Showing posts with label 21st century skills. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 21st century skills. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Got Skillz?

Reader Dave, whose blog you should check out BTW, writes:
21st Century Skills, 22nd Century Skills, they're all the same. We really want to teach our students to be critical thinkers and self-learners.

Without being too convoluted, I respectfully disagree.

Critical thinking and autodidactism aren't 21st or 22nd century skills. They are skills of human intellect going back millenia.

What I'm talking about in terms of 21st century skills are the unique skills associated with the new immediately connected global network. This sort of network acumen goes well beyond traditional inter- and intra-personal skills.

As for 22nd century skills, I'm thinking about the sorts of seemingly sci-fi things that may be possible in merging digital with bio/neurological connectedness. Far out stuff. Visionary stuff. In fact, I use the term 'visionary' specifically with reference to the fact that it nearly lies beyond the imagination.

I think it's very important, however, that Dave brings up this issue. I've been thinking about it quite a bit lately.

For one thing, I think we need to recognize the fact that we are at the very beginning of something. It's not even 2010. Considering the fact that cars, airplanes, and machine guns were in their infancy in 1910 yet automobiles, air travel, and mechanized warfare became the icons of the 20th century's industrial age speaks volumes.

We don't know where this is going to lead. And for that very reason, in my post yesterday I proposed we take some time to imagine the unimaginable. It's going to take critical thinkers and autodidacts to imagine that place; but they've always been with us. And they got skillz.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Diane Ravitch could use some critical thinking skills.

[Addendum: Realizing this is a ridiculously long blog post, I've decided to add a summary; so here it is: Major education thinker slams "21st century skills" by focusing only on the definition of those skills by an organization whose purposes and value have already been widely questioned within serious ed tech circles (though an organization who happens to be pandering those definitions to unwitting state departments of education), thus attacking a concept by representing it solely through the lens of the published goals of a single organization. Rather than explain this to state departments of education and the public, said major education thinker uses major publication (Boston Globe still counts as that, doesn't it?) as venue to vent against "critical thinking" and other obviously useless skills. Major education thinker goes on to ravage a concept which most sane people would agree is not a uniquely "21st century skill" all the while missing the point of what real 21st century skills are and why they are more than a Digital Age "fad". Small time teacher/blogger tries to clear all of this up in reasonable (though admittedly wordy) fashion.]

Diane Ravitch could use some critical thinking skills.

In a Boston Globe column recasting her tireless campaign against the audacity of critical thinking, the professor states:
The latest fad to sweep K-12 education is called "21st-Century Skills". States - including Massachusetts - are adding them to their learning standards, with the expectation that students will master skills such as cooperative learning and critical thinking and therefore be better able to compete for jobs in the global economy. Inevitably, putting a priority on skills pushes other subjects, including history, literature, and the arts, to the margins. But skill-centered, knowledge-free education has never worked.

Ignoring the fact that in calling [21C Skills] a 'fad', she is continuing to harp talking points I thought had gone out of style several months ago after some pretty straightforward arguments pointing out fundamental problems with that line of thinking (and culminating in the journalist who used the term to begin with even considering that there might be something to this 21st century stuff.)

Prof. Ravitch's first mistake is to equate "21st century skills" with those "skills" presented in the manifesto of the Partnership for 21st Century Skills as "21st century skills". As I've written before, the manifesto of the Partnership for 21st Century Skills is one of the most poorly written and meaningless documents in the history of the Western textual tradition.

Rebuffing P21 is like shooting fish in a barrel.

Ravitch continues:
For the past century, our schools of education have obsessed over critical-thinking skills, projects, cooperative learning, experiential learning, and so on. But they have paid precious little attention to the disciplinary knowledge that young people need to make sense of the world....

But we have ignored what matters most. We have neglected to teach them that one cannot think critically without quite a lot of knowledge to think about. Thinking critically involves comparing and contrasting and synthesizing what one has learned. And a great deal of knowledge is necessary before one can begin to reflect on its meaning and look for alternative explanations.

So, the argument becomes: teach skills or teach content.

Well as a practicing teacher, I've coined a term to call folks who can't figure out how to do both at the same time: bad teachers.

It might seem ludicrous to the likes of Prof. Ravitch, but a good teacher can actually teach a subject like, say, the Renaissance, by modeling best practices in the use of integrated social technologies. A good teacher can help students to learn how to use the features of the Digital Age in which we live to learn the content of whatever course they are taking.

After all, most of what comprises the Internet is content.

I teach Latin, and I like to say that I'm using 21st century skills to teach Ancient skills and vice-versa. And so, as they learn to conjugate verbs and parse Cicero, my students are also learning how to navigate web-based databases and synthesize real-time search technologies with social bookmarking and peer networking. And it's not as though we stop and have "tech day"; rather, it's all integrated and natural and authentic to the world our kids actually live in.

As for that phrase "21st century skills". In my mind, this has nothing to do with teaching or not teaching "critical thinking". After all, any decent teacher has been teaching critical thinking all along -- starting with Socrates.

"21st century skills", rather, needs to be taken as what it is and not be allowed to fester as the discarded red herring it's become.

And what are real 21st century skills? Well, by-and-large they are skills unique to the immediately globally connected network that comprises the Internet and its myriad social technologies. You want real 21st century skills? Well, here are my thoughts (I've published this previously, but in lieu of the discussion at hand, I think it's worth reposting rather than re-inventing the wheel):

MY PERSONAL MISSION STATEMENT
Serve the children who will live out their lives in the 21st century by building collaborative partnerships between families, communities, and educators independent of any proprietary business interests. Teach the deep reflective understanding of global historical, philosophical, creative, and intellectual content via the best methods 21st century technology and networking have to offer and may in the future offer and teach how to use and how to think about what the best innovations 21st century technology and networking have to offer and may in the future offer by teaching the deep reflective understanding of global historical, philosophical, creative, and intellectual content.

TWENTY FIRST CENTURY CHILDREN
Every child in America deserves to be treated as a citizen of the 21st century. Every child in America deserves an education that treats them first as human beings who will live out their life in the immediate globally connected world of the 21st century.

