Home » 21st Century Learning »21st Century Skills »Education » Currently Reading:

What Do You Have to Lose?

December 7, 2010 21st Century Learning, 21st Century Skills, Education 9 Comments

It is a new idea for many classroom teachers/students to move from writing, reading and “doing” work, not only for themselves, supervisors/parents or for a monetary compensation/grade, to share their work openly and freely with others. The idea of putting oneself “out there on the internet” (on a larger scale than the teacher lounge) and publicly “brag” about successes, admit failures, ask for help or document one’s learning and teaching process, feels unnatural and even scares many of them.

It is not the first time I am thinking about this “sharing thing”. You can read about my train of thought by looking at previous posts about the topic:

In the last few months I am reading and hearing more and more about sharing from others. Starting with Dean Shareski‘s keynote at the K12Online Conference 2010 “Sharing, the Moral Imperative“.

Dean starts out his presentation with a strong quote by Ewan Mcintosh.

Dean says that we are in the early stages of a sharing revolution that includes so much more sharing than previous generations would have ever considered. Dean makes us think about how we share so much nowadays, our “immediate presence, location, photos, thoughts, videos, reading lists and more”. He continues to ask: Is sharing an obligation in education? All the “sharing” that was required of teachers before was an occasional presentation at a conference, a faculty meeting or with a colleague down the hall. Sharing was “rare, hard and a luxury”. Now that these obstacles seem to have evaporated due to technology tools and social network platforms, they have been replaced by the “who, where and the how” part of sharing.

What is your reaction to that statement?

You have a moral obligation to share as an educator!

What are your reasons to share or not to share as a teacher?

Alan November in his book “Empowering Students with Technology” says:

Collaboration and sharing knowledge are the highly prized skills. This expectation of collaboration will eventually reach the teaching profession. Teachers will be valued for their ability to share their knowledge and solve problems about teaching and learning than an individual teacher could not solve alone.

Sharing seen as a valued skill for educators? Wow! What a divergence to the concept of teaching behind closed doors and holding on to all the resources, lesson plans and expertise a teacher has developed and reserved for the students they have in front of them. Not only does November predict that sharing will be valued, but he also designates sharing as a “skill”, which is defined as the:

Capacity to do something well; technique, ability. Skills are usually acquired or learned, as opposed to abilities, which are often thought of as innate

If sharing is a skill and a skill is “usually acquired or learned”, then we might have to re-think start thinking about sharing as something we need to point out, incorporate, teach, model and coach others in.

Clay Shirkey also talks about sharing in his book “Cognitive Surplus”. He makes the point, like Shareski, that “sharing” is changing. It has changed because of social media and networking tools, that allow anyone to produce and publish. He is very clear about the effect large quantities of people who share are having on media and society. They share for free, simply because they can and because they enjoy being able to connect with each other. We have not grasped the potential sharing might have on society and more particular on learning and education, due to the vast (and growing) number of people who share and aggregate an infinite number of topics.

Expanding our focus to include producing and sharing doesn’t even require making big shifts in individual behavior to create enormous changes in outcome. The world’s cognitive surplus is so large that small changes can have huge ramifications in aggregate.

We are increasingly becoming one another’s infrastructure. This may be a cold-blooded way of looking at sharing- that we increasingly learn about the world through stranger’s random choices about what to share- but even that has some human benefits.

Our ability to balance consumption with production and sharing, our ability to connect with one another, is transforming the sense of media from a particular sector of the economy to a cheap and globally available tool for organized sharing.

Once we understand the moral imperative  of sharing (Dean Shareski)…once we buy into our part in the cognitive surplus to solve universal problems too big to solve on an individual basis (Clay Shirkey)… once we acknowledge that  sharing knowledge is a valued skill nowadays (Alan November), then we NEED to make “sharing” a vital component of our professional planning, collaboration, curriculum mapping, unit plans,  lesson plans and daily interaction with students.

