Blue Serials (12/27/15)

A Christmas Story

Tis the season to be jarring – fa la la la la…

What a week of joyous blessings in the forms of loved ones and weird dessert options, of hope in a glowing baby and the approach of another reboot. But there’s a hair in the pudding – a big wad of it, actually – as the state announces their tax cuts for the top tiniest sliver, smirking in smug hope that public education in Oklahoma may actually die a final violent death this time. If not, we can always cut revenue again next year – it’s a “tremendous opportunity,” it seems.

So’s cancer, if you frame it correctly. But we don’t work at making it happen.

But first, here are the GOOD things you might have missed in the holiday scramble this past week…

Finding Your Holiday Zen – In case you’re new, you need not be devoutly Zen (or even know entirely what that means) to read and benefit from Dan Tricarico’s wisdom at The Zen Teacher. He’s somehow legit enough to actually help you, but without being annoying the way legit people often are. Follow @thezenteacher on the Twitters, and use one of those gift cards you just received to buy his book. I don’t even like ‘teacher books’, and I LOVE this one. 

Amazing Student Candor Increases Learning – Starr Sackstein is more hopeful than I am, more willing to change than I am, and has more patience than I do – for this, I am truly thankful. In this post she reminds us of the power and importance of actual communication and reflection with students. The grades are not the goal. The grades are not the accomplishment. The grades are not the learning. Read her regularly at StarrSackstein.com, and as long as you’re spending those gift cards, she has several titles essential on any teacher shelf. Right now, though, follow @mrssackstein on the Twitters or you can’t possibly do better than a ‘D’.

Lesson Lab: Autopsy of a Photo Blog Project – This is something we should all probably do more of. Peter Anderson at Mr. Anderson Reads & Writes shares two essential teachy-things here: the details of a project he did with his 7th graders, and a thoughtful analysis of how it went – good, bad, uncertain, etc.  I know many of you don’t think most of what you do in class is particularly interesting or useful to share, but I can tell you from experience there are many, many teachers out there ready to benefit from your thoughts and explanations of stuff just like this. Plus – and I’m sorry to say it in front of everyone like this – it’s SO good for us to reflect and analyze post-learnifying. Analyze @MrAndersonELA on the Twitters – he’s into that kind of thing.

Unassigned Reading – Sherri Spelic, the much loved and increasingly renowned Edified Listener, shares some simple thoughts on the joys of reading with her child. I know, I know – but it’s thoughtful and insightful and kinda warm and fuzzy and it’s still sort of Christmas so shut up. You want to increase your joy? Follow @edifiedlistener on the Twitters – she’s the real deal. 

Rest for the Harvest: A Runner’s Letter to Winter Bodies – OK, yes… TECHNICALLY Christina Torres is writing about marathons and reflecting on the physical and mental preparation and her overall holistic experiences with running. She may or may not intend it as an analogy for anything else. But it is. Besides, there’s never a bad reason to read Torres or to follow @biblio_phile on the Twitters. She’s fairly amazing. 

Look for a Special Mid-Week, Nearly New Year’s Blue Serials In A Few Days.

I’ll be compiling the most essential #oklaed and beyond posts about the latest federal and state edu-slation. I’ll also be telling you more about the OK Legislator profiles you’ll see here starting in the new year – what they are, why we’re doing them, and what I hope you’ll do as a result. 

Hope is not a feeling. Hope is a choice. We don’t teach because we’ll win, we don’t love because we’ll benefit, and we don’t vote because we’ll get our way. We hope and we insist and we keep our eyes open no matter how much they burn because somebody has to. Because our kids deserve better.

If we’re going down, let’s go down shouting truth and hope and refusing to go gentle into the self-imposed night. In the meantime, I choose to believe. 

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#OklaEd Chat Preview (12/27/15)

Oh the Giddy Joy!

Blue Cereal will be moderating the weekly #OklaEd chat this coming Sunday (12/27/15) from 8:00 – 9:00 CST.

If you’re a regular participant, please set aside that extended family you’re tired of by Sunday evening anyway and join us. And if you’re not, please consider joining us anyway!

