Month: December 2007

Total 33 Posts

Presentation for Teachers

Scott’s presentation on presentation is a stunner. I don’t know how he kept the reins around this one, flitting as he does from effective PowerPoint to effective handouts to effective delivery inside, I assume, seven hours.

As great as Garr Reynolds, Guy Kawasaki, and the usual suspects are, his PDF (with notes) is pitched straight at the classroom teacher, more precisely than even my own presentation series was.

Dude’s been working on it for months and deserves pageviews and plaudits aplenty. Link it along.

[Updated to fix a homonym.]

Dunk Contest

So you’re standing at the side of the gym chatting with one of the counselors during the winter sports rally when you hear, first slowly and then building, “Mr. Meyer! Mr. Meyer! Mr. Meyer!” ¶ Can anyone put a percentage on the number of times this ends well?

We shook up the world!

You mean you don’t do your professional development here? Man that sucks.

Asilomar, see you next year. Readers, see you later this week. I’ve gotta recharge.

The Complete List

Asilomar #9: Asia
Asilomar #8: The Future
Asilomar #7: Excel
Asilomar #6: PowerPoint
Asilomar #5: Hooks
Asilomar #4: Friday Keynote
Asilomar #3: Green Knowledge
Asilomar #2: Proportions
Asilomar #1: Motivation
Asilomar 2007

For Your Consideration

Ross for Boss. Vote dy/dan best new edublog and best individual edublog.

Asilomar #9: Asia

Session Title

“Putting a Face on Mathematics in Asia: Reflections on My Work of 20 Years”

Presenter

Steve Rasumussen. President, Key Curriculum Press. Hawaiian shirt aficionado. Guy you want to buy a beer.

Narrative

Generally awesome. Completely evenhanded, doing justice to all sorts of tricky issues facing education (NCLB, international competition, TIMSS) without once resorting to the pandering, cheap irony which plagued Friday’s keynote.

In his duties as publisher-in-chief with Key Curriculum Press he’s spent a good portion of the last twenty years in Asia. A lot of it was just as you’d expect. “You have no idea how easy our job could be,” he said, and cited:

  • students who stand up when a teacher walks into the room.
  • nations which devote extraordinary resources to education. (eg. 60% of Thailand’s paper went to its schools a few years back; during lean times schools are the last to cut spending)
  • schools so modern with desks and floors so clean you could safely perform an appendectomy on top of them.
  • teachers who must take 32 post-graduate classes before teaching math.

He adjusted my perspective in a couple of ways:

  • He called us out for a “tremendous national chauvinism.” He said, “If you ever hear competition [with Asia] in the same breath as education, either implicitly or explicitly, be wary of the person saying it.” He cited Thomas Friedman.
  • He explained why students in Asia outpace us in basically every benchmark except “skin whiteness.” He noted that Asian countries have huge populations with comparatively few universities. The competition for university acceptance is so fierce students take no exception to longer school days, longer school years, and three hours of math homework nightly, none of which the teacher ever grades.
  • Radical pedagogy in the U.S. involves online coursework, wikis, and podcasts. Radical pedagogy there, he said, involves a student initiating a question. Charge it to respect for their teachers and fear of appearing weak alongside their classroom competitors but it’s direct instruction all day long. Go figure.

Presentation Notes

PowerPoint for the occasional quote but for the most part he just commented over an iPhoto slideshow which was a really good way to go.

Homeless

  • “I’ve basically got a secret life in Asia,” he said at the start, and then realized what that sounded like.

For Your Consideration

Reannexation of the edublogosphere. Vote dy/dan best new edublog and best individual edublog.