What I Learned From My Honesty Box

I’ve been liking Facebook quite a bit, and really like many of the apps that have been released for this social network. A couple of days ago, I installed the Honesty Box application. It allows people in your network to leave you anonymous comments. I was kind of nervous setting it up, and wasn’t sure what to expect.

Then, this comment came in:

“Yes the honesty box is dangerous! It gives cowardly people the chance to say hurtful things that they wouldn’t normally say to your face, and then it breeds mistrust among “friends”. You’d like to think that people wouldn’t be mean, but with anonymity, one’s morals, kindness, etc. tend to go out the window. You are very brave for getting an honesty box; I hope no mean/ hurtful words come your way. Then again, when someone says nice things, it is a shame they need an honesty box to do it, and they can’t just tell you to your face :-)”

This makes me think. Is a service like this more likely to get you negative comments that it would positive? Is this just a complaints box? I’m really interested to find out.

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Starting Over In Google Reader

One of the things I mention when I present at conferences or to university students is that one of the first things I do in the morning is read my RSS feeds. At times, I’ve had over 1000 feeds in my Google Reader although I’ve whittled this number down significantly. I don’t know, lately, I’ve just found things just are too repetitive, boring, mundane, written for the sake of writing, etc. In other words, I’ve become a bit disinterested in many of the feeds I am reading.

People often ask, “How do you keep up with so many blogs, etc.”. I’ve said in response that I’ve made it a big part of what I do, that I check my RSS before my email, or before diving into those (often) boring academic articles. However, I think something inside my needs a big change. So, today I’ve made the decision to dump all my feeds, and start over.

GoogleReaderBefore

GoogleReaderAfter

It’s a bit drastic, but I’m going to start filling up my reader with all of the sources that I can think of from the top of my head, friends and colleagues who I enjoy reading, and who inspire me. From there, as before, I’ll add others that interest me. However, this time, I’ll be much more particular as I really want to be able to interact with those I read. I’m making a commitment. If I read you, I want to also be able to give back.

So my list may be embarrassingly small for the time being. However, change is good, and sometimes drastic change is the best.

For those edubloggers out there, inspiring us all do a better job as educators and as leaders … I’ll find you again.

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Leadership Meme

I’ve been tagged by Dean who was tagged by Kelly. Here are a few thoughts on leadership (“who’s leading the parade anyways”).

Relative to your leadership role…

What’s working well?
I try to get people excited about new technologies and digital literacies, and when I am successful, it looks something like this.
– Give people a general overview of the new innovations in education, what is changing, how it is changing and present dynamic sessions which appeal to many disciplines.
– Shortly after the sessions, contact attendees casually (e.g., in the hallways, at coffee, at the photocopier) and engage in conversations specific to their context. Ask questions like, “Of the things you experienced, what might be relevant to your work and context? What little things can we get started on?
– Support people independently in the ways they need. Encourage, connect (to others and to resources) and follow-up.
– Get out of the way. I think this is the most important. You’ve started the process, but you can’t (and shouldn’t) control the overall process. Get out of the way, and you may learn something yourself.

What brings you great pride and joy?

– Seeing people become better instructors/teachers through critical reflection and better understanding of digital literacies, web 2.0 and other related technologies. I love to hear stories of my preservice teachers becoming leaders in their respective schools, not only in relation to ICT, but as excellent teachers and role models.

How have you made a difference for good in the lives of those you serve?
– This is a tough question. I’ve always felt that as a teacher, you may not see the results of your achievements until years after. If you are lucky, glimpses of success may come a bit sooner. In my very first job, at a very tough school, I was given the “bad kids”. At first, “bad” didn’t even close to describing it. In my first 3 weeks of teaching, I had all of my tires slashed, a knife pulled on me and several other threats of physical violence. Yet, less than three months later, I had a row of apples left on my desk (one from each student). Basically, I had made it past their probationary period. Today, 14 years later, I still speak to these students. I have continued to watch these students live, and grow, and learn. They are still part of my social network, both physical and virtual. I often hear from them that I was a positive influence in their lives, and how I made them feel that they could succeed.

What brings you quiet satisfaction?
– Seeing people wake up with the realization of the great influence that proprietary software and commercialism has on education, and then do their best to release themselves, their peers and their institutions from this grip. It’s a joy to watch students and colleagues gain a critical understanding of the world in respect to embedded power and influence.

What have you learned over the last few months?

