Blue Sky School is a school built for, of and as a community. Central to everything that we do are our students' voices.
I have always known that the existing schooling system needs deep change. Through all of my previous projects, I have tried to lead this change. There has never been quite enough space for my blue sky ideas. I am so thrilled to see my lifelong, audacious dream of a totally new type of school coming true with the support of a magical co-founder, Karen Hill, 100 Action Team members and tons of community partners. Blue Sky School is the experimental prototype school of tomorrow.
Watching our community work together to build something this huge is truly inspiring. The most amazing thing to see is our learners collaborating with one another.
Three of our incredibly talented and thoughtful community members wrote, directed, filmed and edited a video telling our story!
Our learners of all ages will be contributing to a blog documenting our ongoing learning and the process of building a school from scratch.
The collaboration, community building and celebrations have already begun, before we've even moved in to our amazing innovation centre! Blue Sky School opens for full-time schooling of grade 6-8 learners in September 2017 with a Pioneer Class of 12.
Learning happens when passion and empowerment meet. Blue Sky School is an independent not-for-profit coworking centre for learners of all ages. We nurture the next generation of changemakers and partner with today's innovative leaders.
For more information about Blue Sky School, visit us online.
This is My Teacher Costume
Welcome to the personal blog of Shauna Pollock, an educator living in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Thursday 18 May 2017
100 in 1 Day Ottawa
100 in 1 Day is providing great ways for citizens of all ages to get involved in making our city a better place! Which intervention will you participate in?
Our friends at the Parkdale Food Centre will be connecting neighbours by giving our plant seedlings
Our friends at Robot Missions are running a field test of their garbage collecting robots on Petrie Island
Hang out in the Innovation Pod, a solar-powered, mobile lab at Innovation Centre Bayview Yards, and see VR, AR and 3D printing in action!
Learn about the future of libraries - lending libraries!
Want to learn about attracting pollinators?
Help paint a mural at a Paint Party in Sandy Hill
Join a group hike to talk abut nature and mental health
Participate in the launch of Happy Ottawa
At Mooney's Bay, make a painting and raise awareness about mental health and the power of art
Have a conversation in a Public Living Room
Hang out in Biotown's Community Lab to learn about biohacking
Labels:
100in1day,
community,
getting involved,
Ottawa
Monday 5 December 2016
Breaking Ice and Facing the Tough Stuff: Day 1 of Big Ideas Fest 2016
Challenged by my friend, Chris Stengel, I will be sharing my learning at Big Ideas Fest 2016 everyday on my (woefully neglected) blog. Chris has remarkably been blogging EVERY SINGLE DAY for 2522 days in a row. I think I can handle four days in a row.
Lesson 1.1: Do work you love. Create a safe space. Build a community for yourself and others.
One of my favourite phrases of all time is, "Be the person you needed when you were younger." Today, I met some remarkable people living that mantra.
I ate brunch in a Yelp-recommended restaurant, The Red Door. Reviews said that it was not only an incredible gustatory experience, but a unique atmosphere as well. I was worried that eating alone might make me uncomfortable. I was totally wrong. When I arrived, the owner, chef and server, Ahmed welcomed me to an empty restaurant. I was surprised. The reviews described it as incredibly busy, often with a long wait.
Soon, I learned Ahmed's philosophy. The restaurant is HIS place. He expresses himself through the space, the food and his service. It feels like a wonderfully quirky home. Because he sees his customers as guests in his home, he has rules. He told me he had turned everyone else away that morning, but had a good feeling about me. This may seem like a strange business model, but he's run a successful restaurant for seven years with this philosophy. While I enjoyed his incredible, playful food, he welcomed other guests and it was not quite a dinner party, not quite a meal at a restaurant. It was a totally unique experience, where we all quickly felt like longtime friends.
Ahmed has created a remarkable little world that I was thrilled to enter for a long, leisurely Sunday brunch, all alone in an unfamiliar city.
I also met one of the featured speakers for Big Ideas Fest, Lavender Courage, a Twitch streamer. She shares her passions for video games and crafters with her "Courage Warriors" in 25 hours of live streaming on Twitch every week. Like Ahmed, she has created a safe space for herself and a community has formed around her. Also like Ahmed, she has clearly stated rules to welcome people into her "home."
Tomorrow, she'll be sharing more of her story with Big Ideas Fest on a panel sponsored by Hack Harassment and talk about inclusion and identity in her online work.
Lesson 1.2: Education conferences are SO MUCH BETTER with youth participating
I couldn't believe it last year when I attended a huge education conference as a writer that I was told that students were "not welcome" to attend.
