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Tag Archives: education

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I support teachers, not a strike – Part 1 / 5 – Education is mostly about teaching

The PolyBlog
February 11 2020

I find it odd, and a little offensive, the constant rhetoric that gets launched at times at people who might disagree with teachers striking “for the kids”. The argument is not very complex, but bears laying out:

  1. People should support education
  2. Teachers deliver education
  3. Teachers are striking to change the government’s bad approach to education

Ergo, people should support a teachers’ strike. And, of course, the reverse MUST be true — if you don’t support a strike, you obviously hate teachers, kids and education.

Which leaves me with a puzzling conundrum. I cannot support strike action, yet I don’t hate teachers, kids or education. So where did I fall off the train above? I initially wrote a REALLY long post and realized it is way too convoluted to share as a single post. As such, I’m breaking it into five parts. This first part deals with the first two arguments above and the scope of “education”.

PEOPLE SHOULD SUPPORT EDUCATION

I could word that line as “education is uber important” or that “it’s about our future”, as many protest signs do, but let’s stick with the simpler wording. Is there any problem here for me? Not a whit.

I believe in the value of education. My entire sense of being revolves around lifelong learning, and so I cannot in any way ever support the idea of a cut or really anything that diminishes the value of education. Growing up, school was a refuge for me. A place where, surprisingly, things made sense. Not so much with people, friends, family, socializing, etc., but the subject matter at school did. A world where, if I could have lived in that “bubble of ideas”, it would have seemed close to heaven. People throw in stats about contributions to earnings, job security, blah blah blah, but that is treating education as a means to an end. For me, I’m willing to accept that education is a goal in and of itself.

I’m all in, no argument here, I would even go stronger.

TEACHERS DELIVER EDUCATION

As I said, I value education, I value schools, and I think teaching is one of the noblest of professions on the planets. It is tough, and many people could not last a day doing it. Many of those who could last wouldn’t be any good at it. Finding someone who likes it, embraces it and is good at it? Those individuals should probably be worshipped daily. Even if I didn’t know that from my own experiences growing up, I have four teachers in my extended family who could rightly smack me silly to believe anything else. Again, I’m all in, and the wording could be as strong as you want to make it for this premise.

But teachers are one part of “education”. Maybe the most important part, sure, but not the whole system. Teachers know how to teach, absolutely, and know what has worked in their classrooms in the past, how changes will affect learning. I’m willing to defer to them on that aspect. Who would know it better?

But teaching is one part of the delivery network for the education system, as is having a school, support staff and principals, transportation, security, or janitorial services, school layouts and locations, all of it. The “education system” also includes school boards, multiple school systems even, aspects of learning, human rights, stakeholders, curriculum development, even political support. Plus the dreaded area of budgeting, system management, representation from the full constituency of citizens and taxpayers who fund the system. Accountability. And relationships between the education system and other parts of the state. 

All things that go way beyond a teacher in a classroom.

Which means they are one part, not the whole thing. They contribute to delivering “education”, they don’t control all of it.

If they stay in that lane, and that lane only, the argument can hold. If they go beyond their lane, their claim to superior knowledge is suspect.

Conclusion for part one

I can agree with the first premise, and I can narrow the second premise enough for it to hold. Education is important and teachers’ views of the classroom component are solid. So far, the logic holds. I’m still on the train.

Posted in Learning and Ideas | Tagged education, government, philosophy, schools, strike, teachers | Leave a reply

Articles I Like: Are 'Learning Styles' Real? – The Atlantic

The PolyBlog
April 16 2018

In recent years, many educators have ratcheted up their attacks on the idea of people having “learning styles”. While it was in vogue for awhile, more and more research is suggesting it isn’t as compelling a theory as it once was thought to be. To me, it is more about a theory that resonates instinctively with people, and more a metaphor for approaches to learning – a descriptive paradigm, if you will – then a hard and fast “rule” or law, let alone a theory. So when I saw an Atlantic article aiming to debunk it further, I couldn’t help but click.

