Tag Archives: DC101

A Day in the Life- The Making of Time

“How do you have time to all of this?” This is the first question most people ask me after I give a talk or present a workshop on networked learning and the use of technology. By “all of this” they most likely mean: blogging, checking RSS feeds, Tweeting, or any other of the million things I most likely prattled on and on about during the previous hour. To them my life must look something like this:

cc licensed ( BY ) flickr photo shared by porschelinn

Or maybe this:

There is probably some truth to both images, but the reality is quite different. I have written before about what ubiquitous daily technology use looks like for me…

…She said, “Yeah Jabiz but you seem to spend a lot of time on the computer. I want to have a life.” I am paraphrasing what she said. I know this teacher fairly well, so I didn’t take offense to her comment. I am quite certain that she wasn’t implying that I don’t have a life, and this post is not a defense of my behaviors, but it really got me thinking, do people really think that using technology is a choice to be made that opposes having a life? Do people think that tech-geeks choose the vacant lifeless draw of their screens over “real” life?

You can read the post in its entirety here. Scary to think that it is over three years old, but still somehow relevant. In this post, however, the one you are reading now, I have tried to do things a bit differently. Sure you can repeatedly read about the many ways that people use technology as a tool to enhance their daily lives, but sometimes it helps to actually get a play-by-play visual.

That is what I tried to do. I have created a fifteen minute film about my daily workflow. Exercise in ego? Maybe. Come on Jabiz who the wants to watch fifteen minutes of your daily life. I know, I know, but making the clip has been a very eye-opening experience for me. Perhaps it is a bit much, but I hope that people find it useful when thinking about their own technology use. I hope you can use it, or parts of it, to help talk to your staff about different ways that people use technology. It is not the model, but a model to help you think about the ways you organize your day.

“We don’t have time, we make it.” Nothing can be more true in the digital age, when there is so much pressure to do so many different things. Kudos to anyone who actually watches the whole thing. I hope it gives a balanced and accurate view of a typical day in my life. I’ll meet you on the other side for some reflection and closing thoughts.

As I was watching myself go through the day, I couldn’t help but think of a passage I recently read in a post by Alan Levine:

I find even the terminology strange– to “go online” as if it were a place. Do we sit down on the couch, press the remote, and say we are “going TV”? Maybe that’s a poor analogy, but using the “go” makes it suggest we are having some sort of out of body experience.

Part of this seems historic, because in the previous decades of networked technology, we had to go to a place- first it was some special building with a mainframe computer, then maybe a computer lab, then as microcomputers hit the home front, we were picking ourselves up from the living room, and going to some other room to be connected.

But with tablets, ipads, internet connected phones, we can go online almost where-ever we are.  It’s my personal contention that a suggestion of ourselves moving from “offline” to “online” is a false binary construct. We are who we are, period. Read more

I have no idea how to answer when people ask me how much time I spend online. In a sense, I am never offline. Like Alan mentioned, the web is not a place I go; I don’t go online, I live online. We can discuss how this type of connection can be problematic and unhealthy in the comment section below, but I hope my video and previous post illustrate that I am not having a consistent Clockwork Orange experience.

I am a father, a teacher, an artist…blah, blah, blah, you have heard it all before. The point of this video and post, if there is one, is that how we incorporate technology into our lives is a very personal experience. Your school is most likely demanding that you use more technology in your classroom, but until you are using technology in a comfortable way for you, in your daily life, it will not make sense.  The comfortable way is crucial. No one is saying that you need to get up at 5:00am and check Twitter. You simply need to find how much time you can make to try new things and adjust your time appropriately. We all want balanced, rich, interesting lives, so we should try to find out how and when technology enables these ideal lifestyles, and when it inhibits us from experiencing reality. Finding this balance is an ongoing personal negotiation. It does, however, have large implications for how we view and interact with students, as they are in the process of their own negotiations. I recently wrote more on that here.

After making this video, I am finding places that technology is infringing on my life too much for my taste. I can see that some of my no screen times are becoming tainted with the occasional Tweet, or checking if I “missed anything” glances at my phone, but even your friendly neighborhood tech coach is still figuring it all out. Taking inventory of every minute of my day has been a great way to see where my negotiations are headed.

I would love to see more videos by people who read this blog. Would be cool if we could post them all somewhere for others to watch. After all, the lack of time is the number reason most people give for not being connected and part of a network, so let’s create a bank of models for people to look at for ideas.

Feel free to take this conversation anywhere you like, but I would love to hear what you have to say about how you balance your life. When and how does technology become intrusive? When does it enhance your reality?

