Home again, home again . . .
When Debra (my teaching partner and co-presenter) and I landed back home at YVR late on Thursday night, I cannot tell you how remarkable it was to hear the Canadian customs woman tell me I was "free to go" and know how true that was on so many levels. The Vancouver air smelled lush and green, and there was my brother waiting at the end of the walkway with a WELCOME HOME poster, 2 bouquets of flowers, and congratulatory hugs.
California was sunny and beautiful; the conference was interesting; and the time we spent with the Freepath people was thought-provoking, but the US seemed to this Canuck to be a country pervaded by an atmosphere of 'orange alert' level tension. Compared to Canada, it feels as though American society has drawn a ring of fear around itself. There is a generation of children who now does not know what it is to live without that. I'll visit the US again, and I'll enjoy it's greatness, but give me little Canada to come home to everytime.
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I had very good intentions of continuing with the Freepath interview posts, but time got away from me as I was preparing for the conference -- carving and whittling and polishing to release the message I really wanted to deliver from the pages of material I started with. (Michelangelo had nothing on me!)
I do not work from a story board, but research and write lots and then look for the thread and themes that emerge. By literally looking at what's on my mind, I discover what I truly want to say. It's a slow and laborious process because it's always difficult to let go of those 'thought jewels' -- so artfully crafted to have just the right tone and just the right wry bit of humour -- in the interest of clarity and time.
The point of all this is that it took me right up to the last few minutes before the presentation at San Jose to get it all just right -- so there was no more time for blog posts.
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To those of you who came to see us there, we hope some part of our presentation resonated with you. We'd love you to give us some feedback. Perhaps you'll email me with the answers to the following 4 questions and any comments or suggestions you'd like to add:
(a) Which part of the presentation was the most interesting to you?
(b) Which part held your interest the least?
(c) Will you be trying Freeapth?
(d) Which of our other tools might you try?
Also, if you'd like to receive this blog regularly, please send me your email address. I'm trying to find out from the team at Posterous how I can send you all an update notice.
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To the 2 people from Toronto -- I'm so glad you found us!!! Did we say/show anything that particularly interested you? I'm thinking of setting up a network of Canadian educators who use Freepath. I know of at least one person in Alberta. Are you interested?
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This is one of our students, Syd G-B, using Freepath to research photos for her PowerPoint for Peace project slide.
NEXT 2 FREEPATH QUESTIONS:
How do you balance the use of "leading edge" tools with the normal time requirements as teachers?
Simply put, the flexible structure of the learning environment in our alternate school allows Debra and me to have the luxury of being able to make the time needed to learn and implement “leading edge” tools. Working with individualized programs relieves us of the need to live within strict timelines. Our kids keep working on a subject until they finish. For some students this can be accomplished in a few weeks; for others a few months. The self-paced instruction gives us the time to breathe, to think, to collaborate, and to learn new and interesting technology in a non-frantic, non-stressful manner, and to launch centre-wide projects like Powerpoint for Peace and our Earthcast’08 presentation.
How does Freepath fit into your classroom?
Freepath happens to be the tool I found and Deb agrees that is capable of helping us address a number of challenges, such as: how to easily combine different kinds of resources in one lesson; how to provide instruction that provides for different learning styles, multiple intelligences, and varying abilities; how to work around the limited bandwidth in our school; and how to maximize student on-task time in our individualized setting.
Here’s what I envision:
Students will load up their thumbdrives (we can’t yet depend on fast or consistent internet connection) and they will be able to work on our material 24/7. Many of them are night owls working on their computers at home anyway -- we might as well capitalize on this. They can do the assignments right on the Freepath screen or print and work by hand if they wish. The files can be deleted and replaced when the work is completed. Their most interesting work samples can be stored in student portfolios at myFreepath.
A unit built in Freepath can truly get us away from traditional learning centre content packages -- duotangs with fading photocopied text material and lists of questions or written assignments. Once we have loaded a playlist with the relevant text pages, idea diagrams, Powerpoints, pod- or vod-casts, other multimedia materials, and response form templates, we can let the students loose.
Units constructed this way enable us to more easily differentiate learning by customizing activities to meet the needs of the student, and they ‘free‘ the student to negotiate the ‘path’way to learning.
For a stronger student, we can leave the completion of work required to meet the objectives more open-ended. Whereas a special sequence of activities can be selected and arranged by just shifting the cues (frames) for students who need more direction or who have trouble with reading or grasping concepts. The neat thing here is that we don’t have to rely on print and long videos. We can dole the concepts out in smaller chunks and the students can go back as many times as is needed to really get the answers. We’re trying to minimize the hours spent reading content material they really don’t understand and answering questions by trying to match words and copy the ‘right stuff’.
The material can be easily reshaped over time as we listen to the students’ feedback and add new resources and remove others. A case in point -- my mum sent me an article about a recent discovery of the oldest rock in the world (4.28 billion years) in northern Quebec. All my old stuff has the oldest rock in the North West Territories (4.03 billion years). Right now I have to amend the old package, recopy it and toss out the old ones. Once it’s all in Freepath I’ll be able to change a couple of cues and be totally up to date. I may even have a student do that as part of a learning activity -- to reinforce the notion that scientific knowledge is always growing.
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