Alan November…Another Hero.
August 21, 2007Alan November presented at NECC on June 27th. I really wish I could condense what he said, but there were so many great points that it’s tough to try to simplify it all. I’ll just try and keep it as short as I can.
“You can add technology in the classroom without shifting the ownership of learning.” November is a huge advocate for students owning the learning. The days of the teacher having, managing, and sharing the knowledge they’d like to share, when they’d like to share it are, and should be, things of the past.
“Being told what to do (in the classroom) will no longer support you in surviving in a/our global economy.” Have the student manage their learning while the educator facilitates it within the learning environment.
By the time our students graduate, they should be completely interdependent to survive in our economy.
“Every child should feel the power, in a responsible and ethical way, of having their voice heard on a global scale.” I’m not and haven’t been much of a blogger in the past, but between this page and my MySpace page, I have created things that are “mine.” I love to share them with people that I think would be interested and passionate about the same things I am. Why should our kids not feel this way too?
Students should be “organized, self-directed, and working together in a high performance, collaborative” learning environment.
We, as educators, spend “too much time on the hows of technology and not near enough time on the whens and the whats” of it.
Bring two students to every technology training so they can help other students learn about the tools being presented as well.
Mr. November brought up a name I’ve heard many times over the past few years, Marco Torres. He teaches in San Fernando, California and supports his students in video production. They put together an annual film festival to showcase the work of his students. Check out the site to see the videos themselves There are some great examples of what kids can create when they are self-directed and allowed to be passionate about what they do in school. Cool stuff.
Have students present at conferences rather than teacher after teacher. Who is actually owning the learning then?
Use AltaVista.com, rather than or in addition to Google. Other perspectives never hurt. More depth on that point below.
To build on that point, assign your students to find other versions, perspectives, and interpretations of the history topics they study. This will provide a more global view of “famous” American historical events. The example he shared was use the internet to study the Japanese perspective of Hiroshima and then compare it to the American version. Using the internet to gather information from around the world can be a pretty powerful experience.
“Create global content made by students, for future students.” Use blogs and wikis to support this point. He shared a story of a college class he taught. The blog for that particular class grew to include former students of November’s that had studied the same information in the past. Three months after the class was over the blog was still going strong with discussion by the students. He created a classroom that went beyond the boundaries of time and space. That’s one thing technology can do for you if you use it in a certain way.
Finally, one point he made totally made sense to me and I believed it before he even said it. It was just really nice hearing it from someone with the influence and visibility he has, “You can implement technology and not increase teaching.” So true. It’s the teacher that makes the technology so powerful, not the other way around. Anyone who follows (or makes a living in) instructional technology lives by this belief.
If you get a chance to read November’s books or have a chance to hear him speak you will be amazed at what he has to say. He’s truly is an IT hero.
Posted by Jay Vean