We’re throwing this one open to anyone interested in a little edu-sharing or teacher-bonding mid-holiday break. Teachers, students, parents, administrators, or just desperately lonely people who spend way too much time online. You can participate from Guthrie, or El Paso, or Washington, D.C. Heck, you folks in Austria should set your alarms and drag your cookies to the laptop for this one – GOOD TIMES!

If you’ve not done a Twitter chat before, every tweet will have the hashtag #OklaEd. Most participants use an app like Tweetdeck or other ‘Twitter organizer’ so that any tweet with the chosen hashtag shows up in order in the designated column. You can potentially follow along with whatever you use to Twitter anyway as long as you keep refreshing the search for the #OklaEd hashtag – but it sounds like a lot of work that way. But hey, your call, babe.

In Keeping With the Season, This Week’s Topic is Inspiration & Motivation –

What Gets You Going and KEEPS You Going? Here are the anticipated prompts and some introductory thoughts…

OklaEd Opening

OklaEd Introductions

OklaEd Q1

OklaEd Q2

OklaEd Q3

OklaEd Q4

OklaEd Q5

OklaEd Q6

OklaEd Q7

OklaEd Q8

OklaEd Q9

Please join us. If this chat is successful, despite me leading it and despite the holiday timing, I promise the next time I moderate will be all deep, meaningful stuff.

“What’s the coolest thing you’ve ever done in class for which you could easily be fired if it were taken out of context?”

“What’s the juiciest rumor you’ve refused to pass along in your district because you’re above that sort of thing (but of course you can tell US b/c we’re tight like that)?” 

“What’s the hardest name you’ve had to try to pronounce this year?”

“What administrator would you really like to give your full and honest opinion to and what would you say (knowing they’re not cool enough to read this and we won’t tell)?”

“Does this look infected to you? I can’t tell if it’s a bite, or a rash… can you touch it?”

But not this time. This time, we’re going Inspiration & Motivation – because TIME OF YEAR.

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Blue Serials (12/20/15)

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You Made It.

Well, through a semester, at least. That’s something, right?

I shouldn’t assume that most of us are exhausted, or at least relieved, rather than joyously celebrating another 18 weeks well-taught. But this is a weird gig, folks. The idea that we can cajole kids or teenagers, 30 or so at a time, into learning random stuff they rarely see much point in knowing, and do this more or less alone – every day – once the door is closed… who would expect THAT to work

Before we spend too much energy lamenting the times it doesn’t, or the kids who won’t, consider what a freakin’ miracle it is that you make it happen AT ALL! It’s really quite impressive.

Imagine flapping your arms wildly, hoping to fly about twenty feet off the ground. You only make it about eight feet, though, occasionally skimming the grass as you swoop wildly around the yard – less than half of what you’d hoped. BUT YOU FLAPPED YOUR ARMS AND FLEW OUT OF SHEER FORCE OF WILL AND A HEALTHY SIDE OF DELUSION! Anyone else would have to count that as a win. (Well, except state legislators who are positive you should be at least a quarter mile above the rooftops because they wrote ALL THE BILLS WITH THE SUCCESS WORDS.) 

That’s a little Christmas Miracle you have going all year ’round, my #11FF – even during those few weeks in April when you’re like, ‘screw this’, and those three ‘mental health days’ you took last month. But otherwise – FLAP! FLAP! FLAP! FLAP! FLAP!

Oh, And It’s Also Almost Christmas.

For those of you who are into that kind of thing. It’s cool if you’re not – but I’m personally a bit giddy. Consequently, I’m going to focus on the warm fuzzy touchy feely hopey stuff this week – or at least things primarily concerned with teaching, and students, and our various classrooms.

Still, these are tough times in education, especially here in Oklahoma. You should be following and supporting the legit folks fighting for your paychecks, your sense of purpose, and your students’ academic souls – especially OKEducationTruths, A View From the Edge, and Fourth Generation Teacher.

But this week, I’M all about unicorns and rainbows, baby – because IT’S CHRISTMAS!

