Category: tech contrarianism

Total 133 Posts

Careful now.

I saw this in a pile of forgotten masters while walking by the copier. It was love.

Check out the clear hierarchy. The single, legible font. The single style for emphasis. Margins tightly aligned. The second lines indenting just as they should. Spacing is evenly distributed. The kids know exactly where to look, where to go for their next question, and where to find important information.

I stood there, the clear design drawing me in, the world slowing to a crawl behind me. I took it, scanned it, and decided that, look, unless you know how to translate all these techniques from the handwritten page to the printed page, stand by your handwriting.

Computers make light work of worksheets for teachers, but whether they’re any good for students depends entirely on the skill of the designer.

Related:

Build Your Handouts

Asilomar #8: The Future

Session Title

“Math 20-20 Vision: What Will K-8 Math Education Look Like in 2020”

Presenter

Keith Devlin. Consulting Professor, Stanford. NPR’s “Math Guy.” Avid gamer.

Narrative

A: World of Warcraft. (No, seriously.)

Presentation Notes

Numbing. PowerPoint. Font size dipped below 7pt, at some points, I swear. From moment to moment I had no idea where we’d been or where we were going. Not unrelatedly, I dozed off for several long stretches.

Homeless

  • Dude is a big fan of World of Warcraft. Thought I’d mention that again.
  • Who collects royalties on that “20/20 vision” phrase? Karl?

For Your Consideration:

Standing against liveblogging. Vote dy/dan best new edublog and best individual edublog.

One Day At A Time

  • drove to San Jose Municipal airport sometime around 04h00 PST;
  • gate agent bumped me to first class just before departure, setting the whole trip up on a high shelf from the start;
  • sneered back at the peasantry in economy seating seventeen times over the first twelve minutes of flight;
  • read Andrew Keen’s anti-Web-2.0 anti-fun polemic The Cult of the Amateur 35,000 feet above Utah’s Great Salt Flats, agreeing with much of it, estimating the percent of unhappy edubloggers who read it to be somewhere around 35, finishing it as we taxied into Minneapolis-St. Paul;
  • met my twin sister (last seen: 1.5 years ago) and two cousins (last seen: 10 years ago) in St. Cloud;
  • was introduced by doting grandparents to each of St. Cloud’s 62,000 residents;
  • was asked an awful lot about my job teaching math;
  • saw in College-Aged Cousin diligence, industry, and some other virtues I cherish and covet;
  • experienced an awful moment of clarity;
  • realized I am and have been wasting my diligence and industry in a profession which, by evidence of how it pays its employees (by years and units), doesn’t care about hard work or industry;
  • wrote a letter to the editor of the San Francisco Chronicle entitled “Obituary of a Fourth-Year Teacher” and CC’d my district;
  • licked the stamp;
  • called TMAO, asked him to talk me down;
  • put the letter in a drawer;
  • got flagged for one of TSA’s special security screenings on the flight back which seemed to fit the overall arc of the trip like a glove.

Your Weekend Reading List

  1. Tom Triples Up On Me

    Tom at Bionic Teaching makes three rap-themed classroom posters, showing up my lonely offering. I’ll get him for that. Until then, check out the Jay-Z, which is especially sharp.

    Print out a monster poster from Snapfish or Zazzle for under $10.

  2. Moving From Amateur to Expert (In Three Parts)
    • In the comments of Amateurs and Experts, Ben Chun (née Mr. C) links up a great Kathy Sierra piece called How to be an expert which describes a “kicking ass threshold,” beneath which your typical amateur tells herself, “Now that I can do it I’ll just keep doing it the same way.” Which is basically my waking nightmare.
    • Meanwhile, the indie documentary 10 MPH offers a trove of behind-the-scenes information for $fr.ee, which emboldens my conviction that a) if you’ve got the notion, it’s harder to stay an amateur than become an expert, but b) it remains very easy to ignore the notion.

      (For the sake of the argument let’s not get too bogged down in what defines an “expert.”)

    • Furthermore, design/web-app juggernaut 37Signals says it doesn’t care about an applicant’s formal education:

      What we care about is intelligence, curiosity, passion, character, motivation, taste, intuition, writing skills, and the ability to make smart value judgements. Formal education is probably last on our list of qualities we feel make someone qualified to work at 37signals.

  3. How To Close The Racial Achievement Gap

    According to Douglas Reeves, whose recommendations sent shockwaves through the Racial Achievement Gap Summit in Sacramento, CA, last week:

    • Explicitly teaching students how to take notes, so what they learn in class isn’t wasted.
    • Testing what has been taught.
    • Assigning teachers based on students’ needs rather than by teachers’ seniority.
    • Posting clear objectives for every classroom lesson.
    • Posting students’ work on walls, not just in elementary school but through high school, to foster pride and encourage high achievement.

    Heresy, in my opinion.

  4. Fighting Death by PowerPoint

    I basically agree wholeheartedly with this SlideShare presentation. I agree with it in a way I’ve never even agreed with the usual founts, Guy Kawasaki, Garr Reynolds, Edward Tufte, etc, but particularly with these points:

    • if you can’t find the meaning, don’t present.
    • being simple is not that simple.
    • powerpoint helps to visualize ideas [not discuss them for you]
    • ditch “stupid” rules [which create functional but boring slides]
    • put charts and bulk text onto a handout
  5. Grades: Won’t Someone Please Think Of The Children

    Jackie hosts a great conversation on grades, in which cynics and believers alike weigh in.

    Jackie sez: “The average for both classes was 75.5, the median was 83.6. I really don’t know how to interpret this. Does this mean the majority of them are getting it? That my grading is too easy? That too many aren’t getting it? What scores would make me happy? I just don’t know.”