What do you have to lose?

  • Look at the fifth grade teacher who shared her Christopher Columbus unit with the world by producing a video newscast and is receiving requests for her students to be “experts” to teach others about what they have learned.
  • Look at the fourth grade teacher who uploaded her students’ book trailer videos to her classroom blog only to be contacted by one of the book’s author. They are arranging a Skype call by the author into the classroom.
  • Look at the Middle School Language Arts teacher who shared her student’s essay on the classroom blog only to have the family and friends of the fallen soldier  she wrote about contact them to express a thank you.
  • Look at what happens when I created a blogging unit and someone from St. Petersburg, Russia chose to translate the work into Russian for teachers and students, who most likely I will never meet, to benefit from.
  • Look what happens when a college professor, Alec Couros, creates and shares a diagram of “The Networked Teacher”.
  • Watch more “Amazing Stories” (of sharing) collected by Alan Levine (2009)(2010)

How do you, as an educator, share your wisdom, your experience, your knowledge? How do you enable and encourage your students to share for the sake of sharing? How do you share to contribute to a larger goal of solving a problem or teaching others who you might never meet or hear from?

What are some of the kickbacks you have gotten from sharing on a larger scale?

Take a few minutes to watch Dean’s excellent video and his view on the moral imperative of sharing and… well…share your thoughts!

Related Posts with Thumbnails

Currently there are "9 comments" on this Article:

  1. Silvia,
    After reading many incredible blogs from educators who generously share (yours included) I started sharing a year ago by starting my own blog. Yes I was incredibly nervous, after all, I wasn’t an expert – just a teacher writing about some different projects I did with my kids.
    As a result, I’ve met some really great educators from other parts of the world and our students have connected on various projects.
    I will quite often read my posts to my students (since they’re usually about them), hoping to model sharing. My students now blog and connect with other students. As my students and I share via our blogs, the world has opened up. That has been a great, unforeseen kickback.
    Heather Durnin recently posted..Using Diigo in the Middle School Classroom

  2. Chris Hyde says:

    Hi, Silivia.
    I have been a regular reader of your blog for quite some time now and I truly appreciate everything you share! I was also inspired by Dean’s keynote about sharing as a moral imperative, and as a result, I have started asking teachers in my district to provide me with a write-up of different ways they use technology in their classrooms. In a district of our size, there is no way I can know about all the great stuff our teachers are doing, so I enlisted their help. I’ve been using this as a “guest blog” format, and I’m hopeful that even though I’m a little fish in a big pond that it will have some impact. :)
    Thanks again for everything you do and thanks to your post, it looks like I have some new reading material.

    http://baconbytes.wordpress.com/

    Chris
    Chris Hyde recently posted..What Classroom Walls

  3. Hi Sylvia,

    Firstly thank you for sharing as always. You’re absolutely right the time is now for sharing and collaborating, there are so many messages and drivers for success when considering sharing.

    I know here in the UK the government is finally recognising the importance of shared expertise and communities of practice and actually experiencing best practice in action, not from just reading a text book.

    I really loved reading your blog and watching Dean’s presentation, for me heathers response clearly sums it all up fabulously. Just be taking small steps in sharing opens up huge potential and models positive practice to the most important elements of education the students!

    I will highlight your blog and Dean’s presentation on our CPD network (http://irisconnecteducatio.ning.com/) as I hope as many educators as possible can get to read and view the above.

    I have recently come across a few teachers who don’t recognise the value in sharing best practice, to give credit to their concerns I feel they have not been shown or taught the skill, and their inhibitions as Heather highlighted about being nervous and not feeling like an expert. I think your right about teaching people how to share, it is a skill and quite often it’s just our own perceptions that inhibit us.

    We are in the age of social media, reducing the implications of cost location and how to share! This is such an exciting time for everyone not just education as we have experts 2 feet in front of our face each and every day just by the click of the button. It’s a simple matter of spending 2 minutes searching or simply asking on somewhere like twitter.

