A dashboard for the 7C’s – metrics for pedagogical master planning

I’m just playing with strands of ideas here…imagining one possible weave or braid.

Strand 1: 10,000 Hours

In Malcolm Gladwell’s Outliers, as well as in earlier work by Howard Gardner, the 10,000-hour rule is posited. Essentially, to become expert, or deeply disciplined and proficient, one typically must commit to at least 10,000 hours of dedicated practice. Hold that thought for a minute…like you’re holding one strand between your fingers.

Strand 2: Tracking Time

Not too long ago, I wrote about tracking my time at Unboundary, and I imagined what a similar practice of tracking time might be like in schools. Now, hold this second strand between another set of mental fingers.

Strand 3: The 7 C’s

In Trilling and Fadel’s 21st Century Skills: Learning for Life in Our Times, the authors advocate for the traditional 3 R’s (reading, writing, and arithmetic), as well as 7 C’s:

  1. Critical thinking and problem solving
  2. Communications, information, and media literacy
  3. Collaboration, teamwork, and leadership
  4. Creativity and innovation
  5. Computing and ICT literacy
  6. Career and learning self-reliance
  7. Cross-cultural understanding

Now, we can braid and weave.

Do we know how much time our students – the individual students – spend engaged in these seven activities? If a parent asked me, “Bo, I’ve been reading and listening about 21st C education. Can you tell me how much time your students spend in the 7 C’s? Can you explain some examples of how they might engage in the 7 C’s?”

I think I could knock the second question out of the park. I would totally strike out on the first question.

What if we had some sort of “dashboard” that could show us how much time our students are spending in these various C’s? Yes, you know…like the dashboards in our cars.

In our cars, the dashboards give us real-time feedback on speed, oil pressure, engine temperature, fuel remaining, battery voltage, etc. In 2012, couldn’t we have some sort of tech-enabled dashboard for how much time students are actually getting to immerse themselves in and practice the 7 C’s? It’s so easy now for me to examine how I spend my time at work by using the time tracker. I can see what projects I am working on, I can review what and how I am researching, and I can understand where I might need to rebalance my time allotments.

Wouldn’t it be insightful and informative to know, even if just for one day or one week or one month, how much time a student…

  • sits in lecture passively listening
  • practices communicating with an authentic audience
  • engages in collaborative problem-solving for a real-world problem (like a school’s recycling versus trash quandary)
  • participates in 3D printer activity to create something useful via Maker methods

By looking at the dashboard, I could see how close my son PJ is getting to 10,000 hours in “Creativity and innovation.” I could review how much time he is getting to engage in “Communications, information, and media literacy.” We could make some great, informed adjustments with this information. Just like we know when to stop for gas, when to adjust our speed, when to add oil to our car.

As a school we could examine aggregates and grouped data. We could look at departments to see if one department contributes more to certain C’s and another department contributes more to a different sub-set of C’s. We could see our bright spots and our areas for growth.

There could even be an app for that!

Driving without those gauges and instrument panels on the dashboard could cause a disaster! Using our dashboard makes us a better driver…and helps us get to where we are trying to go with greater success.

Developing and utilizing such tools could really help a school trying to create its finely tuned pedagogical master plan!

Dr. Jason B. Huett, GPEE, #EdReform Themes and Catalysts

Today, I had reason and opportunity to dig deeper into GPEE – the Georgia Partnership for Excellence in Education. As I was digging, I took time to explore Dr. Jason B. Huett’s keynote at GPEE’s recent August 2012 event. Dr. Huett is the Associate Dean of Online Development at University of West Georgia.

During Dr. Huett’s presentation, he highlights five themes in educational change and ten catalysts for these shifts.

5 Themes in Educational Change from Dr. Jason B. Huett

  1. Education will be more technology-advanced.
  2. Education will be more accessible.
  3. Education will be more flexible.
  4. Education will be more social.
  5. Education will be more affordable.

10 Catalysts for Educational Change from Dr. Jason B. Huett

  1.  Loss of information control.
  2. Promise of open education.
  3. Rise of apps culture, cloud, and wireless.
  4. Bye bye books.
  5. Coming of brick and clicks.
  6. Rise of the competition.
  7. Buyer’s market.
  8. Time as the new variable.
  9. Power of collaboration.
  10. New world of work.

Dr. Huett’s talk is very much worth the listen. He puts very interesting flesh on the 15 interconnected bones listed above. In the embedded video below, his speech begins at 18:05.

#MustRead Shares (weekly)

  • tags: brands responsibility #MustRead

  • tags: learning changing leadership #MustRead Brainfood

  • tags: school reform business-education partnership #MustRead

  • tags: school model unschooling #MustRead

  • tags: design innovation #MustRead

  • tags: blueprint malaysia schools of the future future of schools #MustRead 21C

    • Wave 1 (2012-2015) focusing on efforts to turn around the system by supporting teachers and focusing on core skills
    • education transformation is to take place over 13 years
    • Wave 2 (2016-2020) on accelerating system improvement
    • Wave 3 (2021-2025) on moving towards excellence with increased operational flexibility.
    • access, quality, equity, unity and efficiency.
    • six key attributes that will enable them to be globally competitive
    • knowledge, thinking skills, leadership skills, bilingual proficiency, ethics and spirituality, as well as national identity.
      • Reminds me of Gardner’s Five Minds for the Future
    • 1. Provide equal access to quality education of an international standard.