Final note: You maybe asking why I am never marking or planning. The main reason is that I am currently in what I like to call the “meat” of my unit. The planning has been done and kids are working hard. I hover and poke and prod and get kids on task, but the planning and teaching are all but done, and the assessment has yet to begin. In a more stressful marking period, I would use my time at home to mark (sometimes till midnight) or some time during school. I also try not to assign too much work that is marking heavy. I balance out long essays with assessments that are easier to mark. I rarely give homework. (I find it useless, more on that topic in another post) I find if I give kids less busy work, I have less busy work to monitor and mark. I try to keep most of the work I expect from students to be mostly longer unit project based assessments.

All music from CCMixter:

Feeling Dark (Behind The Mask) by 7OOP3D
Goodbye War, Hello Peace by teru
Kids then Age by Fireproof_Babies
Myxtery by Pitx

It’s About Relationships

We tech coaches, when we get together, often bandy about unobtrusive and easy to handle jargon. A term that has been popular lately, describing our role is, “It’s about relationships.” (Actually that is not true. We get together and challenge jargon, but I thought it was a cute way to start this post) Back to relationships-  in order for us to successfully integrate, implement, incorporate, infuse (whatever ‘i” word you want to use) technology into school systems, then we need to build relationships of trust with the teachers with which we work. This means not pulling out our hair or rolling our eyes when someone can’t click the keys and magically make their machine do the things we can, or when they take three weeks to understand they must cite a picture in a blog post. We have to be patient and understand that it has taken us years to gain the skills and understanding which enable us  to help others understand the often complicated concepts and skills we use everyday.

Learning how to be patient and build these relationships has been both challenging and rewarding for me. I am the kind of teacher who sets high standards and expects effort from all my students. I want everyone to love “it” all, the way I do. I don’t tolerate much apathy and goofing around. Even with my own children, I pursue a sort of zealotry when it comes to maturity, politeness, and quest for understanding. Should I expect anything less from my adult learners?

After six weeks of working with some amazingly dedicated teachers, I have learned a few thing, which I am sure apply to all learners young and old:

  • We all learn at our own pace and faster when it is relevant and interesting.
  • We learn best when we have time.
  • We are so often busy with other things that we cannot focus on what we want. ( I have a group of grade 10 students who seem so tired. They tell me they are interested in what we are doing with Of Mice and Men. They tell me it makes them think and the like our class talks, but they can’t give me more because they are swamped with Science at the moment)
  • We have to remember that the things we teach are not always as important to them as they are to us.
  • We have to meet learners where they are, not where we want them to be.
  • Learning takes time. Don’t expect instant results.

I am sure I could come up with many more, but I think you get the point. Being a Tech Coach and working with teachers is teaching me a lot about learning. I love the time I am spending with our teachers. It is great to see so many great blogs sprouting.  I love to see a small group of people entering the Twitter stream and thinking differently about the role of technology not only in their pedagogy, but also in their lives.

In closing, I received this email last night from a teacher from my course, and it made me realize that all the hard work has paid off at least for one learner. As a teacher, should we expect anything more?

I wanted to share with you the ENORMOUS STEEP learning curve I have just been through in the last 6 weeks through this 101 computer course.

At the beginning of October I along with a huge group of people arrived at Jabiz’s classroom all set to go on this 101 computer course for blogging, feeling excited and raring to go. Didn’t really know what blogging was and certainly didn’t know what 101 was all about. Nervous but excited I got rid of my class on time and walked over to the building to find his room, struggled with that bit!! Arrived at his clasroom, sat next to Lindsay ( a mistake in itself) and waited for the course to begin.

The first TWO instructions resulted in me and Lindsay looking at each other in horror as we didn’t even know what to do with these TWO simple instructions:

Log on to MSHS network and Open up your gmail

Already stumped we took a bit of time to even do that by which time Jabiz had raced on with terminology I had no idea about. We sat there for an hour and a half and although I admit I am not particularly well read, would prefer being in the gym to reading a book, I still went to uni, I still have a degree and a post grad and I have enough intelligence to get me through life. After just 10 minutes in the class you wouldnt have thought I had even finished school!!! He talked about..pages, blogs, Rss, categories, creative commons, tags, wordpress, flickr, hyperlinksNow don’t get me wrong I know what each of those words mean independently but what the !!!!!!! do they mean in relationship to a 101 blogging workshop. No friggin idea!!!!

Have to say I left that one an a half hour workshop, feeling;

  • Deflated
  • Frustrated
  • Humiliated
  • Frustrated
  • Thick
  • Frustrated
  • Sick
  • Frustrated
  • Headahcey
  • And other feelings I simply couldn’t write down like ………off!!!!!!

BUT

I went home, had my favourite drink, wrote some emails to the IT people about my concerns, went into school the next day and was listened to and I did go back the following week.

AND NOW…

6 weeks later I stand here as a different person. A happier, more confident blogging woman who still has a huge journey in front of her but much happier.