Last month, at the last minute, I brought an 11-year old former student as co-presenter to an education conference. She was the only student I saw as a participant. There were some groups who came to entertain the adult participants.
From minute one of Big Ideas Fest, the many youth in attendance have participated side-by-side with the less youthful participants.
Why do we gather to talk about youth without them present? If we are really "doing everything for the kids," how come we don't create professional development that includes them?
I have had some great conversations already with high school students at Big Ideas Fest. One of the opening activities was led by young men in the Ever Forward Club.
In the evenings, there is a Youth Zone, a cozy room set up with snacks, for youth participants (of all ages, we've been promised).
Lesson 1.3: An icebreaker does not have to be all fun
The opening session for Big Ideas Fest had all of the participants standing and sitting around the perimeter of what I think is a small ballroom (or a hallway leading to a ballroom, I'm still not quite sure). Led by Ashanti Branch and his Ever Forward Club members, we experienced a remarkably emotional process exploring the masks we live in.
Somehow, within the first hour of locking eyes on a room full of strangers, people were authentically sharing their vulnerabilities and empathizing with one another. A sense of community like this takes months to build up in a classroom (as my former students will remember from our "Crying Circles"), and Ashanti has created a set of exercises that fast forwards this.
We experienced, with rawness, that everyone is fighting a battle you know nothing about. Just by looking at someone and the "mask" they project to the world, you miss that is really going on.
We drew, wrote, had a "snowball fight," listened and shared, "You can't tell by looking at me, but..." The ice was shattered. There was laughter and movement, but the incredibly purposeful directions and thoughtful exercises were infinitely more powerful than any opening session or ice breaker I've ever participated in.
Ashanti has led more than 8000 people through this exercise. When he asked us at the beginning to understand that what we started with wouldn't make sense right away, but to trust that it would come together in the end, we did. He told us to trust that he wanted the best results. He got them.
Lesson 1.4: Students need our love.
"If you care more about the subject you are teaching than the subjects you are teaching, you are going to have a disconnect." - Ashanti Branch
"Students need to guide their own learning and be adored by adults." - Bill Ayers
Ashanti started teaching and watched smart kids fail. It is through creating a safe atmosphere and by being a teacher who loves them that he reaches them. He contradicted the conventional advice to teachers where we are told to leave our own problems, emotions, worries and anxieties in the glove box of our cars before entering school. Our students appreciate seeing that we are human and, in fact, it creates a safe space for them to be human, too.
Bill Ayers, education theorist, activist and author, spoke to us about how to move forward and how to help us move our students forward. He said that, "Education is about sorting people into winners and losers. None of you went into teaching thinking, 'I'm gonna sort those little bastards.'" Helping students become the people they never knew they could be is exponentially more important than judging them.
Lesson 1.5: Don't shy away from the tough stuff.
I'm pleasantly surprised and relieved that people, participants and presenters alike, are not avoiding acknowledging what a dumpster fire 2016 has been. Instead of whining, they are identifying that there is a hard road ahead (read: Trump and his baskets), but that, particularly as educators, we are needed more than ever.
Bill encouraged us to, "Make it [our] business to talk to people [we] don't agree with." "Listen with the possibility of being changed. Speak with the possibility of being heard."
Lesson 1.1: Do work you love. Create a safe space. Build a community for yourself and others.
One of my favourite phrases of all time is, "Be the person you needed when you were younger." Today, I met some remarkable people living that mantra.
I ate brunch in a Yelp-recommended restaurant, The Red Door. Reviews said that it was not only an incredible gustatory experience, but a unique atmosphere as well. I was worried that eating alone might make me uncomfortable. I was totally wrong. When I arrived, the owner, chef and server, Ahmed welcomed me to an empty restaurant. I was surprised. The reviews described it as incredibly busy, often with a long wait.
Soon, I learned Ahmed's philosophy. The restaurant is HIS place. He expresses himself through the space, the food and his service. It feels like a wonderfully quirky home. Because he sees his customers as guests in his home, he has rules. He told me he had turned everyone else away that morning, but had a good feeling about me. This may seem like a strange business model, but he's run a successful restaurant for seven years with this philosophy. While I enjoyed his incredible, playful food, he welcomed other guests and it was not quite a dinner party, not quite a meal at a restaurant. It was a totally unique experience, where we all quickly felt like longtime friends.
Ahmed has created a remarkable little world that I was thrilled to enter for a long, leisurely Sunday brunch, all alone in an unfamiliar city.
I also met one of the featured speakers for Big Ideas Fest, Lavender Courage, a Twitch streamer. She shares her passions for video games and crafters with her "Courage Warriors" in 25 hours of live streaming on Twitch every week. Like Ahmed, she has created a safe space for herself and a community has formed around her. Also like Ahmed, she has clearly stated rules to welcome people into her "home."