  4. Fantastic post – great info. We agree that educators have a responsibility to share. It is invaluable to not only the teacher community to learn from each other’s successes and ‘failures’, but also to the student community. At http://www.Learning.com we offer several resources and products around this subject. Our new digital learning environment, Sky, enables teachers to integrate any Web resource into their curriculum – and share these with other teachers!

  5. We agree that Educators have a responsibility to share and think it is invaluable to not only the teacher community to learn from each other’s successes and ‘failures’, but also to the student community. At http://www.learning.com we offer several resources and products around this subject. Our new digital learning environment, Sky, allows districts to integrate any Web resources into their curriculum – and share these with other teachers!

  6. [...] the full story, CLICK HERE If you enjoyed this article, please consider sharing it! Tagged with: [...]

  7. Andrea Mail says:

    My husband and I are extremely grateful to be the parents of 3 students who are benefiting from what Silvia and other faculty members at our school are doing with regard to integrating technology into the classroom. Thank you, Silvia!
    On a daily basis as parents, we encourage our children to share, to be kind and empathetic toward people they encounter physically. Along those lines, we also believe it is critical that children learn how to share/communicate safely, effectively and responsibly in the virtual world of which we are global citizens. How many schools out there are like ours which are teaching these important skills? I hope there are many!
    Our daughters come home each day from school energized by what they are learning and sharing with other children across the world. As our kids attend a Jewish school, technology such as skype and blogs has helped them to better define and appreciate their own religious heritage by learning how to explain and demonstrate it to others. It also has given them an extraordinary opportunity to observe how children in other countries learn, speak and pray.

  8. [...] RevolutionJohn Suter on Wanted: Collaboration Partner for American RevolutionAndrea Mail on What Do You Have to Lose?What do you have to lose? by Langwitches on What Do You Have to [...]

  9. [...] have been thinking about this post since reading Silvia Rosenthal Tolisano’s blog post on what do you have to lose on her Langwitches Blog. The post came to my attention after I clicked on a link that one of the [...]

Comment on this Article:

Subscribe to Langwitches via Email

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Archives

Choose a Category

In Need of Professional Development?

Contact
Silvia Rosenthal Tolisano for customized workshops, coaching and presentations.
Video Conference sessions available.

For a list of sample sessions visit Globally Connected Learning .

eduClipper

Upcoming Conferences

January 19-21, 2013 Sao Paolo, Brazil

April 28-30, 2013, Jacksonville, FL

Like Langwitches on Facebook

Digital Storytelling Tools for Educators

Guest Posts

Where’s the Authentic Audience? Guest Post by Andrea Hernandez

audience

Tweet Andrea Hernandez, known as edtechworkshop in the blogger- and Twittersphere has written a thought provoking blogpost about Where’s The Authentic Audience?  She takes a closer look at the buzz word circulating among blogging educators and classrooms and asks tough questions. What happens when there is no audience coming to …

(3 Comments)

Quality Commenting- Student Guest Post by Zoe M.

zoe

Tweet I invite few guest bloggers to share posts on Langwitches. This makes it especially rewarding to be able to present to my readers an incredible young lady. Zoe is growing by leaps and bounds as a blog writer and commenter. She is a fourth grader at the Martin J. …

(5 Comments)

Annotexting

annotexting

Tweet The following is a collaborative guest post by Michael Fisher and Jeanne Tribuzzi , of the Curriculum 21 Faculty. The companion LIVEBINDER OF INTERACTIVE TOOLS IS HERE. Expecting students to read deeply and draw meaningful conclusions is at the heart of the Common Core ELA standards. Students are asked …

(No Comments)

Professional Development

Entrepreneurialism, Student Voices and Authentic Work

eBook

Tweet Our 4th and 5th grade students(9-10 year olds) have been working with Mike Fisher, co-author of Upgrading your Curriculum and author of children’s poems. The goal of their collaboration is to create an eBook of Mike’s poems with students’ illustrations. Once produced, students will work on marketing, advertising and …