    • 2. Ensure every child is proficient in Bahasa Malaysia and English language.

    • 3. Develop values-driven Malaysians.

    • 4. Transform teaching into the profession of choice.

    • 5. Ensure high-performing school leaders in every school.

    • 6. Empower State Education Departments, District Education Offices and schools to customise solutions based on need.

    • 7. Leverage information and communication technology to scale up quality learning across Malaysia.

    • 8. Transform ministry delivery capabilities and capacity.

    • 9. Partner with parents, community and private sector at scale.

    • 10. Maximise student outcomes for every ringgit.

    • 11. Increase transparency for direct public accountability.

    • Over the course of a year, over 50,000 ministry officials, teachers, principals, parents, students and members of the public across Malaysia were engaged via interviews, focus groups, surveys, and National Dialogue townhall and roundtable discussions.
  • Our students want to become innovators. Our economy needs them to become innovators. The question is: As educators, do we have the courage to disrupt conventional wisdom and pursue the innovations that matter most?

    Third, to push educational innovation, districts need to partner with one another, businesses, and nonprofits to establish true R&D labs—schools of choice that are developing 21st-century approaches to learning.

    tags: education innovation schools of the future future of schools school model UnbouBrainFood #MustRead Brainfood

    • need to develop ways to assess essential skills with digital portfolios that follow students through school
    • assess teachers’ effectiveness by analysis of their students’ work, rather than on the basis of a test score. Teachers and administrators should also build digital portfolios
    • Third, to push educational innovation, districts need to partner with one another, businesses, and nonprofits to establish true R&D labs—schools of choice that are developing 21st-century approaches to learning.
    • we need to incorporate a better understanding of how students are motivated to do their best work into our course and school designs. Google has a 20 percent rule, whereby all employees have the equivalent of one day a week to work on any project they choose. These projects have produced many of Google’s most important innovations. I would like to see this same rule applied to every classroom in America, as a way to create time for students to pursue their own interests and continue to develop their sense of play, passion, and purpose.
    • Our students want to become innovators. Our economy needs them to become innovators. The question is: As educators, do we have the courage to disrupt conventional wisdom and pursue the innovations that matter most?
  • tags: innovation colorado academy school model EdJourney #MustRead

  • Dewey: “The world in which most of us live is a world in which everyone has a calling and occupation, something to do,” he wrote. “Some are managers and others are subordinates. But the great thing for one as for the other is that each shall have had the education which enables him to see within his daily work all there is in it of large and human significance.”

    tags: education learning freedom Dewey edreform purpose of education #MustRead

    • From this narrow, instrumentalist perspective, students are consumers buying a customized playlist of knowledge
    • philosopher John Dewey, America’s most influential thinker on education, opposed this effort. Though he was open to integrating manual training in school curriculums, Dewey opposed the dual-track system because he recognized that it would reinforce the inequalities of his time. Wouldn’t such a system have the same result today?
    • Education should aim to enhance our capacities, Dewey argued, so that we are not reduced to mere tools.
    • Dewey had a different vision. Given the pace of change, it is impossible (he noted in 1897) to know what the world will be like in a couple of decades, so schools first and foremost should teach us habits of learning.
    • awareness of our interdependence
    • “The inclination to learn from life itself and to make the conditions of life such that all will learn in the process of living is the finest product of schooling.”
    • The inclination to learn from life can be taught in a liberal arts curriculum, but also in schools that focus on real-world skills, from engineering to nursing. The key is to develop habits of mind that allow students to keep learning, even as they acquire skills to get things done. This combination will serve students as individuals, family members and citizens — not just as employees and managers.
      • Yes, the “key is to develop habits of mind that allow students to keep learning.” However, the type of learning for the future is more expansive than the brand of learning provided in many schools. 
    • Dewey’s insight that learning in the process of living is the deepest form of freedom
    • In a nation that aspires to democracy, that’s what education is primarily for: the cultivation of freedom within society
    • higher education’s highest purpose is to give all citizens the opportunity to find “large and human significance” in their lives and work.
      • Are we? Are we giving all citizens the opportunity to find large and human significance in their lives and work?
  • tags: nytimes com friedman edreform #MustRead

  • tags: edreform ActionEd future of schools curriculum #MustRead Brainfood

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Ed Zed Omegas: High School Dropouts Band Together to Learn

Six disenchanted young people have dropped out of high school, hooked up with a guidance counselor, and banded together to study the education issue into which they have plunged. And they are crowd sourcing their learning about the deep dive on high-school alternatives. We can follow along with their blogs, their collective site, their tweets. We can even watch on public television.

Check this out…

And then, be sure to read here

Fascinating!

[Thanks to Chuck Reece for putting me onto Zed Omega.]

Disruption, GOOD #FutureLearning

In “Graduating All Students Innovation-Ready,” Tony Wagner ended his piece with this question about courage:

Our students want to become innovators. Our economy needs them to become innovators. The question is: As educators, do we have the courage to disrupt conventional wisdom and pursue the innovations that matter most?

Recently, GOOD published a piece about a few of the disruptors – those who are pushing us to consider the bigger possible (r)evolutions in education. It’s great material for a bit of optimistic brain stretching…


Future Learning Short Documentary (12:50)

More about the film
GOOD Video: How Do We Make Learning Relevant to Students?

[Thanks to Govantez Lowndes for putting me onto the documentary on GOOD. I had missed it.]