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OK – maybe not ALL unicorns and rainbows. But NOT politics. Not yet. 

By Failing Our Students, Are We Failing Our Students? – Maha Bali at Reflecting Allowed wrestles with something very familiar to many of us as we finalize those first semester grades. Yeah, I see the numbers on the screen. Yes, I read their work. I know, I know… if only they’d tried, or listened, or made a little more effort… but… Could I have done something differently? Tried harder to reach THEM? Understood MORE of what they needed? Will this grade teach them an important lesson about responsibility, or…? If you know something of this feeling, you’ll want to bookmark this one. You may not find answers, but I felt better knowing others had the same struggles. And if you don’t know this feeling, read it anyway. Follow @bali_maha on the Twitters and you can wrestle through a variety of deep issues together. She’s amazing. 

How & Why We Should Let Our Students Fail – Since we’re on the topic, Jennifer Gonzalez at Cult of Pedagogy has a fascinating review of The Gift of Failure: How the Best Parents Learn to Let Go So Their Children Can Succeed (Jessica Lahey). I haven’t read the book, so I have no idea what it might be about, but… (That was what we in the blogging business call ‘knee-slapping humor’.) Like only the best reviewers can, Gonzalez gives us a solid stand-alone piece that merely doubles as a book review. On the other hand, I’ll be downloading this title with some of those gift cards I hope to receive soon. So should you. In the meantime, follow Jennifer on the Twitters at @cultofpedagogy for more learnin’ stuff, and while you’re at it check out @jesslahey as well – they’re both practically #11FF if they’d just join the %#$@ contest

What NOT To Say To Your Music Teacher – Mindy Dennison at This Teacher Sings speaks from personal experience, but I have to think this one resonates with any teacher who has ever taught a so-called “extra-curricular” subject. Turns out they’re not always fighting the tide of disrespect, testing-driven curriculum, and budget cuts just because they’re “lucky.” Maybe they’re fighting for our kids artistic and non-linear souls…? Follow Mindy on the Twitters at @MrsDSings and brush with greatness – she’s kind of a big deal now.  #oklaed 

Brave Spelling – Dana Murphy at Two Writing Teachers talks about spelling. And learning. And how ‘getting it wrong’ is the worst way to see things. Oh, and these weird little letter robots, too – who knew THAT was a thing? Follow Dana Murphy on the Twitters at @DanaMurphy68 and Two Writing Teachers at @2WritingTeachrs – they’re all hung up on the joys of learning and not very good at crushing hope out of little people. I love that about them.

A Voice – Rebecka Peterson on One Good Thing does that thing she does so well with the thinking and the wondering and the caring and the hope. Much like when I hear a capella live or watch Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog for the eleventeenth time, I don’t get it and I can’t do it, but I’m sure glad others can – and that they’re this good at it. Follow Peterson on the Twitters at @RebeckaMozdeh and sing along with her. Er… metaphorically, I assume.  #oklaed

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One Year Ago – And SO Worth Revisiting…

“To The Friend That Once Said, ‘You Need To Be Realistic.'” – This week’s flashback to #amazeballs post (I really need a more consistent name for these) is from Kris Giere at Involuntary Verbosity. It’s a poem, actually – which is what makes this a ‘first ever’, since I don’t really do poems all that often – or share them ever ever ever. But oh my glowing baby in a manger, is this one worth a read or seven hang-it-on-the-wall. It gave me the tinglies – and not the naughty kind, either. Go follow Kris on the Twitters at @KrisGiere, but don’t expect tinglies ALL the time. Mostly he’s just thoughtful and insightful and talks about education and stuff, and makes you feel smarter as a result of his questions and suggestions. 

Finally, Giddy Congratulations to #OklaEd Winners of #Eddies15:

OKEducationTruths – First Place, Best Administrator Blog; Second Place, Best Individual Blog

A View From The Edge – Second Place, Best Administrator Blog

This Teacher Sings – First Place, Best New Blog

Mrs. Waters English – Second Place, Best EdTech/Resource Blog; Second Place, Best Teacher Blog

It’s an honor to stalk and harrass each of you!

