I just read William Chamberlain’s post and subsequent comments about Education Reform and Technology, in which he ponders this idea:
There are not enough teachers in my community with a large enough audience to drive education reform toward student-centered learning and away from high-stakes test driven curriculum.
and I feel a like a bit of a hypocrite because much of the conversation revolves around the inability of the Ed-tech community through their (our?) involvement in conferences to make much of a difference. And here I am in Hong Kong getting ready to give a workshop at an international school conference. I am reading through the comments, by people I respect and agree with on many issues, and wondering if my session is too focused on sharing tools or if it is based in pedagogy. I ask myself if David Wees would cross my session off his list. Am I focusing too much on tools or actually sharing student led ideas? More importantly am I presenting this information in a learner focused manner or am I like John said, “Acting like the expert.” All very important questions for sure, but not important when it comes to the question of what the Ed-Tech community is doing to reform education.
There is no doubt that there are thousands of passionate teachers working tirelessly worldwide to create new educational environments, but I agree with Will, “So why is nothing happening?” My answer is that reform is not an educational issue, but a political one. We do not need Ed-Reform, we need an educational revolution. Before you shake your head, and brand me an idealist ineffectual revolutionay clad in a Che Guevara shirt, let me explain.
I think we need to shift the question from what or how do we educate people to why do we educate them. What is the purpose of compulsory education for most of the world? Do we want kids to take over and control society or to be passive participants? I think there is a great gap between what we say and what we do. We have known for a century what we should do: John Dewey, and Paulo Freire believed:
A strong case for the importance of education not only as a place to gain content knowledge, but also as a place to learn how to live. In his eyes, the purpose of education should not revolve around the acquisition of a pre-determined set of skills, but rather the realization of one’s full potential and the ability to use those skills for the greater good.
Education and schooling are instrumental in creating social change
Education is a regulation of the process of coming to share in the social consciousness; and that the adjustment of individual activity on the basis of this social consciousness is the only sure method of social reconstruction
No pedagogy which is truly liberating can remain distant from the oppressed by treating them as unfortunates and by presenting for their emulation models from among the oppressors. The oppressed must be their own example in the struggle for their redemption
The oppressors must also be willing to rethink their way of life and to examine their own role in the oppression if true liberation is to occur; “those who authentically commit themselves to the people must re-examine themselves constantly”
Freire believed education to be a political act that could not be divorced from pedagogy. Freire defined this as a main tenet of critical pedagogy. Teachers and students must be made aware of the “politics” that surround education. The way students are taught and what they are taught serves a political agenda. Teachers, themselves, have political notions, they bring into the classroom.
Now read most missions statements from schools around the world and you will see terms like: global citizen, critical thinker, change makers, caring, collaborative etc…This all sounds well and good, I think most teachers participating in the Ed-tech movement would agree that they got into education as way a to help move the world forward in some way. To help arm the next generation with the tools to be more kind, responsive and responsible than past generations have been. To guide students to understand these values we must understand that, “Teachers and students must be made aware of the “politics” that surround education. The way students are taught and what they are taught serves a political agenda. Teachers, themselves, have political notions, they bring into the classroom.” So what is going on? Dewey was saying these things a hundred years ago, we still can’t educate children to educate themselves? With all the “tools” and community creators, why are we sill left asking them say questions? Why are we no closer than Dewey was a century ago? I think this is the crux of Will’s question, and the answer is that Ed-Reform is not yet a political movement anywhere in the world.
We need to ask ourself who would suffer from such a truly educated society? Who would lose power should poor kids from Missouri connect to Mexican immigrants in Arizona, to young people in Egypt, to Iran, to Africa, to The Bronx? Who has the most to lose should the oppressed gain a voice, have a vote, get a piece of the power? Another question: who has gained the most from the traditional educational system? Who controls the wealth, the media, the arms, the airwaves, the text books, the technology, your school boards, the lobbies, our congress? Would these forces gain from a generation of educated revolutionaries with a collaborative, empathetic awareness? Next time you are at a conference ask the corporate sponsors what they think? Email your textbook companies and ask them? Next time you are at a school board meeting ask the chair of the meeting? Ask the people bankrupting schools systems so they can sell your gym to Coca-Cola and privatize your school? Ask the people deconstructing your teacher’s union? Ask the Secretary of Education if he is truly ready for the oppressed to be educated. To storm the streets and demand a piece of them pie. Tell them to look to Egypt if they are still not convinced that things will change soon enough. Ask your students if they would prefer to wait another hundred years while we go to Tech conferences, or if maybe organizing themselves and taking to the streets may be more effective?