Tomorrow, she'll be sharing more of her story with Big Ideas Fest on a panel sponsored by Hack Harassment and talk about inclusion and identity in her online work.
Lesson 1.2: Education conferences are SO MUCH BETTER with youth participating
I couldn't believe it last year when I attended a huge education conference as a writer that I was told that students were "not welcome" to attend.
Last month, at the last minute, I brought an 11-year old former student as co-presenter to an education conference. She was the only student I saw as a participant. There were some groups who came to entertain the adult participants.
From minute one of Big Ideas Fest, the many youth in attendance have participated side-by-side with the less youthful participants.
Why do we gather to talk about youth without them present? If we are really "doing everything for the kids," how come we don't create professional development that includes them?
I have had some great conversations already with high school students at Big Ideas Fest. One of the opening activities was led by young men in the Ever Forward Club.
In the evenings, there is a Youth Zone, a cozy room set up with snacks, for youth participants (of all ages, we've been promised).
Lesson 1.3: An icebreaker does not have to be all fun
The opening session for Big Ideas Fest had all of the participants standing and sitting around the perimeter of what I think is a small ballroom (or a hallway leading to a ballroom, I'm still not quite sure). Led by Ashanti Branch and his Ever Forward Club members, we experienced a remarkably emotional process exploring the masks we live in.
Somehow, within the first hour of locking eyes on a room full of strangers, people were authentically sharing their vulnerabilities and empathizing with one another. A sense of community like this takes months to build up in a classroom (as my former students will remember from our "Crying Circles"), and Ashanti has created a set of exercises that fast forwards this.
We experienced, with rawness, that everyone is fighting a battle you know nothing about. Just by looking at someone and the "mask" they project to the world, you miss that is really going on.
I felt extremely grateful for the gift in my hand. Someone's mask and the truths hidden behind it. |
Ashanti has led more than 8000 people through this exercise. When he asked us at the beginning to understand that what we started with wouldn't make sense right away, but to trust that it would come together in the end, we did. He told us to trust that he wanted the best results. He got them.
Lesson 1.4: Students need our love.
"If you care more about the subject you are teaching than the subjects you are teaching, you are going to have a disconnect." - Ashanti Branch
"Students need to guide their own learning and be adored by adults." - Bill Ayers
Ashanti started teaching and watched smart kids fail. It is through creating a safe atmosphere and by being a teacher who loves them that he reaches them. He contradicted the conventional advice to teachers where we are told to leave our own problems, emotions, worries and anxieties in the glove box of our cars before entering school. Our students appreciate seeing that we are human and, in fact, it creates a safe space for them to be human, too.
Bill Ayers, education theorist, activist and author, spoke to us about how to move forward and how to help us move our students forward. He said that, "Education is about sorting people into winners and losers. None of you went into teaching thinking, 'I'm gonna sort those little bastards.'" Helping students become the people they never knew they could be is exponentially more important than judging them.
Just a lovely human man, that Bill Ayers. |
Lesson 1.5: Don't shy away from the tough stuff.
I'm pleasantly surprised and relieved that people, participants and presenters alike, are not avoiding acknowledging what a dumpster fire 2016 has been. Instead of whining, they are identifying that there is a hard road ahead (read: Trump and his baskets), but that, particularly as educators, we are needed more than ever.
Bill encouraged us to, "Make it [our] business to talk to people [we] don't agree with." "Listen with the possibility of being changed. Speak with the possibility of being heard."
Monday 9 May 2016
Enroll at EPSOT Today - Ally Positions Available
I recieved this delightful email tonight and got permission to share it with you. The author is Magno (or Camden) a Superhero Learner in the Passionate Learner Experiment and sent his Ally request is a far more elegant and entertaining way than I did!
FkL21hbmdvX1BORzkxNjgucG5n
May 08, 2016
Dear Ally or Acquaintance,
My name is Camden, though many around here call me Magno, and my purpose is to support others. I do it for the feeling of society and personality, as well as the joy of making someone else happy. Whether that support is helping them with work, or taking care of something while they're busy, it creates a pocket of time for those people to feel collected, and successfully accomplish the task at hand. Enough about me, at this point in time I plan on making this note sound as “Cheesy Organization Campaign Flyer” as possible.
I am honored to select you as a candidate for an “Ally” position in the currently Beta-staged EPSOT Program. EPSOT is the Experimental Prototype School Of Tomorrow, a small group of learning activists, hoping to change the world in 24 hours.
