Details

Building School 2.0


Building School 2.0

How to Create the Schools We Need
1. Aufl.

von: Chris Lehmann, Zac Chase

17,99 €

Verlag: Wiley
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 31.07.2015
ISBN/EAN: 9781118222676
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 304

DRM-geschütztes eBook, Sie benötigen z.B. Adobe Digital Editions und eine Adobe ID zum Lesen.

Beschreibungen

<b>Ninety-five propositions for creating more relevant, more caring schools</b> <p>There is a growing desire to reexamine education and learning. Educators use the phrase "school 2.0" to think about what schools will look like in the future. Moving beyond a basic examination of using technology for classroom instruction, <i>Building School 2.0: How to Create the Schools We Need</i> is a larger discussion of how education, learning, and our physical school spaces can—and should—change because of the changing nature of our lives brought on by these technologies.</p> <p>Well known for their work in creating Science Leadership Academy (SLA), a technology-rich, collaborative, learner-centric school in Philadelphia, founding principal Chris Lehmann and former SLA teacher Zac Chase are uniquely qualified to write about changing how we educate. The best strategies, they contend, enable networked learning that allows research, creativity, communication, and collaboration to help prepare students to be functional citizens within a modern society. Their model includes discussions of the following key concepts:</p> <ul> <li>Technology must be ubiquitous, necessary, and invisible</li> <li>Classrooms must be learner-centric and use backwards design principles</li> <li>Good technology can be better than new technology</li> <li>Teachers must serve as mentors and bring real-world experiences to students</li> </ul> <p>Each section of <i>Building School 2.0</i> presents a thesis designed to help educators and administrators to examine specific practices in their schools, and to then take their conclusions from theory to practice. Collectively, the theses represent a new vision of school, built off of the best of what has come before us, but with an eye toward a future we cannot fully imagine.</p>
About the Authors viii <p>About Science Leadership Academy xi</p> <p>Acknowledgments xii</p> <p>Foreword xiv</p> <p>1 School Should Mirror the World asWe Believe It Could Be 1</p> <p>2 We Must End Educational Colonialism 3</p> <p>3 Citizenship Is More Important Than the Workforce 6</p> <p>4 Build Modern Schools 9</p> <p>5 Be One School 11</p> <p>6 Vision Must Live in Practice 13</p> <p>7 We Must Blend Theory and Practice 16</p> <p>8 Everything Matters 19</p> <p>9 “What’s Good?” Is Better Than “What’s New?” 22</p> <p>10 Reflection Means Better, Not More 24</p> <p>11 Consider the Worst Consequence of Your Best Idea 27</p> <p>12 Disrupt Disruption 30</p> <p>13 Humility Matters 33</p> <p>14 Build Consensus 36</p> <p>15 Teach Kids Before Subjects 40</p> <p>16 WhatWe Should Ask of Teachers 42</p> <p>17 Schools Are Where We Come Together 45</p> <p>18 WhatWe Want for Students, We Must Want for Teachers 48</p> <p>19 Embrace Your Best Teacher-Self 52</p> <p>20 We Must Be Our Whole Selves 54</p> <p>21 Technology Should Transform School, Not Supplant It 57</p> <p>22 Build Your Own Faculty Lounge 60</p> <p>23 Don’t Admire the Problem 65</p> <p>24 Not “Yeah, but—”; Instead, “Yes, and . . .” 68</p> <p>25 Ignore the Seat Back 71</p> <p>26 Find Meaning Every Day 74</p> <p>27 Take What You Do Seriously, but Don’t Take Yourself Seriously 76</p> <p>28 Don’t Fall for Authoritarian Language 79</p> <p>29 Don’t Be Authoritarian—Have Authority 81</p> <p>30 Be Silly 84</p> <p>31 Be in the Room 88</p> <p>32 Don’t Get Ego-Invested 91</p> <p>33 Plant Perennials 94</p> <p>34 Cocreate Community 98</p> <p>35 Say More, Talk Less 101</p> <p>36 Be Deliberately Anti-Racist 103</p> <p>37 Practice Inclusive Language 106</p> <p>38 Honor Multiple Needs 109</p> <p>39 Listen to Understand 113</p> <p>40 Learning Must Be Nonnegotiable 116</p> <p>41 Ask Why the Kids Are in the Room 118</p> <p>42 Why DoWe Need to Know This? 120</p> <p>43 Deconstruct Passion 122</p> <p>44 Inquiring Minds Really DoWant to Know 125</p> <p>45 Ask What They Are Curious About 128</p> <p>46 Understand What Project-Based Learning Really Means 131</p> <p>47 We Need to Change theWay We Teach Math 133</p> <p>48 Instill a Love of Learning 136</p> <p>49 Stop Deficit-Model Thinking 139</p> <p>50 Start Surplus-Model Thinking 142</p> <p>51 Assign Meaningful Projects 145</p> <p>52 School Must Be