(23 Comments)

Students Are Speed Geeking

speed-geeking-5

Tweet During last year’s edJEWcon conference (a Teaching & Learning Institute for Jewish Educators, which  I help organize with Andrea Hernandez and Jon Mitzmacher),  we invited our Middle School students to attend our keynote session with Heidi Hayes Jacobs. We all watched magic happen, when students (without being asked) created …

(21 Comments)

New Forms of Professional Development

new-forms

Tweet You have all been there… Professional Development days at your school… Administration usually choose a topic, design the activities and/or bring in a speaker. Most likely,  they will be slides with bullet points…listening…turn to your partners…learning about a new initiative your school will take part in…etc. As more and …

(28 Comments)

Download

What am I Reading?

Silvia's bookshelf: currently-reading

Catching Up or Leading the Way: American Education in the Age of GlobalizationLost on Planet China: The Strange and True Story of One Man's Attempt to Understand the World's Most Mystifying Nation, or How He Became Comfortable Eating Live SquidThe World Is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-First CenturySECRETO BIEN GUARDADOThe Digital Diet: Todays Digital Tools in Small BytesFacebook Marketing: An Hour a Day

More of Silvia's books »
Silvia Tolisano's currently-reading book recommendations, reviews, quotes, book clubs, book trivia, book lists

21st Century Learning

Amplification of a Transportation Unit & a Survey

k-transportation3

Tweet In a unit on Transportation, our Kindergarteners read a large picture book “On the Move!” by Donna Latham Students got so interested into learning about different ways people around the globe got around. They were even ready to take a trip to Venice, Italy to ride in a Vaporetto. …

(10 Comments)

Stepping Up the Backchannel In the Classroom

backchanneling.1jpg

Tweet Students need our guidance to use virtual platforms for ACADEMIC purposes. We can’t rely on their “so called” native status to know how and what to do. Just a few years ago, no one had heard of “backchanneling”, nowadays, it has become main stream (although most people might not …

(26 Comments)

Entrepreneurialism, Student Voices and Authentic Work

eBook

Tweet Our 4th and 5th grade students(9-10 year olds) have been working with Mike Fisher, co-author of Upgrading your Curriculum and author of children’s poems. The goal of their collaboration is to create an eBook of Mike’s poems with students’ illustrations. Once produced, students will work on marketing, advertising and …

(23 Comments)

The Digital Learning Farm in Action

Entrepreneurialism, Student Voices and Authentic Work

eBook

Tweet Our 4th and 5th grade students(9-10 year olds) have been working with Mike Fisher, co-author of Upgrading your Curriculum and author of children’s poems. The goal of their collaboration is to create an eBook of Mike’s poems with students’ illustrations. Once produced, students will work on marketing, advertising and …

(23 Comments)

Assessment in the Modern Classroom: Part Two- Taxonomy of a Skype Conversation

taxonomy-skype.jpg

Tweet This is Part Two of Assessment in the Modern Classroom. Read Part One here. Assessing students’ writing, thinking level , understanding, learning connections via a Twitter stream, did not end the assessment upgrade for this particular learning opportunity. During the same Skype call, we paid special attention to how …

(23 Comments)

Learning in the Modern Classroom

skype

Tweet I can die happy now I have seen learning in the 21st Century modern classroom! The learning just oozes through the cracks of the physical classroom walls. Learning is amplified by the amount of people who are collaborating, participating, communicating and creating. The learning is NOT about the technology …

(41 Comments)

Global Education

Amplification of a Transportation Unit & a Survey

k-transportation3

Tweet In a unit on Transportation, our Kindergarteners read a large picture book “On the Move!” by Donna Latham Students got so interested into learning about different ways people around the globe got around. They were even ready to take a trip to Venice, Italy to ride in a Vaporetto. …

(10 Comments)

Wall of Intolerance- What if….