Alright Darlings – regroup and relax, give and receive, sing and watch and eat and play. We have so many miles to go, and so little objectively suggesting we’ll ever arrive. 

Isn’t it exciting to have a challenge? 

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Blue Serials (12/13/15)

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Baby, It’s Tepid Outside. It doesn’t really feel like Xmas yet – maybe it’s the weather (at least in Oklahoma), or maybe it’s because school’s still in. Maybe it’s just age blunting the potential of the season.

Nevertheless, I have an early present for you. A collection of edu-posts from this past week(ish) which you simply must. not. miss. You’re welcome! 

(Oh, um… can you save that bow? We reuse those. Yeah, thanks.)

The Other Shortage – OKEducationTruths wrote last week about the shortage of competent, capable, not-going-to-hell-for-their-shenanigans people running for state office. We need more candidates, and better candidates, and – while he’s a bit more gentle about this than I am – we need to get our collective heads out of our behinds well before next November to figure out who we’re supporting and who we’re not, and why. 

It’s partly with this in mind that I’m starting an #OKElections16 feature in January profiling various members of our state legislature – especially in regards to their actions impacting public education. As new candidates arise – IF new candidates arise – I’ll try to cover a few of them as well. You know things are serious when Blue Cereal tackles legit, boring-but-so-important stuff. 

In the meantime, follow @okeducation on the Twitters – he’s not always serious, but he does say much that’s pretty important. (Don’t, um… don’t tell him I said that, would you?)

#OklaEd Funding, Vouchers Proposals, and Other ‘Bend Over, Like It, and We’ll Call It Love‘ State Legislative Rhetoric:

Fund Us. Support Us. Or STFU! – Claudia Swisher at Fourth Generation Teacher has had enough of lawmakers and others talking smarmily about how their mother and their sister and several of their ex-wives were all teachers and so I TOTALLY UNDERSTAND WHAT YOU’RE SAYING I HAVE ALL THIS CREDIBILITY. If you get it, she says, then do something useful; otherwise, Shut The F-

Well, you get the idea. Find the normally much calmer, sweeter @ClaudiaSwisher on the Twitters. She’s brilliant and effective and still feels awkward about the ‘STFU’ thing even though it made everyone smile and no one thinks she’s a potty mouth.

I Can Run A Spreadsheet Too (Rob Miller, A View From The Edge) – Rob explains why vouchers do NOT raise ‘per-pupil funding’ for public schools after all the wealthy white kids run to Word of Grace of Hope of Profit Academy in the suburbs. Rob’s on Twitter – @edgeblogger – go show him some love. 

A Blatant Double Standard (Rick Cobb, OKEducationTruths) – Of rhetoric and reality regarding voucher proposals in Oklahoma. My favorite part is about how public schools MUST be buried in bureaucracy because OMG STANDARDS! while the privates/charters/chosenfaves MUST be free from any and all accountability because OMG BUREAUCRACY CRUSHES INNOVATION AND QUALITY!

Rick’s on Twitter also – or were you not paying attention above? *sheesh*

Early #OklaEd Reactions to the recent passage of the More Delusional Rhetoric Act (aka, “Every Child Learns Everything At The Highest Levels Ever Just Because We Mandate It” Act, sometimes abbreviated to ESSA):

Music Stands Alone – Meghan Loyd at For the Love has hope for extra-curriculars under the revised federal… thing. Only Meghan could make me feel happy thoughts about anything 18,000 pages long and approved by the federal government – but she does. Be happy with Meghan on the Twitters – @meghanloyd.

The First Bite of the Elephant / The Next Big Bite of ESSA – Rob Miller of A View From The Edge has been on a roll lately. Thank goodness – he does all that… thinking and facts and stuff, so the rest of us don’t have to.

Finally, GO VOTE FOR THESE AMAZING #OKLAED EDU-BLOGGERS Who’ve Been Nominated for #Eddies15!