I have chosen you because I believe you are a good fit into our group. As an Ally, you can choose to contribute your own updates into the roster, or simply support our current members. Support does not involve money, and never will, though you can donate to our PayPal if you feel so inclined. (Just kidding) Support only means that you provide encouragement, easily by comment on our blogs, or constructive criticism to build our progress in learning.
I hope for you to share your ideas and support as the group and I do, and enjoy your time with us.
Sincerely,
MAGNO / CAMDEN
Member of EPSOT
Base64: aHR0cDovL3BuZ2ltZy5jb20vdXBsb2Sunday 8 May 2016
We Need YOU to Be Our Ally!
from: http://joshkilen.com/so-what-do-we-need-you-for/ |
They are doing amazing things and I want to share with you what they're up to. Right now, they've been exploring their learning styles, strengths, areas of needs and interest. They are discovering their passions and will be designing Passion Projects soon.
I am distributing Missions and Quest to the Superhero Learners and check in on them regularly as their Q (Quartermaster). They have great allies on their side. Their parents and friends are supporting them. We can always use more people looking in on us and cheering us on.
If you can spare a few minutes and visit one of (or a few of) these blogs and leave comments, please please please do so.
All of us are better when we work together. Your ideas, comments, questions and input will help elevate our learning.
Feel free to share these links far and wide!
Check out the Superhero Learner's Digital HQs (also linked on the right-hand side of this blog):
Abby a.k.a. Positive Pinky
Camden a.k.a. Magno
Edan a.k.a. Outrider
Fiona
Gabby a.k.a. Justice
Gracie a.k.a. Triple M Master
Hari a.k.a. Brainy Bovine
Hudson a.k.a.Wolf
Hunter a.k.a. The Amazing Meme Man
Jen a.k.a. JemBot
Julianna
Monday 25 April 2016
If It Weren't For You
If It Weren't For You
If it weren't for you
I wouldn't have had a poster of Justin Bieber up in my classroom for a whole year
I wouldn't have spilled butter chicken all over the floor at CHEO
I wouldn't have been celebrated with flowers
If it weren't for you
Matt and Jeff wouldn't have had crowns to wear at a concert
I wouldn't have had a fight with a doctor the first time I met your parents
I wouldn't have understood unicorns
If it weren't for you
I wouldn't have gotten to be a Fairy Godmother
If it weren't for you
I wouldn't have known how proud someone could be to weigh more than 10 lbs at birth
Our conversation about "Kick a Ginger Day" wouldn't have been so meaningful
I wouldn't have been able to describe the smell and taste of the softest, ashiest cheese
If it weren't for you
Matt would have had to eat grown up food, instead of chicken fingers
We would have all shaved our heads
If it weren't for you
I wouldn't have made two of my most incredible friends in your parents
I wouldn't have known the kindness of strangers who made a beautiful dream come true
I would have felt guilty about how many Golden Palace egg rolls I can eat in one sitting
There are things that you think
And there are things that you know
If it weren't for you
I wouldn't have known that the worst thing about cancer was not scoring guys
I wouldn't have known how much strength could be in one person
I wouldn't have known the compassion that can be shown by children to their friend
I wouldn't have known the healing power of a horse
You used the word "irony" as liberally as Alanis Morisette
Loved Hallowe'en as much as I do
Refused any extra attention
And put a sign on your door that said
"If you can't treat me like Molly,
Go away."
The people you really let in got to see so many sides
Your complex, multilayered personality
Wickedly funny
Brilliantly smart
Observant
Thoughtful
Sarcastic
Always surprising
A twinkle in your eye
The knowing look
That spoke of wisdom well beyond your years
If it weren't for you
I wouldn't have laughed till I cried and
Cried till I laughed
If it weren't for you
I wouldn't have the mask that was hand-painted
With a unicorn
And a neon rainbow
That took a private taxi ride
From an artist's house
To the hospital
Where it kept your head in place
If it weren't for you
I wouldn't have understood that bravery means
Saying "no" incredibly forcefully
To the people who love you
In their misguided attempts to support you
If it weren't for you
I wouldn't have known that courage
Is when you look out for others
Even when you're hurting
It it weren't for you
I wouldn't have seen an incredible side of my baby brother
And my husband
Or known that I could say thank you
And good-bye
If it weren't for you
More kids would be sick
---
In Molly's lifetime and memory, more than $150 000 has been raised to support the life-enhancing and life-saving treatments offered at CHEO.
---
I have learned a lot of lessons from a lot of kids. I suspect that some of them may even read this. Lest they think that I don't have similar stories about them I want to remind them that once you're mine you're always one of mine.
The time is right for me to share some of my cherished memories of Molly.