– Being proactive is still an important activity. Here’s how I once again came to this important realization. I saw the Julie Amero story on Alternet back in January. I couldn’t believe it, what an incredible state of affairs for the American justice system. I contemplated blogging the story, but ironically I self-filtered. See, I’m a big opponent of web/information filtering of any kind in schools. If kids can go home and see the “bad stuff” on the Internet unsupervised, how will they ever be able to learn how to self-filter themselves. I think schools are vitally important in helping students become critical consumers of information, and where issues like Internet pornography and other related topics, should be discussed. In a sense, highlighting the story in my local circle may have given way to a type of FUD. “See, this is why we need school filtering. Things like this will happen.” Bottom line: things like this shouldn’t have happened, the justice system is technically incompetent in dealing with such a case and if anyone is to blame, it’s not Julie Amero.

Yet, I should have blogged this story stating some of these points. I didn’t have the time, so I chose to ignore it.

How can you use this information (above) to move your organization forward
– Blogging, in this case, is reflection. Better understanding one’s successes and failures cannot assure future success, but it is certainly a good place to start.

Inclusion

This is the best example of Skype or video-conferencing I have ever seen in the classroom, or elsewhere for that matter.

Grade 4 Students

My fourth graders have produced a 5 minute video that tells the story of how we “Skype” a classmate that has leukemia into our classroom.

See the video here.

What a wonderful project. After a week of listening to school administrators justify why certain technologies are blocked in schools (e.g., Youtube, Skype, Blogger), this video has given me even more evidence of why it is unwise (and likely wrong) to do so.

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Climate Change & Propaganda

Coinciding with the Gore-led climate change movie, An Inconvenient Truth, to be released, corporate propagandists are releasing 2, 60-second television commercials focused on “the alleged global warming crisis”.

From Lessig’s blog:

So the Gore movie will at least give lots of good and appropriate work to bloggers, as lots try to spin the story told by Gore. My favorite so far are two ads released by the Competitive Enterprise Institute. (Both are here.) The first is totally empty and hilarious, with the slogan (and who could make this up): CO2: They call it pollution. We call it life.

The second has more substance, charging the biased media with not reporting the fact that there were scientific studies showing that the ice caps were in fact thickening, not thinning. That claim has incited a strong rebuke from the scientist quoted in the ad:

“These television ads are a deliberate effort to confuse and mislead the public about the global warming debate,” Davis said. “They are selectively using only parts of my previous research to support their claims. They are not telling the entire story to the public.”

CEI: They call it truth. Scientists call it lies.

Need Help, Suggestions!

Hello blogosphere, I have a question.

We’re putting together something called the Digital Internship Project which will focus on supporting a group of 15ish preservice teachers as they move through their internship/practicum experiences. What we would like to build is a supportive online community for these students which would allow the following:
– personal blog spaces
– sharing of digital artefacts/learning objects (lesson plans, units plans, presentations, etc.)
– shared wiki space
– content aggregation
– probably a bunch of other things I’m not thinking about right now

So, any ideas of where to start. Of course, I’ll only use free/open source tools for this because I am sure there is something out there. Is there one solution (e.g., Drupal, Elgg) which will do all of this well without tons of modification? Do I need to be splicing a few things together?

I have a few ideas already, but would love to hear from others before I move heavily into one direction.

Thanks for your ideas.

Homeschooling

I received an instant message from my 13-year-old nephew today. He wanted to discuss the differences between peer-to-peer file-sharing and bit torrent. He’s being homeschooled this year so it’s been fairly easy to connect with him at times when he’s usually in school.

I wanted to know what he thought about homeschooling. I’ve been involved in formalized school settings for the majority of my life as a student, as a teacher, and now working in a Faculty of Education with preservice teachers. I’ve often thought about my life as it would have been had I been homeschooled. I’ve pondered what it would be like to be apart from the familiar social environment in our classrooms, and how it may be different to learn. Here’s some brief insight from my nephew as captured from our IM conversation.

Me: So how are things going with your homeschooling?
George: Great.
Me: You don’t miss being in the classroom at all?
George: Not really. I like not being in it actually.
Me: What don’t you like about it?
George: The noise. The strange people.
Me: Yea, you can’t do much work with the noise.
George: Nothing actually.
Me: Do you feel like you are learning more now?
George: For sure. This is way more efficient, because by the time the teacher is done with everybody else we’ve wasted a lot of time.

There are simple insights here, perhaps so simple that we tend to ignore them as unavoidable. What if we really payed attention? What would learning look like then?

Come Back Soon Stephen!

I’ve been pretty busy with my writing, and haven’t had the chance to comment on Stephen’s annoucement on the (hopefully) temporary hiatus of the OLDaily and all of the wonderful work that Stephen does there. I know that my thoughts for a swift return have already been echoed throughout the blogosphere, and this outpouring certainly demonstrates your deep impact in the learning community. It’s been a pleasure to learn from and with you over the past several years, and it was truly my pleasure to meet you in Regina a few months ago. We all hope for the best in your current circumstances and we wish for your speedy return.

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