I now have 4 blogs, I do know what a page, a tag, an RSS, a category is in IT terms and I have started blogging both at home and in school. Admittedly my blogs aren’t like other peoples thought provoking arguments or off the wall statements, but they are very simple and most of them are about AJ and TJ and my latest one is about Santa visiting my boys, hardly intellectual but it is where I am, it is where I am in the blogging journey and it is something I can send to my Mum to show her what life Is like here, so it is working for me.

I have been convinced that I CAN use blogging and I am happy that I didn’t quit after that first session and persevered through the pain to begin my blogging journey.

 

Take it slow. One learner at a time. Teach what you know and love. If you have any teachers who are new to IT or blogging or both, share this letter with them as a sign of hope. Please go to Lou’s blog directly, if you want to leave her a comment.

Deal With The Fire

It is only 9:00 pm and I am exhausted. Don’t get me wrong; I am suffering from the fatigue that comes from hard work and personal fulfillment. I have been working very hard lately and my brain is a buzz and snapping a bit too quickly at times. Perhaps I need another sojourn into the jungle, or some deep breathing,  mediation or a simple dip in the ocean, but a break is not on the agenda for a few more weeks. So I need to roll up the sleeves, plug-in and see where this train is headed.

I started teaching a course called DC101 for teachers at my school. It meets twice a week for one and half hours; it is on my mind 24/7. I sometimes wake up in the middle of night and think about ways to convince people to blog. It is crazy. I have become the school lightening rod for all things digital. This constant need to be the voice for the 21st century can be taxing. Again, don’t get me wrong; I know I brought it upon myself, unfettered passion can sometimes be contagious and you need to be able to deal with the fire.

cc licensed ( BY NC SD ) flickr photo shared by Dan LXIX

And a fire is what we may have on our hands at school. It is slow in building, but I can feel the excitement and energy of our teachers. Before I continue, let me say that we have an amazing staff. I have a little over 40 people who have signed on for no credit, in their own time, to push their thinking and themselves beyond their comfort zones. It is a beautiful thing. Because of the work we have already done, hopefully a few of them (you) are reading this post from your RSS reader.

We have begun to discuss and share some of the apprehension people are having about a public online life.

The three main things that seem to come up over and over are: time, the feeling of having nothing to say, and fear of the unforgiving permanence of the Internet. I do not have the energy now to write to each point. I hope that we can touch on all of these issues in the next few weeks, and that the participants will come to their own conclusions. I just wanted to share some misconceptions about blogging that I have overcome, in hopes that my sharing will help others.

You are publishing so everything has to be perfect.  Teachers are used to being experts in their respective fields, and so they feel that if they are not “publishing” a PHD thesis style post then they will judged and evaluated. Perhaps an administer or parent will question their ability, if their blog posts express doubt or confusion, or worse TYPOS! Be a risk taker. Write from your heart. Do what we ask kids to do. Reflect honestly, authentically. Be vulnerable and your admin and parent community will respect and appreciate your openness to show your learning. Life-long learning is more than a piece of jargon to put on a resume. Jump in and write.

Nobody cares what I have to say. If this is true for you, then it is true for your students. And if this is the case then lets all go home. We tell students that they matter. That they have a voice and that they should learn to share and express this voice. We tell them that when they talk to others, they will learn and grow from collaboration. We tell them that writing is an art, that you craft and improve over a life time. We tell them not to fear failure. We tell them to dig deep and find their passion. We tell them that they are special and that we want to hear what they think and feel….now just tell yourself those things when you don’t know what to write.

It has to all be about tech or education. I don’t like writing about tech all the time. I like writing about things that excite and frustrate me. Find things in your day that you find meaningful. I like to write about epiphanies I have in class. I like to write about ideas that worked and those that failed. I like to use my writing to connect with others, but really I use my writing to help me make sense of my teaching, my life, myself. There is empowerment in vulnerability. Open up a little and see what happens. Take baby steps.

You have to blog everyday and all the time. Write when you feel you have no choice. I guess I have always felt the need to write. I have been wishing for a blog since I was 12 years old. Maybe not everyone has this obsession with writing, but set a manageable plan. A post a week. Set up an hour on Sunday night and make it happen. Make it fun. Not a chore.

People who blog do nothing but spend time online. I have a full life with two kids, a wife, a voracious appetite for books and TV and many other hobbies. But I make time to write. I have a routine: Music and the couch- Me and the my words. Make one up.  Stick to it.

I am officially out of gas. It is 9:22. See that took me twenty minutes. I will now crawl into bed, read a bit, watch some TV and try to rest. Hang in there guys. You are doing an amazing job. This, whatever it is we are doing, takes time. The fact that you are excited and here is a great first step. You see the value of connected learning. You see the value in sharing ideas with an audience. You see the value of creation. In short, you are starting to see that technology is not about computers. It is about people, ideas, creativity, passion. It is about “real” life.