    Kelly calls grades “demoralizing.”

    Kindred digital contrarian and defender of the status quo, Robert Talbert, brings the dispassion: “The purpose of grades is to compare student understanding of a concept against professionally-constructed standards. They are not intended to reward, punish, evoke emotional responses, pass judgment on the worth of the person being graded, or any such thing. Grades are information; they let the student know where they stand in relation to an objective standard; and how the student and teacher use that information is something outside the purview of grades as such.”

    Ben Chun (dude’s everywhere) says: “The more I think about this, the more I think Dan Meyer has it figured out. You’ve read his “How Math Must Assess” essay, right?”

    Naturally, I agree with him, but not purely for self-promotional purposes.

    Assessment used to be my least favorite part of teaching and then, by way of some large modifications (not gonna lie to anyone here), it became my favorite.

    Under this system I’m running,

    • I don’t adjust any grades at term’s end so a student can pass (or fail).
    • I have a lot of reason to believe that the grade a student has is the grade she deserves. (As tricky as “deserves” is to define in these situations.) In other words, the grade indicates something significant.
    • Students know exactly how to bring up their grades.
    • Parents know exactly what they can do to help.
    • I meet the most common special ed assessment modifications by default.
    • Grades go up as easily as they go down, which is something I can’t say for any system I’ve taught or studied under.

    Nothing I haven’t already rambled on about, I guess.

  6. Peer Review: I Want This

    … at least until someone tells me what horrendous loophole this would open or what right of tenure this would revoke. I mean, doesn’t every other professional corps have one of these? What am I missing?

    The Washington Post article is entitled “The Right Way to Oust the Wrong Teachers.”… which is kind of an awful title when you think about it. I mean, don’t we want to oust the right teachers.. Elena Silva at Education Sector agrees with WaPo.

  7. Classroom YouTubbery
  8. Your Friends and Neighbors
    • Chris Craft’s classroom video project, Teach Jeff Spanish, goes live and is awesome.
    • Todd Seal has his kids working with visual essays, which is also awesome.

Amateurs and Experts

Responding here to Christian who found some elitism in my objections to Vid Snacks’ banner headline:

The killer intersection, however, lies in whether or not any proponent of any given medium/technology is seeking the same end-game as ‘you’. If our collective goal is to simply maintain an expert-driven culture and educational system, then it would certainly behoove all of us to minimize the very existence of any ‘amateur’ from the discussion. If, on the other hand, we perceive that there is some value (you pick your scale and relative measuring tool) in the ‘process’ of discovery, then we are obligated by the sheer democratic nature of the Net to soften our need for expertise as the sole ticket to the show.

Christian, this could get even more interesting but you’ve gotta do me a favor and take these as sincere:

  • I’m not an expert designer.
  • I’m not even a professional non-expert designer. I don’t get paid for design work.
  • I am, under every definition of the word, an amateur designer.
  • I really really love that tools exist so that adults and kids can create videos and photos ad infinitum with zero marginal cost.

Disagree with me on those terms and not on this mistaken presumption that my fellow gray-bearded experts and I are concerned we’re gonna have more competitors on our turf if amateur communities like Vid Snacks proliferate.

What concerns me is clarity.

My “end-game” is a world where people across ages and cultures communicate with each other better, more clearly, a world where people can express complicated ideas with a maximum of clarity and art.

So what bums me out about this cult(ure) of the amateur (of which I am a member), is that there are methods tried and true, dating back centuries, dating back to the golden ratio and before, methods for simplifying the complicated, for clarifying the unclear and, by and large, they’re ignored in this culture. With limited exception, I don’t think people in these insular communities (like Vid Snacks, for example) care.

The relevant conversations I see in my aggregator are of two varieties:

  1. check out this new tool.
  2. check out what cool thing this other amateur in my learning network has created using this tool.

Those are both great but the one conversation I rarely see (so rarely it’s tempting to use the word “never”) is:

  1. check out what this person outside my learning network has made with the tools I’m using. it is so much clearer than anything I’ve tried to make. how has she done this?

I don’t know if that person is one of your “experts” but I know there are people (web design: Khoi Vinh; presentation: Garr Reynolds; motion graphics: Andrew Kramer; photography: David Hobby; screenwriting: John August) who can speak so clearly in these 21st-century languages, people (experts? beats me.) who make their tools and methods freely and quickly available from their websites and weblogs.

Where I split from my crowd of amateurs is I can’t find enough hours in the day to consume their work. I can’t stop deconstructing how they’ve made [complicated thesis x] so very clear. I feel like a schmuck taking Tim to task back there for his run-on sentence of an introductory video but its very existence perplexes me here on an Internet which daily – from Ze Frank on down to LonelyGirl – has modeled great, clear, edited video.

But when amateurs create content for amateurs, that sort of oversight is an acceptable part of the conversation.

Which is fine to an extent – I mean, everyone just seems so happy creating and posting their videos in that community; who am I to interfere? – but eventually one of these amateurs or, more tragically, one of their students will want to express something beautiful, messy, and complicated through video (let’s say) to an audience larger than and outside of Ning. They’ll want to express it with clarity but it’ll be impossible.

They’ll be able to explain simple concepts to large audiences.

They’ll be able to explain complicated concepts to small audiences.

But if they and their teachers aren’t immersing themselves constantly in better, clearer work than their own (made by experts? doesn’t matter. it’s just clearer) work which for the first time in history is available freely and quickly, how in that vacuum can they rise to any greater occasion?