that "motivation"... getting them interested... however you do it... is key. So, in a way all of the above quoted remarks, I think Godin is also suggesting this.