There is a profound gap between 20th century manufactured education and its accompanying textbook-based bubble test knowledge and the reality of a shift in the authority of knowledge as made clear by the democratic and participatory technologies of the 21st century. Our students deserve better than to be sold a textbook or its online equivalent. Our students deserve an education that bears an awareness of and an engagement with the multifaceted and ever evolving connected network we call humanity.

Students of the 21st century will know that ‘rigor’ means ‘stiffness’ and we the teachers will abandon such arbitrary ed speak in favor of addressing the real needs of the families and communities that we serve. Students should be made aware that most of what we predict about future career and workforce markets is complete nonsense. Students should learn that socio-economics effects the results of institutionalized education. Students should learn that standardized testing completely fails in predicting individual lifetime achievement. And students will learn that education is not about the ability to get a job, but rather is about the ability to transcend whatever position or situation one finds oneself in throughout a lifetime.

My version of specific 21st Century Skills includes:

• Critical Media Network Skills: the ability in a networked environment to recognize when you are being taken advantage of via special interests and the ability to argue within the dominant paradigm of a global network with acuity and accuracy based upon the application of historical, philosophical, creative, and intellectual skills grounded in the history of human thought and applied to the spontaneity and immediate global impact of 21st century networked communications.

• Participatory and Networked Information and Communication Skills: the ability to take part in one’s global society on equal footing with any other human via the immediacy and power of digital networks. Long-term, this may mean sharing any variety of networked consciousnesses.

• Collaborative Social Meta-Thinking: the ability to learn from and give back to both local community-based and global-based digital social networks. This may extend in future environments to nanotechnology merging with on-demand personalized virtual reality.

• Creative Network Confidence and Digital Community Stewardship: the ability to use the global network for both the purposes of creative problem solving and for the benefit of peaceful co-existence between peoples, animals, ecologies, and environments.

• Digital Cunning: students will learn that merely ‘using technology’ does not mean that you are either educated in or are a contributing member to the global network. Drawing on a strong Liberal Arts background merged with Digital Age critical thinking skills, students will be able to distinguish between participatory media and authoritarian media even when the latter cloaks itself as the former.

• Awareness of Digital History and Digital Divide: the ability to understand historical analog modalities and to recognize the value of pre-digital and non-digital media as well as the temporary nature of specific technologies within historical evolution; the ability to understand and through social action compensate for and help to eliminate digital distinctions based on economics, politics, geography, and race.

There you have it.

Real skills for the unique demands of a new Age.

Does this in any way preclude the learning of content? Heck no. In fact, I'm one of those folks who thinks that ed schools should be re-designed so that there are no undergraduate majors in education; rather, all undergrads would complete a full degree program in the Liberal Arts and then be required to earn a grad degree through educational practicums and substantial hands-on in-school mentored lab programs before they ever stepped foot alone into a classroom.

I, like Prof. Ravitch, am a strong supporter of teaching content and giving students the benefit of prior knowledge (though what knowledge is up for debate). But I am also practiced enough in the art of teaching that I realize that there doesn't have to be an either/or situation when it comes to teaching skills and content.

And I also know -- and I think Prof. Ravitch knows -- that our kids are entering a different world than we did when we finished high school. This isn't feel-good talk; this is purely practical. Just think about buying a television twenty years ago and then walk into a Best Buy and tell me that the world hasn't changed.

And consider computing itself. It used to be about the hardware. And the storage capacity. And how much it all cost.

Now, students are literally bringing more technological power into school in their pockets each morning than most schools have been able to acquire in 30 years. Now it's all about the connection, and the potential, and the unknown outcomes.

So professor, when you say that
Proponents of 21st-Century Skills might wish it was otherwise, but we do not restart the world anew with each generation. We stand on the shoulders of those who have gone before us. What matters most in the use of our brains is our capacity to make generalizations, to see beyond our own immediate experience.

I find it hard to believe that you fail to recognize the irony.

It's time to take a hard look beyond our immediate experience and see that despite all the previous claims of educational revolutions and the power of technology, that these were but signaling tremors as to what was on the horizon. Because with the advent of social technologies that literally can put everyday folks into the position of being important and influential creators of content (note I qualify that as "can"), we are seeing the ultimate shift created by the quake of the Internet's coming-of-age.

If our kids are going to make heads-or-tails of this, they are going to need both content knowledge and critical 21st century skills. They are going to need to understand how to live an immediately connected networked life.

There's no getting around that.

And so, what do we do about this?

Well, we start by admitting that the ultimate goal here should be in preparing the next generation for whatever it may face in the future. And, in my mind that means creating new understanding through the employment of Socrates and Twitter alike.

Sacrilegious as it may sound, the great knowledge of the past is not sitting there for us to look at. It's there ready for us to use. So, I say it's high-time to appreciate the new challenges and shifting technologies that have made the 21st century (already) something different from the 20th.

And it's time to quit passing off easy targets as the real thing.

Monday, June 1, 2009

21st Century Skills: My Personal Mission Statement

Dear Friends,

There has been a lot of talk recently for and against “21st Century Skills”.

Part of the debate has raged around the goings-on of the Partnership for 21st Century Skills. As I’ve previously addressed the matter on teachpaperless.com, it is my opinion as a paperless classroom teacher that whatever the motivations and self-interests of the board members of P21, their version of “21st Century Skills” just ain’t my version of “21st Century Skills”.

P21 is holding a 2009 ‘Cyber Summit on 21st Century Skills’ starting today, June 1st. As an educator deeply involved in educational technology, I thought it would be a good idea to take advantage of the free registration and see what they had to offer.

What they’ve got to offer is a site 'powered by' We Are Teachers: the "Knowledge Marketplace".

I could not have come up with a better descriptor for everything I find discouraging about P21.

Schools are not and should not be “marketplaces” of anything. They are learning environments. They are academies. They are workshops. They are temples of education. Fields of knowledge. But they are not and should not be marketplaces.

But, perhaps P21 put as little time into thinking about the slogans of their 'powerers' as they did coming up with a meaningful mission statement.

As has been mentioned countless times by countless observers, there is little if anything in P21’s Mission Statement and accompanying selection of skills that has anything to do specifically with the 21st century. I fear that more than anything, the board’s weak statement only serves to undermine much of the valuable work we educators and educational technologists have accomplished independent of P21.

This becomes all the more pressing given the recent attempts at P21-approved legislation and corporate marketing in relation thereof.