Thursday 21 April 2016
Life 101 with Prince
This post has jumped the queue because of the sad news of Prince's death today.
Know yourself. Know what you believe in. Live it. Don't worry what doubters or detractors have to say. If you're living and working how you want to, others' complaints won't matter to you.
Life 101 is a series of blog posts in which I document what I have learned from some of my favourite teachers, most of whom I have never met. Using their own words, I reflect on the lessons I learned from them about life.
Welcome to Life 101 with our guest teacher, Prince.
1. Don't talk down to your audience (your students)
"The Little Prince" by Sean Miller |
1. Don't talk down to your audience (your students)
"When you don't talk down to your audience, then they can grow with you. I give them a lot of credit to be able to hang with me this long, because I've gone through a lot of changes, but they've allowed me to grow, and thus we can tackle some serious subjects and just try to be better human beings, all of us." - Prince
Prince looked at his entertainment in a way that beautifully parallels the way great teachers look at teaching.
Don't talk down to your students, believe that they'll grow and change along with you. Don't shy away from tough or serious subjects. Challenge your students, and you will all become better people.
2. Don't be afraid to change if it's what works for you.
"I don't really care so much what people say about me, because it usually is a reflection of who they are. For example, if people wish I would sound like I used to sound, then it says more about them than it does me." - Prince
Don't let yourself be defined by how others perceive you.
3. People are people are people. Be confident in your own skin.
"Cool means being able to hang with yourself. All you have to ask yourself is, 'Is there anybody I am afraid of? Is there anybody who, if I walked into a room and saw, I'd get nervous.' If not, then you're cool."
(Author's note: I will never EVER be "cool," in Prince's definition. I am WAY too excited to meet way too many people.)
4. Invest in the future.
"Sometimes it takes years for a person to become an overnight success." - Prince
Successful people put in work. A lot of work. A lot of work that no one else sees. If you look at someone else's success and it seems instant, it's probably not. They probably worked their tail off to get there.
Realize that if you want to be successful in your chosen endeavours, you will have to do a lot of work. Often behind the scenes. Work that may never be seen or understood by anyone else.
Just because it is the product that is celebrated, don't let yourself forget about the importance of the process. Value the work that you do working towards making your dreams come true. Other people will appear and celebrate you once you've "gotten there," but you need to remember that it takes a lot of blood, sweat and tears to make great things happen.
5. Declare your own identity with pride.
Names and titles are incredibly powerful things.
If you're lucky enough to have parents who are prescient and name you, at birth, "Prince Rogers Nelson," go ahead and drop the middle and surname and call yourself "Prince". Declare who you are, loudly and proudly.
If your name, your title or your position isn't working for you anymore, change it. Create a symbol that represents you. Combine aspects of your identity in it.
If the binary of male and female doesn't work for you, reject it.
Why not ask your students to create a symbol that represents their identity? Call the project, "The Students Formerly Known As" and create a bulletin board to honour Prince's memory.
6. Empower youth.
"Ownership, that's what you give your kids. That's your legacy." - Prince
Teachers invest in the future by investing their time and energy in kids. We are so lucky to have the opportunity to have a remarkable legacy. Empower children to be the people they never knew they could be. That is the greatest gift we can give them.
7. Mentors and guides make us believe in ourselves, even through tough times.
"There's something about having people around you giving you support that is - it's motivating, and once I got that support from people, I believed I could do anything." - Prince
As a teacher, you can be the person who believes in students, even before they believe in themselves. Guide and mentor them.
Appreciate and thank your mentors and supporters. Reflect on who you can turn to, not only to share the good stuff, but who you can come to with doubts, problems and tears. Reach out to them during a calm time and tell them how much it's meant to you.
Be the person you needed when you were younger. Offer up your support, expertise, and a listening ear to new teachers. Instead of paying back what you were provided, pay it forward. Formally and informally support and mentor students and professionals.
From Wikipedia |
8. Get in your own groove, your zone, your flow.
"You can always tell when the groove is working or not." - Prince
Do things that you love greatly with great passion. Give yourself the space and time to get into a flow. When you are doing or making something that works, you can feel so connected and engaged that you completely lose track of time.
When you are in the groove in the classroom, you can tell. Real-world connections come easily, students are sharing their ideas, the "A-ha" moments are coming fast and furious. If you have a few of those days a year, you are a lucky teacher.
If you lose your groove, you can get it back. (see this post)
9. Make your own rules based on what you believe in.
"A strong spirit transcends rules." - Prince
If the status quo doesn't work for you, challenge it. If you know yourself and you know what is best for you and your students, you can push the boundaries. You need to push the boundaries. Change is not made when everyone does the same thing the same way.