Real Life 148</p> <p>53 Engage the Entrepreneurial Spirit 152</p> <p>54 Classes Should Be Lenses, Not Silos 154</p> <p>55 Create Complexity, Not Complications 157</p> <p>56 Find Something Interesting and Ask Questions 159</p> <p>57 Story Matters 162</p> <p>58 Success Is the Best Weapon 165</p> <p>59 Preschool Is a Great Model 168</p> <p>60 Every Kid Needs a Mentor 171</p> <p>61 Inquiry Is Care 174</p> <p>62 Schools Are Full of People 175</p> <p>63 Care For and About 178</p> <p>64 Assume Positive Intent 182</p> <p>65 Have an Excess of Good Will 185</p> <p>66 No Child Should Be On Silent 187</p> <p>67 Audience Must Be Curated 190</p> <p>68 Make Better Use of the Built-In Audience 194</p> <p>69 Parent Conferences Should Be Student Conferences 197</p> <p>70 Communication Is Key 200</p> <p>71 There Are No Sick or Snow Days 204</p> <p>72 Get Rid of the Pencil Lab 208</p> <p>73 Technology Must Be Ubiquitous 210</p> <p>74 Technology Must Be Necessary 212</p> <p>75 Technology Must Be Invisible 215</p> <p>76 Class Blogs Should Be Open Spaces 218</p> <p>77 Make Personalization Authentic 221</p> <p>78 Ask Better Questions 224</p> <p>79 Cocurate Your School 226</p> <p>80 Organize 228</p> <p>81 Teach Thoughtfulness 230</p> <p>82 TeachWisdom 233</p> <p>83 Teach Passion 235</p> <p>84 Teach Kindness 239</p> <p>85 Make Advisory Work 242</p> <p>86 Teachers Should Be Readers and Learners 245</p> <p>87 Change at School Zone Pace 247</p> <p>88 Create Space for Collaboration 250</p> <p>89 Work Together to Make Us All Better 252</p> <p>90 Get Together 256</p> <p>91 We Must Practice a New Kind of Research 259</p> <p>92 Experts Are Necessary 262</p> <p>93 Success Must Be Defined by All 265</p> <p>94 We Don’t Need Martyrs 268</p> <p>95 Teachers Are Lucky 272</p> <p>Notes 275</p> <p>Works Cited 281</p> <p>Index 283</p>
<p><b>CHRIS LEHMANN</b> is the founding principal of the Science Leadership Academy, a progressive science and technology high school in Philadelphia, PA. Chris was named Outstanding Leader of the Year by the International Society of Technology in Education in 2013 and in 2014 was awarded the prestigious “Rising Star” McGraw Prize in Education. Chris is also the author of the education blog Practical Theory:<b>www.practicaltheory.org.</b></p> <p><b>ZAC CHASE</b> is a former teacher, an instructional technology coordinator, a consultant, and a writer who blogs at <b>www.autodizactic.com.</b> An original Freedom Writer Teacher, he has contributed to ­several books including the bestselling <i>Teaching Hope: Stories from the Freedom Writer Teachers</i> and <i>Freedom Writers Diary Teacher’s Guide.</i>
<p>All too often technology has become the focal point when discussing the school of the future. Rather than simply offering an examination of how using technology for classroom instruction changes education, <i>Building School 2.0: How to Create the Schools We Need</i> offers a larger discussion of how education, learning, and our physical school spaces can—and should—change in order to give students the education they deserve.</p> <p><i>Building School 2.0</i> is based on the work done at Science Leadership Academy (SLA) and its founding principal Chris Lehmann and former SLA teacher Zac Chase. ­Lehmann and Chase reveal the challenges of changing how we educate our children and the ­techniques and approaches they employed to create a school that is technology-rich, collaborative, and learner-centric. As the authors explain, the best educational strategies enable networked learning that allows research, creativity, communication, and collaboration to help prepare students to be functional citizens within a modern society. <p>The model outlined in <i>Building School 2.0</i> presents ninety-five theses that are ­designed to help educators and administrators—in all schools both private and public—­examine specific practices in their own schools. These ninety-five theses are written with the intention to open conversations and elicit questions for educators and administrators to explore with colleagues. Lehmann and Chase challenge educators, administrators, and parents to construct more modern and humane spaces for our most cherished resource: our students.

Diese Produkte könnten Sie auch interessieren:

Teaching Skills For Dummies
Teaching Skills For Dummies
von: Sue Cowley
EPUB ebook
17,99 €
Copyediting and Proofreading For Dummies
Copyediting and Proofreading For Dummies
von: Suzanne Gilad
PDF ebook
17,99 €
Assessing the Online Learner
Assessing the Online Learner
von: Rena M. Palloff, Keith Pratt
PDF ebook
26,99 €