And that’s why I am writing this, my personal mission statement of 21st Century Skills.

***

MY PERSONAL MISSION STATEMENT
Serve the children who will live out their lives in the 21st century by building collaborative partnerships between families, communities, and educators independent of any proprietary business interests. Teach the deep reflective understanding of global historical, philosophical, creative, and intellectual content via the best methods 21st century technology and networking have to offer and may in the future offer and teach how to use and how to think about what the best innovations 21st century technology and networking have to offer and may in the future offer by teaching the deep reflective understanding of global historical, philosophical, creative, and intellectual content.

TWENTY FIRST CENTURY CHILDREN
Every child in America deserves to be treated as a citizen of the 21st century. Every child in America deserves an education that treats them first as human beings who will live out their life in the immediate globally connected world of the 21st century.

There is a profound gap between 20th century manufactured education and its accompanying textbook-based bubble test knowledge and the reality of a shift in the authority of knowledge as made clear by the democratic and participatory technologies of the 21st century. Our students deserve better than to be sold a textbook or its online equivalent. Our students deserve an education that bears an awareness of and an engagement with the multifaceted and ever evolving connected network we call humanity.

Students of the 21st century will know that ‘rigor’ means ‘stiffness’ and we the teachers will abandon such arbitrary ed speak in favor of addressing the real needs of the families and communities that we serve. Students should be made aware that most of what we predict about future career and workforce markets is complete nonsense. Students should learn that socio-economics effects the results of institutionalized education. Students should learn that standardized testing completely fails in predicting individual lifetime achievement. And students will learn that education is not about the ability to get a job, but rather is about the ability to transcend whatever position or situation one finds oneself in throughout a lifetime.

My version of specific 21st Century Skills includes:
• Critical Media Network Skills: the ability in a networked environment to recognize when you are being taken advantage of via special interests and the ability to argue within the dominant paradigm of a global network with acuity and accuracy based upon the application of historical, philosophical, creative, and intellectual skills grounded in the history of human thought and applied to the spontaneity and immediate global impact of 21st century networked communications.

• Participatory and Networked Information and Communication Skills: the ability to take part in one’s global society on equal footing with any other human via the immediacy and power of digital networks. Long-term, this may mean sharing any variety of networked consciousnesses.

• Collaborative Social Meta-Thinking: the ability to learn from and give back to both local community-based and global-based digital social networks. This may extend in future environments to nanotechnology merging with on-demand personalized virtual reality.

• Creative Network Confidence and Digital Community Stewardship: the ability to use the global network for both the purposes of creative problem solving and for the benefit of peaceful co-existence between peoples, animals, ecologies, and environments.

• Digital Cunning: students will learn that merely ‘using technology’ does not mean that you are either educated in or are a contributing member to the global network. Drawing on a strong Liberal Arts background merged with Digital Age critical thinking skills, students will be able to distinguish between participatory media and authoritarian media even when the latter cloaks itself as the former.

• Awareness of Digital History and Digital Divide: the ability to understand historical analog modalities and to recognize the value of pre-digital and non-digital media as well as the temporary nature of specific technologies within historical evolution; the ability to understand and through social action compensate for and help to eliminate digital distinctions based on economics, politics, geography, and race.


***

I am 100% for teaching content via 21st century skills and 21st century skills via content. I do this every day. Ed tech savvy teachers throughout this country do this everyday.

So, why are there no individual day-to-day classroom teachers on the board of P21?

Tech savvy students are learning like this throughout this country everyday.

So, why are there no students on the board of P21?

In schoolhouse lingo, I could only declare teachers and students 'absent' from the board of P21. And until that absence is rectified, the board will only symbolize the top-down old-fashioned 20th century style of management that's gotten us into so many of the problems that as a nation we currently face.

We don’t need a board comprised mostly of corporate interests telling us what’s good for our children whilst they busily turn them into the consumers of tomorrow. What we need is leadership by a truly independent movement of sophisticated and tech-savvy 21st century classroom teachers who for far too long have been seen as the ‘users’ of technology rather than the ‘creators’ of education.

Sincerely,
Shelly Blake-Plock
teacher, artist, blogger

ps - And just for the record, sending Cookie Monster out there as the feel-good face of corporate power is nothing less than tremendously disturbing to the childhood memories of many of us kids born in the '70s'.

FYI: Partnership for 21st Century Schools board members currently represent Intel, Pearson, AASL, Education Networks of America, Junior Achievement, Adobe, Apple, ASCD, Atomic Learning, Blackboard, Cable in the Classroom, Cisco, Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Dell, ETS, EF Education, Ford, Gale, HP, K12, Knowledge Works Foundation, Learning.com, Learning Point Associates, Lego, Lenovo, McGraw Hill, Measured Progress, Microsoft, NEA, Oracle, PolyVision, Quarasan, Scholastic, Sesame Workshop, Sun Microsystems, Thinkronize, Verizon, and Wireless Generation.

Monday, May 18, 2009

No Going Back

Reader Magistra M points 21st education straight into the reality of the Recession:
I think it is important to point out that this 21st century skills thing isn't just about preparing our students for the "new" jobs that are being created. There are many jobs that no longer exist, or will soon cease to exist, because of the changes in technology, our economy, and a global society. As the adult unemployment lines get longer, it is hard to argue with the need to provide our current students with the most innovative and comprehensive education possible.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Looking for Exemplary 21st Century Schools

CASTLE is looking for schools with strong 21C programs and initiatives.

Check out the Moving Forward wiki on Exemplary 21st Century Schools and please add information about your own programs.

For more info on the wiki, see this recent post over at Dangerously Irrelevant.

Friday, April 17, 2009

Talk by Will Richardson and an observation about editing, publishing, and responsibility

Just watched a live talk: Will Richardson speaking at the Blue Ribbon Institute up in MA; took part in a live chat on Cover It Up hosted by the ever tweeting Magistra M. The program was covered on Ustream by Karen Janowski. Great work by everybody in organizing and taking part in the extension of this conversation online.

Two things Richardson said really stick with me: 1) Our kids need to learn how to be editors. And 2) Despite the fact that our kids are publishing all the time, we still teach them in the old fashion. Part of the way I take this is that we still teach them from the top-down point-of-view where publishing -- and therefore literature and knowledge -- is something sacred for the select to write and have read by the masses.

Well, things have changed.

We need to teach our kids how to be editors. And to do so, we need to model good publishing practices for them. Which, in this environment means that we need to blog; we need to tweet; and we need to edit wikis. You wouldn't put a kid in the car and send him or her out onto the highway with a driver's ed teacher who never passed his own driver's test. Why would we expect kids to learn the new media if we don't understand it?

Blog Blog Blog Blog Blog. Tweet Tweet Tweet Tweet Tweet. Wiki Wiki Wiki Wiki Wiki. It is the responsibility of every teacher to actively take part in the 21st century -- because our students don't have a choice.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

21st Century Cheaters

From Open Thinking up in the great land of .ca, a tale of how a video went viral via (and because of) a simple cheat scheme.

Moral of this story?
Recognizing the power of networks and nodes and understanding why certain messages become more wide-spread than others (whether by merit, messenger, or manipulation) are important media literacy skills.

Sort of a uniquely 21st century skill, no? (Or, the 21st century version of ballot-stuffing)...

One way or another, this is the sort of thing our students have to deal with; so we should be educated in it as well.

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Last Thing: P21/C21/etc

Some folks are just too big for their britches.

We know that. GM right now is proof of that. MS is proof of that every time a new virus scares the bejesus out of half the world. Google is sure as heck getting there, though in a much different way (stay out of Twitter, guys).

What I'm personally hoping for, as a paperless classroom teacher and as someone who really sees a lot of positive in this Digital Age, is that both individual thought and collaborative innovation can continue to bloom. I want to see teachers actually enjoy teaching and I want them to get the most out of all technology has to offer rather than spend all their precious time freaking out about it.

As for the players in the C21 debate: I am sure that somewhere deep down, all of those board members of P21 really do want to help kids. And I'm sure that deep down all those folks who pretend that 21st Century Skills are the greatest blight on the future of humankind really just want to help kids.

But what we really need right now is some common sense. The future is upon us. We, the people, have to be the leaders we want. We, the teachers, have to be the teachers we want. And our kids have to be prepared for their future and not our past.

The Real Problem with P21 and the C21 Fund Bill

The real problem with P21 and the C21 Fund Bill is that it's all so backwards-looking.

They've dressed up this corporate board led by 20th century stalwarts like HP and Ford and Dell and Microsoft and the rest and they've told us that this is the future.

It ain't.

I figure there's a reason Google ain't on that board. I figure there's a reason no one from Twitter, or Facebook, or YouTube is on that board. Because these resources are the best inkling of where technology is headed: towards user-driven individualized public networking. And that's about as far from courseware and corporate-driven proprietary software you could get.

Now, these companies certainly aren't perfect, but at least they aren't beating down my inbox trying to take advantage of the economic crisis.

Are the Web 2.0 technologies perfect? Hardly. But I'll take a user-driven Ning over McGraw Hill courseware any day.

See, the problem isn't 21st Century Skills. The problem is that the bill of goods P21 is pushing isn't 21st Century Skills. It's textbooks in a sheep's clothing.

Open source. Free access. Free public server space. Internet connection as a Civil Right. A public commitment to free technological access and education. That's 21st century.

That Little Detail: More on the C21 Fund Bill

The real kicker in the C21 Fund Bill:
(C) achieves broad support for a statewide 21st Century Skills initiative from among the State's education leaders (including classroom practitioners), business leaders, and civic leaders; and

(D) is approved as a 21st Century Partner State by the nonprofit, nonpartisan Partnership for 21st Century Skills.


So, almost immediately folks started asking the obvious question: What's the Partnership for 21st Century Skills?

And the answer:
[We] serve as a catalyst to position 21st century skills at the center of US K-12 education by building collaborative partnerships among education, business, community and government leaders.


And the founders?
Founding Organizations:

* AOL Time Warner Foundation
* Apple Computer, Inc.
* Cable in the Classroom
* Cisco Systems, Inc.
* Dell Computer Corporation
* Microsoft Corporation
* National Education Association
* SAP


Now, as readers of this blog know, I have no problem teaching 21st century skills. In fact, I've argued in strong support of it. You could consider me AN ADVOCATE OF 21ST CENTURY SKILLS. But to give the right to judge the quality of a given State's 21st century skills plan to a team made up of members of the corporations who exist to sell the very goods that P21 promotes is insane.

It's like asking the textbook industry to tell us what textbooks we are going to use.

Just a few hours ago, I received an email from Adobe (who now has a rep on the P21 Board).

Engage students in learning while teaching 21st century skills

The economic downturn not only has hit school budgets hard, but it’s also placed great importance on students learning advanced technology skills for an increasingly competitive job market. Schools must engage students in learning, inspire their innovation, and empower them to communicate solutions to others.

Recognizing these challenges, Adobe provides products, resources, and training for teaching 21st century skills and integrating technology across the curriculum.


Looks like they recognize a good thing when they smell it. Here's a link to the whole pitch.

Continuing Our Look at the 2007 Version of the C21 Bill: Context, Skills, and Priorities

Continuing our look at the 2007 version of the C21 bill:
(3) Students need to go beyond just learning today's academic context to develop critical thinking and problem solving skills, communication skills, creativity and innovation skills, collaboration skills, contextual learning skills, and information and media literacy skills.

(4) Information and communications technology literacy is the ability to use technology to develop 21st century content knowledge and skills, in the content of learning core subjects, and students must be able to use technology to learn content and skills so that the students know how to learn, think critically, solve problems, use information, communicate, innovate, and collaborate.

(5) Educators need to incorporate life skills into pedagogy, including leadership, ethics, accountability, adaptability, personal productivity, personal responsibility, people skills, self-direction, and social responsibility.

(6) There needs to be 21st century assessments of education that measure the following priorities:

(A) Core subjects, and 21st century themes.

(B) Life and career skills.

(C) Thinking and innovation skills.

(D) Information media and technology skills.


The first issue has to do with 'academic context'. This is one of those phrases extremely useful to politicians but not all that useful to the rest of us. The nature of online learning itself means that 'context' is not only changing -- but is changeable. For example, I use Facebook all the time with friends and family, but were I to use it as a teaching environment, I'd be changing not the physical environment itself (the site architecture, etc), but the 'meaning' of what the site is 'meant' for. One of the most glorious things about Web 2.0 is that it is so malleable. You can change it to be and do whatever you need it to be and do.

That said, the point the proposal is making -- namely that students need critical thinking, collaboration, and media literacy skills -- is accurate. What would start to address the concerns of antagonists would be to address specifically what this has to do with life in the Digital Age.

Second, and again this is where a lot of folks are freaking out, is that none of the 'skills' mentioned were actually created in the 21st century. They are basic life/academic skills. And the line: "Information and communications technology literacy is the ability to use technology to develop 21st century content knowledge and skills" sounds like "students will be able to use skills to learn skills". Come on, this isn't Bureaucracy 101. It's school. Anyone can read information on a blog. Just like anyone can read a newspaper. The real '21st century skill' is not in reading content, but having the media acumen to analyze the source in an effective way and then in then deciding what to do with it with all of the options a public and immediate Web offers for responding to and synthesizing content.

I actually like the bit about incorporating 'life-skills' into 21st century education. But my concern is that most teachers don't actually know all that much about the effective uses of technology. And so what we could wind up with is unaware teachers giving the false impression as to what Web 2.0, social networking, and open source are all about. What we really need is an investment in tech mentors with a classroom background and loads of hands-on experience. We need teachers to feel comfortable with technology. And as someone teaching in a 1:1 school with a long proud tradition of traditional education, I can testify to the fact that this doesn't come easily. I think it is entirely inappropriate to suggest that teachers who don't know a darned thing about life on the Web then be told to go and try to teach students how to be 'responsible' online. And that kind of familiarity with the use of the Internet that would constitute something appropriate as a pre-requisite for someone teaching online-responsibility doesn't come from three periods five days a week using online courseware to give a quiz. It comes from authentic and sustained ongoing use and experimentation of all aspects of the Web.

As for the Four Priorities:
(A) Core subjects, and 21st century themes.

(B) Life and career skills.

(C) Thinking and innovation skills.

(D) Information media and technology skills.


I have no problem with the first one, though it's so vague you'd think we were in a Medieval Romance agreeing to do whatever the lady bid of us. As for 'life and career skills', I am weary to put the two together much less suggest that 'career skills' be the #2 priority of 21st century skills. C'mon: most of the jobs our elementary and middle school kids will be taking haven't even been invented yet.

Rather, I would put my eggs in the third basket. Thinking and Innovating. This is the future. And if we can get teachers to teach content and skills with an eye towards innovation rather than in fear of it, we'll be on the right track. In this way, the use of 21st century skills in the classroom should be something that the teacher is modeling and that the students are building upon. In fact, I'd say that the vital components of all education hinge more on this duo of Thinking and Innovation than on anything else.

On the C21 Incentive Fund Bill: Part One -- The Difference between Content and Skill

To begin with, the original bill came up in 2007.

Now, that might not seem so long ago, but in terms of technology, a lot has happened since then. I dare say that given the rise of Web 2.0 over the last two years, there are technologies that are standard-fare today that weren't even thought of two summers ago.

And that's an inherent problem with the bill.

But let's start by looking at the initial findings on Congress:
(1) Students must be prepared in the core subjects of English, reading, mathematics, science, foreign languages, civics, government, economics, art, history, and geography.

(2) In order for our Nation's students to be prepared to succeed in our communities and workplaces, students need 21st century content, beyond the traditional core subjects, that includes global awareness, financial, economic, business and entrepreneurial literacy, civic literacy, and health and wellness awareness.


Let's stop there for a moment. What the language of the bill confuses -- and what is the bane both of the folks on the core curriculum side of the debate as well as people like me who are actually proponents of C21 skills -- is that "global awareness, financial, economic, business and entrepreneurial literacy, civic literacy, and health and wellness awareness" is not content. Just like reading is not content. Reading is a tool for understanding, analysizing, and debating content. Global Awareness is a tool. It is a vitally necessary tool. But it in and of itself is not content. Geography, History, Literature: these are the content areas in which you would use the C21 skill of 'global awareness'.

The second thing that core curriculum proponents freak out about is the idea that such things as finance, economics, and civics are specifically '21st century'. And they have every right to be upset. This is the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard. What I think the bill garbles is the distinction between skills we want students to have in the 21st century and skills that are specifically new to the 21st century. There is nothing 'new' about economics -- but there is something new about the ways in which we relate to economics and access and share economic information in the Digital World.

In other words, when we are talking about content, we're talking about the 'what'. When we're talking about skills, we're talking about 'how'. This itself is not a new thing -- Aristotle came up with these distinctions. For us, the important thing is that we recognize that BOTH are equally important. 'Content' must deal with historical as well as current events; 'Skills' must deal with the possible ways of dealing with content -- they too must address historically 'how' people have dealt with stuff as well as how current and future technology is allowing and will allow people to deal with content. Teachers are responsible for getting both content and skills into the brains of the their students.

The skill that most deserves the title of a 21st century skill is 'global instant communication awareness'. This is not 'content'. Rather, it's a skill built on our human capacity for effective communication that addresses the new reality of instant public interaction on the Net. It's a skill our students need. And while the bill mentions 'communication' and 'information' skills, it never addresses what that means in a 21st century format.

Comments on the '21st Century Skills Incentive Fund Act'

Lots of freaking out over at Core Knowledge and Common Core on Senator Rockefeller's '21st Century Skills Incentive Fund Act' which was introduced into the Senate back in '07 and apparently may be reintroduced this spring.

Much of the consternation comes from the language in the proposal that reads that to be 'eligible' for incentive funds, a state: "is approved as a 21st Century Partner State by the nonprofit, nonpartisan Partnership for 21st Century Skills."

This in and of itself is bone-headed to the max.

Over the course of the next few posts, I'll suggest -- from the point of view of a teacher who on a daily basis actually uses and teaches 21st century skills within the context of a 1:1 computing high school arts and humanities program -- exactly what it is that Rockefeller doesn't get about '21st Century Skills' in general, and why P21 -- even if they do have the best interest of students at heart -- really shouldn't be the face of this movement, let alone the arbiters of what is and is not considered aptly '21st Century'.

Monday, April 6, 2009

Typing is Stupid

Isn't there an irony in blogging against 21st Century Skills?

This is actually a pretty funny article, but really... the irony.

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Passing on the Future: a paragraph-by-paragraph rebuttle of Peter Berger's 'Predicting the Past'

Readers,

Here's a little a paragraph-by-paragraph rebuttle of Peter Berger’s ‘Predicting the Past' which was published today on Ed Week. This is not meant to be a hit-job, but rather a sincere if heated rebuttal of what I see as the problem with the 21st Century Skills debate. I'm just a classroom teacher and blogger -- I was never taught the finer skills of debate, so I apologize in advance for anything that might come across here as purposefully antagonistic or rhetorically ill-advised. But I'm sure Mr. Berger can handle whatever I can throw at him and I encourage debate on this issue.

Shelly
n.b. -- My comments are in bold.


General Motors stock is selling for less than a cup of Starbucks coffee. Armed with that urgency, experts and policymakers are turning back the education clock to the 1970s, those golden years when self-esteem, the whole child, and our current state of academic bankruptcy were born.

rebuttal: The ‘current state of academic bankruptcy’ was, like the ‘current state of economic bankruptcy’ born not in the haze of the post-Nixon 1970’s that curmudgeons like to blame for everything related to education, but rather in the 1980’s of Ronald Reagan and both the antagonism of and cuts to public education.


We were almost headed in the right direction for about five minutes. The federal No Child Left Behind Act, with all its faults—and its faults are legion—properly refocused schools on academic content and fundamental skills like reading. Unfortunately, NCLB promptly plunged off the testing deep end, taking its credibility with it. Now, right on schedule, here comes the education pendulum, hurtling toward the other policy extreme.

rebuttle: Actually, we were only headed in the right direction if one considers the ability to do what one is told the ‘right direction’. For almost eight years, No Child Left Behind has dumbed down the conversation of public education to the point where we now consider second-graders reading at a second-grade level to be a ‘success’ rather than a starting point. I actually agree that there is a pendulum swing in motion, but would defer that unlike most trends in the history of education, this swing is being dictated by the cultural revolution occurring in society rather than by insular education theories. The revolution is the Digital Age itself and education has found itself in a game of ‘catch-up’.


Like former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani and his invocation of 9/11, education reformers exploit the refrain "21st century," as in "21st-century skills," "21st-century global competition," or "21st-century bridge to sell you." Not that there’s anything wrong with preparing kids for the 21st century. I stopped using parchment and quill pens in my classroom months ago. But garbing recycled bad ideas in the new century can’t help us, especially when our real problem is that most students haven’t mastered the skills that mattered in the last century, and that will continue to matter, like reading and writing.

rebuttle: Please don’t compare educational technology advocates to Rudy Giuliani; this makes your argument feel cheap and petty. If you had studied Cicero’s oratory in my paperless Latin II classroom you might have realized this. Regarding what you are attempting to say: yes, there are plenty of folks using the term ‘21st Century Skills’ who are trying to sell you their product. Absolutely. But that in no way takes away from the meaning of ‘21st Century Skills’. To think otherwise is the equivalent of hating movies because you don’t like Hollywood; or hating music because you don’t like Beyonce. You do have choices here, you realize. The whole point of ‘21st Century Skills’ is that there are networking skills with educational, ethical, political, and legal implications which our students need to understand as fundamental skills for living in the Digital Age. These forms of instant global public communication didn’t exists in years past. It’s something new. To send our kids out onto that Digital Highway without ‘21st Century Skills’ is the equivalent of sending them out onto the highway without Drivers’ Ed -- and that’s dangerous both for them and for the rest of us drivers out there. Now, with regard to ‘21st Century Skills’ in anyway ‘replacing’ the fundamental and necessary skills of learning -- particularly reading, writing, music, art, kinesthetics, and math -- that is entirely deluded. We don’t want to ‘replace’ anything. We understand how learning works. Many of us took Brain-theory and Neuroscience classes as part of our teacher training. Get real. What we are doing is killing two birds with one stone by teaching kids the basics and fundamentals via the processes of educational technology. They pick up therefore the necessary ‘21st Century Skills’ along the way as they are learning to read and whathaveyou.


Back when the dawning millennium first had experts atwitter, the Business Roundtable of my home state, Vermont, circulated a glossy brochure depicting what heightened "worldwide competition" would demand of 21st-century graduates. The group foresaw a new age when carpenters would "interpret detailed blueprints and diagrams," work with building materials, and estimate costs, as opposed to, presumably, just randomly nailing objects together, which is what the experts seemed to think 20th-century carpenters did. Future nurses would, apparently for the first time, have tasks requiring "communication with patients, families, and doctors," while also developing "flexibility," observations that could only have been made by someone who had never met a nurse. Farmers' innovative skills would include, according to the roundtable, "herd management” and "animal husbandry." They would also study something novel called agronomy.

My Boy Scout troop awarded animal-husbandry merit badges back in 1962. Vermont’s state agricultural college has been offering agronomy courses since its founding in 1865.

Fast-forwarding to the present, boosters cite a national survey in which 88 percent of Americans agreed that schools should teach "21st-century skills." How else would you expect most people to respond? No, I support not preparing children for the future?

rebuttle: Are you actually using the results of a Vermont ‘Business Roundtable’ to try to disparage the use of educational technology in schools? Maybe what we need is a few less business people deciding things like this and a few more liberal arts educated teachers and education professionals. That brings me to another point: every savvy liberal arts scholar knows that the Internet has drastically improved access to and distribution of information. In fact, among major online initiatives, many of the biggest have had a liberal arts slant: Project Gutenberg, Perseus Project, OpenLibrary, Sacred-Texts, just to name a few in the fields of Literature, the Classics, and History of Religion. Do you really think our kids DON’T deserve to know about this stuff? How about we rule that a qualification for becoming a teacher is that you have a liberal arts degree AND an education degree. Both. Mandatory. Or if you are in math and science, you need a math or science degree AND an education degree. Both. Mandatory. Now I think THAT would be a good idea. But, that’s just me.