From the Montreal Gazette |
10. Customize your performance (or your teaching) to your users.
"Every audience is different." - Prince
Acknowledge that no matter how great your ideas or plans are, your users are the most important part of any performance, including those in the classroom. Every audience is different. Every class is different. Like Prince, be responsive to that. Give your students what they need. If you can't figure it out on your own, ask them!
#squadgoals From The Muppets |
11. Demonstrate empathy.
"As human beings, we suffer from an innate tendency to jump to conclusions; to judge people too quickly and to pronounce them failures or heroes without due consideration." - Prince
Don't just put *yourself* in someone else's shoes. True empathy occurs when you can take yourself out of the equation all together and listen to someone else without judgement. Listen empty to hear what they're really sharing.
A wonderful gift to give to anyone is an ready ear, an open heart and validation. Don't always jump to conclusions or offer solutions.
Each of us can be a hero or a failure, depending on who is naming us. Don't reduce any person to one simple word. Understand that we are all complicated, multilayered human onions and value the diversity that exists within each and every one of us.
12. Let go of grudges.
"I ain't mad at anybody. I don't have any enemies." - Prince
In the Passionate Learner Experiment, my Superhero Learners have declared their Signature Strengths and Kryptonite. My Kryptonite (one of my weaker areas I am trying to fight off) is forgiveness. I hold onto grudges like they are indoor cats trying to escape from an open door. Prince could have called many people enemies, but let go of bad feelings. 2/2 Prince and Buddha's agree: holding onto grudges does nothing good.
13. Be passionate. Share your gifts. Have fun while doing it.
"As long as I do not take myself too seriously, I should not be too badly off." - Prince
Play. Laugh. Imagine. Dream. Build. Laugh at yourself. Repeat.
14. It costs you nothing to be kind to others. The impact you can make is limitless.
"Compassion is an action word with no boundaries." - Prince
Compassion is not just an noun. It's not a thing that lives on its own. Compassion can be a verb. It can be something that we do every day. You don't know what impact a kind word, a smile, a thoughtful question and a bit of attention can make. Don't limit the amount of compassion you show.
15. Create safe and supportive places for children.
"No child is bad from the beginning, they just imitate their atmosphere." - Prince
Create an atmosphere that brings out the good in everyone.
16. Believe in innovation and reinvention. Live it.
"I try not to repeat myself. It's the hardest thing in the world to do -- there are only so many notes one human being can master." - Prince
If a lesson works, that's great. If you can iterate on it and make it better, that's greater. Don't be a "one-note" musician, "one-trick" pony, or "one-idea" teacher. Challenge yourself. When you've achieved your goals, set new ones.
17. Hold on to your inner child
"I'm still very much a kid inside myself." - Prince
Three year olds have it right. They are filled with questions, laughter, quick tears that let out the sad, fearlessness, wonder and endless curiosity.
Keep your inner three year old well-nourished and do the same for your students, whatever their age. Give them space and permission to play, laugh, cry, explore, build, take risks and fail.
18. Make a thing. Then make another. Then keep going.
"Do you know how many hits I have? I can go on all night!" - Prince (at one of my all-time favourite live shows in Ottawa)
Put many things out into the world. Leave a mark.
2007 Superbowl Halftime Show (Photo by Donald Miralle/Getty Images) |
19. Anticipate the good, even while you're in the bad.
"There's always a rainbow at the end of every rain." - Prince
("Can you make it rain harder?" - Prince. You MUST watch this video!)
("Can you make it rain harder?" - Prince. You MUST watch this video!)
While this is not factually true, it's awesome. Rainbows are basically the best thing ever. They're nature reminding us of beauty and magic and hope.
20. Enjoy the time you have.
"But life is just a party, and parties weren't meant to last." - Prince
Goodnight sweet Prince, thanks for letting us in on your party.
What lessons did you learn from Prince's life?
Is there someone else you would like to read about in a Life 101 post?
Disclaimer: I totally and thoroughly acknowledge that any quote can be taken out of context and interpreted in any number of ways. Above is a list of my own interpretations of messages from the guest teacher in this Life 101 lesson.
Labels:
learning lessons,
Life 101,
mentor,
Prince,
Shauna Pollock
Monday 28 March 2016
The Passionate Learner Experiment Begins!
My Microschool's inaugural course, "The Passionate Learner Project" is underway. Tn incredible Superhero Learners (who are currently in grades 4-12) and their Parent Allies have taken a risk with me, as we experiment with a new way of learning!
Superhero Learners are using digital literacy skills to answer the question: how might we change the world in one day? They will complete 24 hours of work in the next 10 weeks. Together, we are creating a game that will guide their highly personalized and passion-based learning.