Tweet During my visit this past January to the Graded School, in São Paulo, Brazil, I met Jamie Tuttle  Middle School Guidance Counselor. He told me about an incident at their International School and the response as a community: We found our world map defaced with several derogatory and racist …

(6 Comments)

Where the Hell is Matt- Evolution

hellmatt

Tweet I have been following the “Where the Hell is Matt” videos since 2006. I always thought the video is a great hook for students into geography. There are three versions available with a clear evolution of Matt growing as he travels around the world. From dancing in isolation in …

(12 Comments)

Blogging With your Classroom

Beyond Pockets of Excellence in Blogging

visible-thinking

Tweet There are many, many pockets of excellence in classroom/student blogging out there. These blogs are driven, coached and nurtured by educators who “get it”. They get how blogging makes a difference in student learning, supports 21st century modern learning skills and literacies and at the same time basic reading …

(47 Comments)

Anatomy, Grammar, Syntax & Taxonomy of a Hyperlink

taxonomy-hyperlink-1

Tweet Hyperlinks make the World Wide Web what it is. If links did not exist, EVERY web page would be a stand alone. Let’s take a close look at these “clickable thingies” I  like the metaphor of thinking of hyperlinks as the “wormholes”, that transport us from one section of …

(23 Comments)

Assessment in the Modern Classroom: Part Three- Blog Writing

blog-post-assess

Tweet I believe we are on our way of taking a modern classroom learning opportunity and upgrading assessment forms to match new skills and new literacies while not forgetting traditionally assessed ones. We took a classroom Twitter feed (Part One) , looked at the conversation skills students exhibited during the Skype …

(30 Comments)

iPads

Kindergarteners Gaining Independence, Pride & Increased Comfort Level with the iPad

K-nouns-class

Tweet The picture above makes me smile… I see a group of Kindergarteners thinking, wondering, discussing, testing things out, collaborating, being proud of their independence as they are working with iPads. It was the first time, we “let go” with the iPads. Previously, we had iPad Centers, working with 3-4 …

(32 Comments)

Further Amplification… Other Languages…

upgrade-amplify-exercise.015

Tweet “Amplification” in education is a concept, I am deeply committed to. In a recent post, Upgrade & Amplification Exercise and Checklist, I try to break down the process of amplification and make it more transparent for educators. What I did not explicitly include  was the component of another language …

(7 Comments)

How Does iPad Workflow Fluency Look Like in Kindergarten

K-explain-everything

Tweet Recently, I tried to explain to a teacher from another school how we are trying to use iPads BEYOND apps. We have over 100 apps on our school iPads and introduce our students according to age level to a variety of them, but the focus of the use of …

(39 Comments)

Digital Storytelling

My StoryTelling App Folder(s)

storytelling-app

Tweet Matt Gomez shared a post today with a screenshot of his storytelling iPad app folder. I wanted to reciprocate and share mine. Storytelling I Folder StoryBuddy StoryBuilder StoryPagesHD Toontastic Tappy Memories StoryBoards Premium StoryMaker HD StoryPatch In a World … Drama Build a Story PhotoPuppets HD Epic Citadel Sock …

(20 Comments)

Visualizing Stories

K-ipads-1

Tweet I recently found a video of 1st graders using the iPad to visualize a poem that their teacher read to them. After students drew what they imagined, they got into pairs and explained their drawings to a partner. The teacher also circulated to listen and to ask deeper questions …

(20 Comments)

The Making of a Story in Kindergarten and Amplification Thoughts

qr-code-techno

Tweet Kindergarten time is storytelling time: Listening to stories, telling stories, acting stories out, learning how to read your own stories and creating your own stories! Learning about a holiday, like Thanksgiving in the USA, is the perfect time to cloak the historical origin into a fascinating story for five …

(28 Comments)

%d bloggers like this: