Preparing our kids for the future

There’s been a wonderful conversation going on at Weblogg-ed about what our kids’ futures will require them to be. Miguel Guhlin has synthesized the original thoughts of Will’s with those of the commentors on the post.

I’m mulling over two of Will’s points in particular right now, though I suspect I’ll come back to all of them in the future.

Paper Training Students

The first is that although students will need to be less dependent on paper, we are still paper training them. This hits home, coming on the heels of my thoughts on teaching handwriting to secondary students. I feel that I need to “paper train” students — and do this well — because their secondary school success depends in part on their ability to write a standardized pen-and-paper test. At the same time, I want to prepare them for a conceivable future where paper is no longer the common communication medium. I feel that at times I’m working with a weird mix of tools and strategies, trying to meet both short-term and long-term learning goals.

I think that it’s going to come down to what several commentors suggested: kids need to know how to learn new skills themselves. I think of the different communication mediums I’ve been using over the past ten years — from email to instant messaging to websites, blogs, wikis, and social network sites. I didn’t learn how to use these in school, but I know how to learn how to use these. (In most cases, I talk to my brother-in-law who seems to absorb all things technological ahead of the curve, but that’s beside the point.)

Fluent in creating and consuming hyper-text

The idea here is that basic reading and writing skills will not suffice. I think of my observations of students’ online reading, and I agree: reading hypertext requires a different mindset than ‘basic’ reading. One needs to understand why a link is there, and why it may or may not be helpful to click through to it, and how to navigate back. One also needs to understand the architecture of hypertext environments. I found blogs quite confusing at first until I became familiar with their common features; I suspect that I need to take the time to help students recognize some of those common features to ease their own reading.

And then there is hypertext, where indeed, a very different writing style is needed. I feel like I’m slowly being convinced that student-owned blogs are going to be essential teaching tools in my near future.

Literacy program success (sort of)

A couple of days ago I decided to use computers in my after-school literacy program just to liven things up a bit. After reading about an extreme case of using gizmos for their glam factor with disastrous results, I felt a bit uneasy about my new decision. Was I going to compound the challenges surrounding this program?

Nope. It worked. Like a charm. Today’s literacy program was about as successful as any two hours of class after a full day of lessons can be. I was directed to a great OSSLT preparation site for the students, and most of them more-or-less happily spent two hours there. The novelty of using computers for something like literacy preparation worked.

I know that this novelty is going to wear off quickly, so I will resist the temptation to design every activity from here on in around online practices. But after the relative success of today’s program, I’m certainly going to integrate many more online activities into the program.

Lesson Debrief: Analyzing "Batman Begins"

With my Gr. 12 English class, I’m in the midst of a unit that asks, “What makes a person great?” This lesson builds on our conversations about characteristics of great people, features of a great movie, and the blockbuster phenomenon: in other words, media literacy. Once again, I owe a lot to the good folks at the Media Awareness Network, as I launch this 3-or 4-day lesson with a slightly modified version of their camera shots lesson. After talking about the hero journey, camera shots, and comic heroes, students are ready to discuss the techniques used by movie directors to portray a hero.

I’ve used Batman Begins several times with this lesson, and as much as I like mixing things up from class to class, I keep returning to this movie because it works so well.

What I like

  • Batman Begins, suprisingly, has not been seen by the majority of my students. It’s always nice to work with something that is new for most of the class. And the upcoming Dark Knight adds an extra level of intrigue.
  • Bruce Wayne/Batman offers an interesting portryal of the hero’s journey.
  • The camera techniques used in Batman Begins are a rich discussion source. During class, I play the movie for a few minutes, pause it, and ask what students have noticed about the camera angles (or anything else from music to script to costuming). We talk about the the movie’s director’s decisions, why they were made, and what impact they have on the audience. Students invariably get involved and enthusiastically share their ideas. (A high school English teacher’s dream come true.)

What needs work

  • This lesson portrays yet another male hero. I want to find more strong female characters for this unit, and indeed the entire course, both of which are too male-focussed right now. Aeon Flux is an obvious alternative for this lesson with its female hero; however, I tend to use that movie in my Grade 9 class. I could use it again, I suppose, but then it just gets a bit boring for both me and the students.

Final notes

This lesson markedly changes students’ media literacy. One student half-complained, half-joked, “I’ll never watch movies the same way again!” That is exactly what I want to hear. I have a friendly debate with a colleague about our role here: he is of the opinion that we shouldn’t spoil the way students watch movies, while I am convinced that students should be equipped to see movies as constructed re-presentations of reality. For me, then, this is an almost-perfect lesson.