In the early ‘90s, a New Zealand man named Neil Fleming decided to sort through something that had puzzled him during his time monitoring classrooms as a school inspector. In the course of watching 9,000 different classes, he noticed that only some teachers were able to reach each and every one of their students. What were they doing differently? Fleming zeroed in on how it is that people like to be presented information. For example, when asking for directions, do you prefer to be told where to go or to have a map sketched for you?

Today, 16 questions like this comprise the VARK questionnaire that Fleming developed to determine someone’s “learning style.” VARK, which stands for “Visual, Auditory, Reading, and Kinesthetic,” sorts students into those who learn best visually, through aural or heard information, through reading, or through “kinesthetic” experiences.

Basically the idea that everyone is relatively unique, but if you break them into sub-types for learning, you can reach them better by using techniques that target that sub-type. Yet the scientific evidence, i.e. the “testing” of the sub-types is less indicative:

…a lot of evidence suggests that people aren’t really one certain kind of learner or another. In a study published last month in the journal Anatomical Sciences Education, Husmann and her colleagues had hundreds of students take the VARK questionnaire to determine what kind of learner they supposedly were. The survey then gave them some study strategies that seem like they would correlate with that learning style. Husmann found that not only did students not study in ways that seemed to reflect their learning style, those who did tailor their studying to suit their style didn’t do any better on their tests.

[…]

Another study published last year in the British Journal of Psychology found that students who preferred learning visually thought they would remember pictures better, and those who preferred learning verbally thought they’d remember words better. But those preferences had no correlation to which they actually remembered better later on—words or pictures. Essentially, all the “learning style” meant, in this case, was that the subjects liked words or pictures better, not that words or pictures worked better for their memories.

Are ‘Learning Styles’ Real? – The Atlantic

However, in the same article, it basically says it isn’t about “styles”, it is about skills. Some people are better at certain tasks than others, so they may think they’re a visual learner because they happen to be good at things that are visual. My problem though is that I’m not sold the idea fails with their “tests”.

All of them have the same methodological problem that the studies about “digital reading” vs. “paper-based reading” exercises and measures of retention. Basically, the studies conclude that if two students read the same text, one on paper and one electronically, the one who read paper will remember better. Which I can practically guarantee will happen with the test they’re running…they’re taking a text that was designed for paper reading, converted it to e-format, and then ran the test.

But what is the more appropriate test? Well, how about optimizing the text electronically first? Taking advantage of the e-format to embed other info or even use a font that looks better on e-format? There’s a reason why so much money and attention is paid to web design — layout and format matter, and it isn’t simply a matter of converting from paper to electronic. And did they first gauge how comfortable the person is with reading an e-text? The assumption is that the texts are the same, so the reader experiences no difference. Yet we all know modern-day Luddites who might be adept at email, surfing, or texting, but they find the idea of e-readers abhorrent. They just don’t want them. Almost NONE of the tests asked what the student preferred to use. If you start off blocked and negative, would you expect the outcome to be different? People are used to paper, they don’t often “balk” at a paper text (except in purchase decisions).

To use the VARK idea, and downgrading it from a learning style to a communications style, we all know that personality types are generally accurate in groups but not so much individuals (all stereotypes, negative or positive, break down when you go from a group to an individual — the standard of deviation is enormous). So let’s look at the personality-type model that resonates the most with me — the axis of introverts/extroverts vs. analytical/intuitive.

Analytical introverts (the blues) have a very clear preferred communications style — they want details. They analyze, they nuance, they want to get their fingers dirty poking the content so they understand it. Preferably, they get paper and read it on their own and they have it before they discuss it together.

Reds, i.e. analytical extroverts, are action-oriented and while they want details, what they really want are the KEY details — they prefer high-level summaries and overviews with minimal background noise. Be brief, be bright, be gone. Don’t waste their time.

Yellows, i.e. intuitive extroverts, want interaction, team work, FUN. They want to discuss the information. Sitting quietly and reading the book by themself is tantamount to torture.

Greens, i.e. intuitive introverts, also want to be “involved” in small-group discussions. A bit quieter than the yellows, and preferably with some say in how they decide what to study or how to proceed.