They are working their way through the several quests in Mission 1: You Are a Superhero. They are exploring what kind of teacher they need and what kind of learner they are.
Learners work their way through the Mission Dossiers I send to them at their own pace, in their own way.
They are working their way through the several quests in Mission 1: You Are a Superhero. They are exploring what kind of teacher they need and what kind of learner they are.
Learners work their way through the Mission Dossiers I send to them at their own pace, in their own way.
In the coming days, each learner will launch a Digital HQ where they will document their learning. I hope you'll follow along and add to the conversation! We need allies to cheer on the learners, challenge their thinking and add their influence. We are so happy to welcome Lisa Paterson as a Yoga coach to the Superheroes in Mission 2. If you want to be a part of The Passionate Learner Experiment as an ally, let me know!
To whet your appetite, I have to share one learner's approach to Quest 1.1
We have space for a couple more learners to come on board if you know anyone who would like to play and learn with us!
Wednesday 16 March 2016
40 Ways to Teach About Global Education and Empower Globally Competent Youth
In our increasingly connected world and global economy, it is more important than ever to equip and empower youth with the skills and knowledge to be globally competent. They need to be taught how to learn about, communicate with and take part in their local, national and global communities.
Successful high school graduates should be able to demonstrate excellent communication skills, empathy, critical media literacy, cultural sensitivity and collaboration. They should have an understanding of the history of their own cultures and the world. They should know how to effectively use maps, charts and graphs to learn information about geography. They should be eager to share their stories and learn the stories of others, with open hearts and minds.
How can you empower youth with global competencies?
Share Enlightening, Inspiring Content
Connect Your Class With Other Classes
Participate in Global Initiatives
Learn About the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child
Learn About Micro Loans
Read Amazing Stories in Picture Books
There are many incredible picture books that help tell the story of children around the world. Here are just a few that I love:
Learn About the Lives of Children Around the World Through Gorgeous Photographye
Again, this is by no means an exhaustive list. Here are just a few that I love:
Share Your Stories
Successful high school graduates should be able to demonstrate excellent communication skills, empathy, critical media literacy, cultural sensitivity and collaboration. They should have an understanding of the history of their own cultures and the world. They should know how to effectively use maps, charts and graphs to learn information about geography. They should be eager to share their stories and learn the stories of others, with open hearts and minds.
How can you empower youth with global competencies?
Share Enlightening, Inspiring Content
- The video above describes what the world would look like if it was made up of 100 people. It's a great starting point for discussion about global inequities. There are further statistics, videos and lesson plans and information about The 100 People Project available online.
- This Child Every Child - a book containing many more statistics that compare the lives of children around the world.
- Jenny Buccos is an amazing human being and her Project Explorer inspired a whole lot of great learning for EPCOT class last year. She is leading a mission of creating 10 million globally competent youth by 2020. The free videos on her website are helping to do just that.
Connect Your Class With Other Classes
- One of the most powerful ways for kids to learn is from other kids. If you can, connect your students with students from around the world.
- Skype in the Classroom helps you connect with other classes, experts and virtual field trips. If you haven't tried a Mystery Skype yet, you have to sign up!
- The Global Read Aloud, run by my incredible friend, Pernille, unites classrooms around the world, as they read the same book (there are choices based on student age) every fall.
- Connect with Pen Pals. Start with reading the book Same Same But Different and brainstorm ways you and your students can find Pen Pals (Snail Mail or digital)
Participate in Global Initiatives
- In October, Stand Up for Girls. Learn about why so many girls around the world are not given an opportunity to have an education, and demonstrate your support for them by literally standing up for girls.
Learn About the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child
- Share and post the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, in child friendly language, in your classroom.
- Illustrate and write about what each of the rights mean to you and your students. Years ago, I did a project where I collected drawings depicting the rights here in Canada and then had students in Lesotho, Africa, draw their representations as well.
- If You Could Wear My Sneakers - funny poems based on the articles in the UN Convention
- For Every Child - beautifully illustrated depictions of the Rights
- I Have the Right to Be a Child - simple, colourful book exploring all childrens' rights.
Learn About Micro Loans
- Read the book One Hen: How One Small Loan Made a Big Difference
- Fundraise $25 (or $50 or $100...) and, as a class, invest in a real person. Visit Kiva.org and start a lending profile. You will be able to relend your loan over and over and over! My students and I have put under $175 into our account and that has allowed us to lend over $1000!
There are many incredible picture books that help tell the story of children around the world. Here are just a few that I love:
- Iqbal and Malala - The stories of an Indian boy and a Pakistani girl who demanded education and faced incredible violence from adults as a response. These stories open a students' eyes to how differently education is valued around the world.