Power never relinquishes power and educational reform is no different. Education is the most powerful tool of oppression and the people who have the most to lose will not give it up without a fight. We can go to conferences till our faces turn blue, we can blog and tweet, and struggle in our individual classrooms, but until we educate ourselves, our peers and most importantly our students to stand up and be heard, nothing will change.
But I am sitting in a nice corporate hotel room in Hong Kong wearing a plush white robe as I type on my shiny MacBook getting ready to share how Google Docs is “revolutionizing” my classroom , which happens to be in a for-profit school run by a corporation in Indonesia. So what the hell do I know?
Jabiz,
Great post! I feel I could said all of the same things in my own way – so I have little to offer. I only hope others who aren’t really thinking about these things will engage them in doing so.
And yes, you may well be working in a context of privilege and be a holder of some privilege but you are forever reflexive about it (no need to apologize for it. Just own it, reflect and move on, right?). That’s the difference between you and 99% of the others I see out there who teach in more privileged contexts and do not ever account for the existing supports and privileges that contribute to their students engagement, enthusiasm and creativity. In your case, learners are getting a bit more than an innovative class. They’re being engaged to think differently about things via the *ideas* you share and how you share those ideas. We all have some form of privilege – whether we own it and how we reflect on it in our practice, beliefs and actions is the key thing:
http://web2.uvcs.uvic.ca/courses/csafety/mod2/media/flower.htm
It’s the ideas, not the tools, that really define what we talk about when we talk about change.
Important issues. I’m not convinced that revolution is the best method for change — it is sometimes a part of a larger process, but people taking to the streets is just as often to slow change as it is to forment it. But you are right in saying that education as it is now constituted is by nature conservative, focused on the past while rarely inviting a meaningful action in the present, let alone thinking about the future in a meaningful way.
What concerns me in particular about the edtech movement is the manner in which we seem quite happy to ignore the influence of corporations to influence or even control the direction of education. Having tablets instead of textbooks sounds great, but aren’t we essentially just shifting the power from the publishers to the platform owner, who will take about a week to be in bed with the publishers to reformat their old materials? Just because we use electronics instead of paper doesn’t change anything. It’s how we use it.
Chamberlain is right about the questions we should be asking. Are we just doing the same old crap, but using a talking dog to do it?
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Jabiz, sorry it took me so long to get back to your comment/post.
I don’t think there are enough of us revolutionizing (evolutionizing?, devolutioning?) their classrooms. I think a very large majority are simply doing the job they had done to them. There is no awareness inherent in them that things can be changed, or for that matter should be changed.
Several times I have proposed creating a political party with a single education platform. I truly believe that only a big political entity can wield enough power to make these conversations take place outside of the back alleys of Twitter. The problem is, nobody seems to want to hear it. It is like there is a taboo about educators being politically involved. I’m not even sure that the taboo is generated by outside pressure either. I am not hearing a lot of push back aimed at Wisconsin teachers because of their “sick-out”.
The world can’t change without ideas, but ideas are just dreams if they are not implemented somehow….
I love the idea of a party based on Education. I love the idea of more parties no matter what they are about. Our democracy has been stifled by a two party system and many voices have been drowned out.
Curious to see what comes out of Wisconsin. What they do there will set precedent for us all.
This is an inspiring post and one I identify with since moving from the states to The Netherlands. I moved her for a lot of reasons, the main one being to start a life with my Dutch partner, but I can’t help but feel like I left behind a lot of the schools and students I said I wanted to help. I will be teaching at a school similar to your own in the fall and I’m excited about being able to implement many of the technologies I know create opportunities for deeper learning and self-exploration. Those kids need great teachers and schools just as much as the rest of the kids in the world. But sometimes, in the deep corners of my heart, I think about the kids I was teaching just last year with a chalkboard and an overhead stained with pen marks and “so and so was here.” They’re graduating this year, most of them anyway, and I’m not sure where they’re going to end up. Their school system promotes 21st Century Learning and technology, but like most school systems this is mainly “tech washing” and doesn’t really translate to innovation in the classroom. There are (incredibly slow) laptop carts you can rent occasionally, unless one of your students breaks one and the IT department frowns on you and hesitates to rent them out to you again (yeah, that happened to me). And even with the laptops it seems every site is blocked. These students have a lot working against them (troublesome home lives, gangs in their neighborhoods, SES, etc.) and I feel like their schools failed them – that I failed them for being a part of the status quo.
I left for a better life and a more fulfilling career as an educator – to be able to pursue my philosophies and ideas in an environment that supports them. But am I the equivalent of an educational draft dodger? My thoughts and ideas censored because “you weren’t there, man.”
I’ve mentioned this to you before, but I feel like the discussions that happen on Twitter around education are generally masturbatory acts that allows the ed tech thought leaders to try out new theses with a choir that is generally already behind them. You’re right to ask “where’s the revolution?” because it’s not here yet.