Those personality studies have been studied to death and for about 60% of the population, they have pretty strong validity. Another 20% end up straddling types. Which leaves 20% where, in my view, they suffer from two measurement problems — about half don’t know themselves well enough to answer the questions reliably (they’re following scripts of what they THINK they should say, not describing what they actually do) and half who are balanced across multiple categories. It doesn’t mean the theory of personality types is wrong, it just means it isn’t universal when you apply to individuals. Quelle surprise.

So what might that look like in terms of learning styles? Well, if the four groups have differences in their preferred communications styles, would it be surprising that they have a different way of learning? Not really, it should be expected. So the test would have to be optimized first for EACH learning style.

But even then, it’s not going to be 1:1 for every person on every item for every subject. Not unlike the phrase that talking about love is like dancing about architecture, reading about art isn’t very useful without pictures of the actual artwork. Equally, if a picture is worth a thousand words, historical video footage of events is far more compelling and easy to “understand” as the students witness.

Is that true for everyone? Nope. Some are going to respond to the text more than the pictures, pictures over video, and video over text, or the reverse such as text over video.

Ultimately the benefit of the theory is not in saying everyone has a different style and targeting the individual, although someday we may be able to do that better. Instead, the benefit of the theory is recognizing what everyone has already known. Mixed teaching techniques, judiciously applied, work better than a single technique of one-size fits all.

But that’s just my view. What do YOU think? Do you learn differently from a friend or sibling? Or do you believe one can find a perfect way to deliver info for a topic or subject area that is applicable to all?

Posted in Learning and Ideas | Tagged education, learning, personality, profile, style | Leave a reply

2015 – New areas of writing

The PolyBlog
January 4 2015

The seventh item on my vaguebooking list was “07. Seven new topics”. These are new “subject areas” that I want to write about on my blog.

Pop culture is likely one of them, although it might be more narrow than that, maybe “pop culture intersecting with the news”. I didn’t comment on Jian Ghomeshi or Bill Cosby’s news items when they hit, but I loved watching people post and take sides, often looking like internet trolls in comment forums except they were posting the same comments on their own social media feeds. My take is a bit different and is primarily about the law, and the court of public opinion vs. the court of justice or law. I may yet blog about it.

Equally, I love the law. So much so that I couldn’t become a lawyer. I’d like to take a subject area and blog about that, but I haven’t yet found my niche. It may very well harken back to my days at law school when I was working for the Ministry of Education in B.C. and focus on the law, schools, education, and children. I haven’t quite decided yet. But there’s an itch there that I’d like to scratch again.

In the realm of writing, I have three areas that are of interest to me. First and foremost is the changing nature of the business model of publishing. I’m very much in the world where “everyone must choose their own path”, and I may turn my attention again to the world of disrupted publishing. Second, I think there is a lot of general information out there about marketing of books in the modern age, but not a lot that gives a comprehensive list of “here’s everything you COULD do, choose wisely”. I started work on this at one time and would like to go back to it. Finally, I also think there is a ripe area for a different slant on books and publishing, and that’s measuring the performance of libraries. I did some research and even some preliminary writing about three years ago but never brought anything to fruition. I think libraries are going to come under increased fire in the digital age, and while they have a strong role to play, I don’t think many of them are telling the right story or using the right yardsticks. When they tell their story initially, they act as a community centre; when their funding is threatened, they claim critics are burning books and destroying literacy if the library goes the way of the dodo. The balance is off, and maybe I can find something I can contribute to the conversation.

In a similar vein, I’m wondering if I have something to say about charities. I feel that much of the rhetoric out there is a bit one-sided, or at times, diametrically-opposed two-sided. I know, for example, that there is not much out there giving people insights into different types of charities. I also have some questions for myself that I want answered on local basic human needs programming and the most effective means of contributing donor dollars.

Finally, I do reviews for books, movies, TV and music, or at least my website says I do. I’ve been a slacker-doodle for my reviews, and I want to get back into them. I am not yet ready to commit to exactly what the other six categories will look like when I’m done, but I know this one pretty well. So, I commit to:

  • 24 book reviews;
  • 250 reviews of TV episodes (tweets);
  • 24 movie reviews; and,
  • 3 new reviews of Billboard year-end results.