- It's Back to School We Go: First Day Stories
- Malala Yousafzai: Warrior with Words - by now, you surely know about Malala, the youngest every recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize. This book is, "a testament to the power of education to change the world for boys and girls everywhere."
- Nasreen's Secret School
- "Young Nasreen has not spoken a word to anyone since her parents disappeared. In despair, her grandmother risks everyone to enroll Nasreen in a secret school for girls. Will a devoted teacher, a new friend and the worlds she discovers in books be enough to draw Nasreen out of her shell of sadness?"
- There is a video of this book being read available on Youtube
- Rain School - I was introduced to this story by one of my Bachelor of Education students who created a whole day plan based on this beautiful book. (Video here)
- "It's the first day of school in Chad, Africa. Children are filling the road. 'Will they give us a notebook?' Thomas asks. 'Will they give us a pencil? Will I learn to read?' But when he and the other children arrive at the schoolyard, they find no classroom, no desks. Just a teacher. 'We will build our school,' she says. 'This is our first lesson.'"
- Waiting for the Biblioburro
- "Ana loves stories. She often makes them up to help her little brother fall asleep. But in her small village, there are only a few books and she has read them all. One morning, Ana wakes up to the clip-clop of hooves, and there before her, is the most wonderful sight; a travelling library resting on the backs of two burros (donkeys) - all the books a little girl could dream of, with enough stories to encourage her to create one of her own."
Learn About the Lives of Children Around the World Through Gorgeous Photographye
Again, this is by no means an exhaustive list. Here are just a few that I love:
- A Life Like Mine
- Children Like Me
- Every Day is Malala Day
- My Librarian is a Camel: How Books Are Brought to Children Around the World
- My School in the Rain Forest: How Children Attend School Around the World
- Off to Class: Incredible and Unusual Schools Around the World
- Ryan and Jimmy - the true story of a young boy in Canada and his Pen Pal in Uganda and the water project that turned them into brothers.
- Shannen and the Dream for a School - this is the story of Shannen who demanded that the Canadian government create better schooling options for her and other aboriginal youth.
- This is the Way We Go to School
- What's For Lunch?
- Where Children Sleep - the most popular book in my classroom for years, our copy has needed many repairs! You can see photos from the book online and project them into your classroom to encourage discussion.
Share Your Stories
- On your class blog, share what a day in life of your students looks like - use pictures, videos and/or writing.
- Share your learning, projects and adventures on a class Twitter account.
- Make videos and have a class Youtube channel to tell your learning stories.
- Respond to people's comments, visit their projects and learn together.
Show Your Students That They Can Make an Impact
From Amy Poehler's Smart Girls |
- Share stories of kids changing the world (including this list from 2012 and these projects by awesome young humans)
- Fill some free time in the classroom by practicing your vocabulary or times tables (or a number of other topics) and, for every correct answer, the World Food Program gets rice to give to people in need. Play FreeRice!
- Set up a class account on We Give Books. For every book your your students read online (extra awesomeness for reading with younger or older Reading Buddies!), Penguin donates books to children who need them!
- Ask your students what problems they want to solve and be a Collaborative Curator to support them. Curate great information and collaborate with them to make a plan!
How do you empower your students and help them become globally competent? Share your ideas below!
This post was inspired by this tweet:
This post was inspired by this tweet:
Thanks for spurring me into action, Sylvia!
Tuesday 15 March 2016
Dear Grade 4-12 Student, How Can You Change the World in One Day?
Do you want a chance to be a part of a brand new learning experiment and be a model of how we can disrupt and design education in a way that REALLY works for learners?
You can be one of the first students at the Experimental Prototype School of Tomorrow (EPSOT) starting on March 22nd, 2016. There are four spaces left in the first cohort!
In 24 hours of online work, you will explore the question, “As a digitally literate person, what can I make in one day?” You will pick your own path to explore this question and can do the 24 hours of work at any rate you choose.
Your teacher, Shauna Pollock, will be your guide and collaborative curator, working alongside you to learn and practice new skills, discover new tools and apply your learning to a self-selected project. Your classmates in this first cohort will be on parallel learning journeys of their own and you will learn how to collaborate and communicate with them online.
This is a chance to hack your learning and help shape what education can look like in 2016. We will use digital literacy skills to help you uncover and explore your passion. You will be empowered to pursue a self-selected project and share it with a real audience.
Are you ready to take your learning to the next level? Email Shauna Pollock at shauna.pollock@gmail.com for more information on how to become part of “The Passionate Learner Experiment.”
Shauna
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