The question isn't whether students need an appropriate education, but what reformers mean by an appropriate education. The Partnership for 21st Century Skills has compiled a typical reform vision for the future. The trouble is it looks an awful lot like the equally visionary past that’s plagued schools for 30 years. For starters, they’re reviving "interdisciplinary themes," which 1980s restructurers gushed would teach students how their knowledge was connected, even as they also preached that schools were too concerned with "content." Inconveniently, you can’t connect what you know if you don't know much.

rebuttle: I’m gonna guess you haven’t been in a Latin classroom recently. In the Classics we use the term ‘horizontal’ to define our discipline. Basically it goes like this: you can learn all the grammar you want, but you are just going to wind up with well-constructed sentences that don’t mean anything. You need to study the history, politics, art, literature, poetry, science, medicine, economics, military, social activities, and architecture of the society that used that language to really understand what their words and documents actually mean. And, all my witty stylistics aside, the Internet and my students’ capability for working in a 1:1 computing setting makes the teaching of all of these necessary ‘interdisciplinary’ aspects much more compelling, meaningful, and useful. And by the time they come out of four years in my Latin program, they know a hell of a lot more than how to conjugate a verb.


Garbing recycled bad ideas in the new century can’t help us, especially when our real problem is that most students haven’t mastered the skills that mattered in the last century, and that will continue to matter, like reading and writing.

rebuttle: But denying that traditional and 21st century skills aren’t equally of value is derogatory at best. Why not get rid of the nutrition and health programs while you are at it. I sure as heck want my kids to be able to read. But I equally want them to know how to live and eat in a healthy way. And if they don’t get that information in school, then they just may well not get it at all. There are a lot of really book-smart burn-outs out there.


This is a lesson still lost on inter-disciplinarians, who continue to rave that the principal task of public education is making "real-world essential connections" between "bodies of knowledge" kids have never been taught. They propose accomplishing this objective by focusing on "themes" like “global awareness," where students employ "21st-century skills" to "address global issues" as they learn about and from "individuals representing diverse cultures, religions, and lifestyles in a spirit of mutual respect and open dialogue."

rebuttle: The principle task of LIFE is to make essential connections. That’s what people do. This is not ‘opposite’ to content learning. It’s just that some of us feel that it’s more important to ‘Know Thyself’ than to know who said to ‘Know Thyself’. You might wanna go back and re-read your Plato.


All this sounds very enlightened, and I'm all for being able to work with different kinds of people. I expect it of my students every day. But global awareness has too often meant talking about how we feel about other countries without actually knowing anything about them, including where to find them on a map. You can’t teach global awareness if you skip geography.

rebuttal: “global awareness has too often meant talking about how we feel about other countries without actually knowing anything about them, including where to find them on a map”. Maybe at your school, buddy.


Boosters tell us the 21st century demands a new "learning environment," in which students receive "human support" and learn in "relevant, real-world 21st-century contexts." As a human who’s worked in a school for a while, I recognize the recycled jargon of the "whole child," unstructured, content-light, 1970s reform regime where teachers "facilitate" and children choose their own academic adventures. I've seen the nonsense lurking behind buzzwords like "social" and "interpersonal" skills. I've witnessed the catastrophe when "academic and intellectual skills" are displaced by "attitudinal, experiential, and social-emotional" goals. It’s all code for how we got where we are today.

rebuttle: See, there you go thinking about your own past again. The 21st Century Learning Environment has got to do with practical stuff like Wi-Fi access, smartboards, digital hardware, and on-staff tech support for teachers and students. We need ‘human support’ in our classrooms just like businesses need IT support. We also need tech/curriculum mentors and Web 2.0 gurus. To be honest, I’m getting the feeling that you are a bit out of your element, Donny. No one’s ‘coding’ anything.


Reformers also tout "multiple measures of assessment," including projects and student portfolios. These are the same subjective, discredited connivances that for years have artfully masked the reality that too many students know too little. I doubt that fraction raps and feudalism cakes are how they assess students in Beijing.

rebuttle: Student portfolios -- particularly in the form of ongoing student blogs -- are extremely powerful tools for learning. I’m not even going to bother going into the details in a brief statement here, but you are welcome to speak with my students and their parents about how digital portfolio learning has addressed all sorts of intellectual strengths the students (and their teachers) never even knew they had. And I’m not talking about useless feel-good projects. To be perfectly honest, dioramas are the bane of my existence. But seeing a year’s worth of a student’s development through a blog is a thing to behold. And when it comes to project-based learning, I just saw a student-run production of the play Ghetto produced as a Senior Capstone Project that completely floored the audience with its professionalism, integrity, and command of history, drama, and perception. Not an unshaken soul in the house -- which included Holocaust survivors and liberators. So, please be a bit more precise when you try to go and dog ‘projects’.


Twenty-first century fans are often the same people who complain that schools today are "too dominated by academic achievement." They claim their version of education "emphasizes deep understanding," rather than "shallow knowledge" like those old 20th-century schools.

rebuttle: There are so many terrifically smart kids who get squashed by the standards of traditional verbal-based assignments and grades. If you don’t know any of them, that’s just a shame. I actually feel bad for you for bringing this into the argument.


I believe in understanding. But you can't get there without slogging through the ancient knowledge that reformers have disparaged for years as "mere facts." I agree there’s a profound gap between what most kids learn in school and what they need to know. But that gap doesn’t exist because we’re teaching the wrong things, except where our schools have clung to the folly that 21st-century reformers are resuscitating once more as the cutting edge.

rebuttle: Hey, you are the one describing the education of kids as ‘slogging’.


Yes, some things have changed. Pluto's no longer a planet, and kids need to know more about using computers than I do. But most of our students aren’t falling short because they lack a deep, new understanding. They're failing because they’re too often uninterested in or unprepared for any understanding.

rebuttle: It’s not that kids need to ‘know more about using computers than I do’. It’s that you need to know more about using computers. Get with it. You are supposed to be a professional. Get yourself up to speed. Are you teaching that the earth revolves around the sun yet? What about evolution? Pro Patria Est? The point is that things do change. And the Digital Age is as much a change as the Industrial Revolution was. Things are gonna get really weird. But that’s life. After all, the whole point in teaching is to prepare the minds and souls of the students to be able to take on whatever they may face in life. That’s what we teachers do. We do it by teaching facts. We do it by helping them make connections and see things holistically. But that’s what we do. And teaching them as if they are entering into the world of the 20th century is an insult both to them and to our profession.