That should keep me busy too.

Posted in Pondside Planner | Tagged 2015, books, charities, culture, education, goals, law, libraries, movies, music, pop, pricing, publishing, reviews, self-promotion, tv, website | Leave a reply

TED talks about Education by Ken Robinson

The PolyBlog
March 30 2011

The videos below are two of the TED talks by Ken Robinson (2006 and 2010), who focuses on education systems. The first is about creativity, and how it is as important as literacy, but whereas we learn literacy, we tend to “unlearn” creativity.

The second one looks at how education systems tend to be like manufacturing enterprises, assembly line entities that go linearly from kindergarten to higher education. His talk argues for a different way of looking at it, more like a fine-dining restaurant than McEducation. The quote from Lincoln alone is probably worth the price of watching. Enjoy…

Posted in Learning and Ideas | Tagged creativity, education, government, ideas, system | Leave a reply

Get Your University Degree at Home by Kevin Paul (1999) – BR00051 (1999) – 🐸🐸🐸🐸⚪

The PolyBlog
June 8 1999

Plot or Premise

Having met the author when I was a student at the University of Victoria when he was the Director of Graduate Admissions, I had a lot of confidence in his ability to present a no-nonsense approach to the idea of Distance Education. And for the most part, he delivered. [Note: This review is of the 1999 edition, vastly out of date now 20 years later).

What I Liked

The book does a pretty good job of giving an overview of those universities where it is possible to do the majority of the degree through distance education (correspondence, audio tapes, video tapes, fax, e-mail, internet lists, etc). And there are some sections for the uninitiated to figure out if distance education is right for them. Some notable highlights, in my opinion, include:

  • Athabasca University: its primary method is distance ed;
  • California State University (Dominguez Hills): it has an interesting MA in Humanities (Art, History, Lit, Music, & Philosophy are the core courses);
  • City University: some campus centres around the world;
  • Heriod-Watt University (Edinburgh Business School): one of the UK systems with solid academic credentials but only for the truly independent learner;
  • Ohio University: offers two methods: independent study (with interaction and support) or truly independent study (with little support, no interaction but at half the cost);
  • Open University (Open Learning Agency): a strong presence in British Columbia;
  • Queen’s University: Only three BAs available by this method, but a strong MBA program offered through regional centres throughout Canada;
  • Regents College (University of the State of New York): perhaps one of the better “”credit for life”” univs.;
  • University of London: Similar to HWU in Edinburgh, this offers a great deal (financially and academically) but is for the serious learner only who can work alone;
  • University of North Dakota: Offering an MSc in Space Studies, which alone is enough to be worth noting;
  • University of South Africa: Has a huge selection of courses available, perhaps more than any other univ in the book, and has reasonably solid international credentials;
  • University of Waterloo: as always, a solid choice regardless of the medium; and,
  • Vermont College of Norwich University: has an interesting mentoring program tailored to adult learners, but the residency requirement might be difficult;

What I Didn’t Like

The majority of the book are all-too-brief overviews of each university. He covers them all — but the most useful tool is missing from the book. There are appendices that list, for example, the universities offering each degree. However, what is missing is a simple table that would help the reader narrow down the search. The table would list:

  • degree available, perhaps broken by section?;
  • estimated cost of the degree? (the overviews list the cost of a unit/credit, but then fails to tell you how many units/credits it takes for a degree);
  • if there is a notation on the transcript that the degree was obtained through distance education?;
  • if there is a residency requirement? (many people would eliminate a huge number of places solely on that basis alone); and,
  • if they give credit for life experiences? (this would aid those who would select/deselect on that basis from both sides of the argument)

The overviews give you a lot of info, but a nice index would improve the process.

Disclosure

I used to know the author as Director of Graduate Admissions at the university where I was a student.

The Bottom Line

No-nonsense approach to distance education.

Posted in Lilypad-Library | Tagged Amazon.ca, Amazon.com, B&N, book review, business, computers, education, Good Reads, library, non-fiction, paperback, PolyWogg, prose, reference, self-help, series, stand-alone, technology | Leave a reply

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