As much as I loved working with students, I found a great deal of joy (and still do) in working with educators and helping them navigate the challenge of facilitating learning projects, building authentic assessments and realizing the great reward that comes with watching students dig into a great learning opportunity. Through a relevant problem, students persevered through the challenge with collaboration, creativity, and problem solving very evident. All learners thrived because in the depth of a great project, differentiation is possible. All. Learners. Thrived.
We are now 16 years into the 21st Century. This is my 19th year on the journey. We continue to talk about the need for 21st Century Skills in our learners. When are we going to figure it out as an educational system?
We continue to teach in subject matter that is siloed rather than interconnected for relevance.
We continue to provide adult-driven learning structures and impose them on our learners.
We continue to allow the perpetuation of a 19th century educational system.
We continue to define what should be learned rather than letting our students biographies and interests help define what could be learned.
In 1995, Deborah Meier wrote a wonderful book titled
The Power of Their IdeasIn the prologue to the book, she wrote something so simple and beautiful that it has caught my focus as I re-read her words. In recognizing the talent of one of her children as a "Natural teacher" she states "If, as I've discovered, teaching is mostly listening and learning is mostly telling." (1995, p.xi) I believe Meier captured something so incredibly simple yet powerful in moving our traditional views of education forward.
Shouldn't teaching be about listening? Shouldn't our learners be empowered to tell us their stories of growth, tell us who they are, tell us their dreams and aspirations? If we could listen more, could we help them reach higher goals rather than the goal of completing "3rd grade" as we define it?
The Power of Their IdeasShouldn't we continue to focus our instruction on empowering every learner to find relevance and deeper learning through environments that provide them a space and place for exploration and creation? If we as the educational leaders don't set out on a path for innovation and positive disruption of our long standing practices, then who will bring about sustainable, systemic change?
The challenge; If not you, then who?