There’s nothing new about teaching kids to "talk and write clearly." There’s nothing uniquely 21st century about "creativity," "analysis," "interpretation," or "problem-solving." But you can’t solve "meaningful problems," which is how rose-colored reformers prescribe that 12-year-olds spend their class time, if you skip the fundamentals because they’re too tedious or too last century.

rebuttle: You are absolutely right. And that’s why you shouldn’t base your critique of 21st Century Skills on the rhetoric of one camp. There’s a whole lot of room for interpretation in the field of education and in the field of educational technology.


One typically ardent reformer urges that we "give our students the education they need for their future, not the education we had in the past." If most students today were mastering a rigorous 20th-century education, the 21st century wouldn’t look as bleak as it does.

rebuttle: With all due respect, for the most part it’s not the kids who were educated in the 70s and 80s who have gotten us into the mess we’re in. Maybe the Bushes, Cheneys, and Madoffs of the world could have used a little less ‘drill, baby, drill’ back in their classrooms and a little more ‘deep understanding’.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

21st Century Skills vs. Classical Education: The Answer my Friends, Is Blowing in the Wind...



Felt like I had to re-post a response I posted on the Core Knowledge Blog's recent post of remarks by Florian Hild. The 're:' at the start of my post quotes a particularly gnarly part of the esteemed Dr. Hild's argument about the superiority of a Classical Education -- which in one paragraph manages to name drop Emily Dickinson, Jane Austen, Aeneas, Ben Franklin [paragon of virtue], Beethoven, Da Vinci, Jesus [I'm assuming the dude from Nazareth and not the guy from The Big Lebowski], Newton, Darwin, James Madison, Abe Lincoln, and Jane Goodall.

(Just for the record, remember that I'm a guy produced by a Classical Education...)

re: “However, the erudition, eloquence, and integrity of a John Milton will still serve us well today. The ability to outmaneuver others on one’s Blackberry, though, will ultimately not provide a lasting competitive advantage, not to speak of a happy and good life. If we are afraid of the challenges of a new century, I’d say that the best way to prepare us for them is to face them standing on the shoulders of giants.”

First of all, your giants are not my giants. Why not talk about the ideas themselves without turning this into a discussion of canonical name-dropping.

My kids study the ins and outs of Classical Rhetoric via Cicero as well as Chuck D.

Second, my classroom is completely paperless, Web 2.0 connected, and unapologetically 21st century tech in terms of environment.

But that environment doesn’t dictate the content.

I teach Latin and Art History.

By the end of the year, my Art History students have taken on every major aspect of Western philosophy and criticism, considered the historical and contextual processes surrounding every art movement from the Cave Paintings through Hip-Hop, and written hundreds upon hundreds of paragraphs of criticism — discussing all of this in person — both together in the classroom, as well as on blogs, wikis, and intermedia Web 2.0 apps. In addition, they are responsible for keeping all of their work online in a personal blog which over the course of the year produces for them a completely connected hyperlinked digital portfolio and produces for my school and department a cost-savings in paper that can then [be] put towards more worthy things.

And I would feel completely irresponsible as a teacher here in the transition period leading us into the Digital Age if I were to neglect my students either the liberal-arts-based study of the ideas produced through the intellectual tradition of Western Civilization or if I were to throw them out to the digital wolves with no guidance as to the educational and societal uses of new technology.

Folks here are absolutely right: There is no magical solution to education. Tech ain’t magic. And the canon ain’t magic. When it comes down to the brass tacks, it’s about meeting the kids where they are and giving them the intellectual and technical capacity to handle whatever is thrown at them in the future.

Everything else is just silliness.

- Shelly


PS: Don’t trust anyone trying to ’sell’ you 21st Century Skills; everything you need is available for free online. By the same token, don’t trust anyone who needs to support his claims by citing only the names of the famous and legendary; the greatest potential of the Internet is the democratizing force of the amplified lowly human voice and the ability of a simple well-thinking person connected online in a public library to take on in real-time the ‘authorities’ and ‘top-ranked’ arbiters of an age.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Thinking about 21st Century Skills and the Future of Education

Spent part of the evening last night taking part in a chat synchronous to a 'Future of Education' online talk with the Da Vinci Institutes's Thomas Frye.

And it really got me thinking about this whole recent debate about '21st Century Skills'.

Two very valid arguments anti-'21st Century Skills' folks have is that a) there's nothing '21st Century' about problem solving and creative thinking and b) it is freaky that computer and software makers are often the big proponents of such skills; I mean, they are the ones most likely to benefit financially, right?

Well, two things have been rolling around in my head since last night. First, 'problem solving' and 'creative thinking' are not the 21st century skills. Rather, the ability to navigate an immediate and massive fully-connected online world is the primary 21st century skill. And it is an absolutely necessary skill; to deny students this skill is tantamount to denying them drivers' ed and then putting them out on the highway in a VW Bug.

Fundamentally we are now living in a networked world; so we need to present information to our students that demonstrates an awareness of this. That's not to say that technology should dictate content, but rather that the method of delivering the content should be of the connected variety.

Second, one of the biggest fallacies in the 21st Century Skills debate comes dressed up in the guise of necessary 'courseware'. In my mind, 'courseware' is just the 21st century version of a textbook. Well, I got rid of textbooks a long time ago.

Maybe it works great for teaching a memorization-heavy technical course, but it's not gonna be showing up in my Latin or Art History classrooms anytime soon.

Especially if I have to pay for it.

I'd say the rule of thumb is that if someone is trying to sell you something to help teach '21st Century Skills', then they assume you are a sucker. Because Web 2.0 already offers free (and generally speaking better quality) apps that do just about anything and more than some proprietary software package would.

Don't fall for it. Instead, invest your time and money in something worthwhile: advocating for free accessible and universal Internet access for all and an end to the digital divide.

-- ADDENDUM March 12 3:29PM -- Just for the record, the reason I say 'problem solving' and 'creative thinking' are not '21st Century Skills' is because they are 'All Century' skills; without them, you are kinda screwed one way or another. Network Navigation, on the other hand, especially at the scale of the Internet, is something specifically '21st Century'.