Best Individual Blog – OkEducationTruths

Best Teacher Blog – JennWillTeach and Mrs. Waters’ English

Best New Blog – This Teacher Sings (who has a pithy new post we didn’t have a chance to get to this week)

Best EdTech/Resource Sharing – ELAOK Teachers and Mrs. Waters’ English

Best Administrator Blog – A View From the Edge

It doesn’t take long to vote, and you’re a better person for having done so.

Next week I hope to get back to warmer, fuzzier topics and grab a few from outside our troubled state as well. I know we’re tired, and I know anyone paying attention is probably livid and discouraged most of the time – but I promise you, you’re doing the Lord’s work out there. What you say to your kids and the simple things you try to teach them mean more than any thousands of pages those principalities and powers can pass. So to hell with the system – go love your kids. Hold their heads under that water of knowledge until they have to either drink, or drown.

Merry Almost Xmas.

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Don’t Worry – I Have A Plan #OklaEd

#oklaed

In an #OklaEd chat a week or so ago, we were challenged by @Coach57 to not merely complain about state legislation and legislatures, but to suggest specific solutions.

Fair enough.

I confess my cynicism does tend to get me stuck attacking nonsense rather than offering alternatives. History teaches many lessons, but few are more clear or consistent than this: it’s almost always much, MUCH easier to get people united AGAINST something than it is to reach consensus over what to be FOR. 

The thing is, I’m not convinced a majority of state legislatures actually want solutions to improve public education. Some seem quite determined to destroy it altogether – presumably in service to whatever private corruption they wish to install in its place. The rest merely pander to an ill-informed constituency with destructive platitudes and bad ideas marinated in shoddy rhetoric. 

None of which negates Coach’s point. So here’s my plan for Oklahoma Public Education. 

Districts decide what courses they’ll offer, how they’ll teach, and what’s required to graduate. They’re free to offer different types of diplomas, use traditional grading or not, or reinvent the idea of school altogether. 

I can hear the heads exploding already. Stay with me – it’s not as anarchic as it sounds.  

Each district would be part of a collective, a team of mutually accountable districts not necessarily scattered equally across the state, but also not packed together by region. We’d need a pretentious name for these – something that’s not entirely accurate but makes an offensively cheesy acronym. 

Each collective would be composed of 12 – 20 districts, a mix of large and small, urban and rural. Representatives from these districts would meet periodically – at least several times a year – to share ideas, successes, and failures (also known as ‘learning experiences’), AND to hold one another mutually accountable. 

Each district must secure the approval of its collective for its proposed curriculum and standards, however traditional or non-traditional they may be. The collective can grant ‘pilot’ status to ideas outside the norm, and set a period of time during which these ideas can be tried and assessed – probably a few years. They may also serve in an advisory/supportive capacity – fresh eyes from outside, as it were. 

Travel expenses and time investment would be offset by the elimination of most state compliance requirements. I can’t remember half of the bureaucratic crap districts have to crank out every month, but @OKEducation used to do lists from time to time – he could probably fill in some specifics. 

The representatives from each district should be at or near superintendent level, perhaps with a curriculum person as cohort. We don’t want this to be a symbolic exercise in cranking out the same old magniloquence – we want to actually change the substance of how school works. 

Doctor Frankenreform

Membership in each collective would be juggled from time to time to promote cross-pollination and reduce any tendency to fall into mutual back-scratching. Collectives would be overseen in a general way by the SDE using resources it wastes now on testing, compliance, and other bureaucracy not of its own design, but most of the decisions and actions of the collectives would be self-reported. The SDE or state legislature would only step in if a collective fails in some dramatic way to perform its functions. 

What madness would this unleash? Not much, I fear. The expense of real change is a natural retardant on progress, for better or worse. Keep in mind that most districts are already filled with teachers trained in core subjects, in classrooms set up and stocked for the same old same old, and led by graduates from the traditional system. 

If anything, I think it will be difficult to shake ourselves OUT of current ruts. I don’t expect much SO wildly outside-the-box that we make the funny pages up North. Change – and I do expect substantial, positive change – is likely to be evolutionary more than revolutionary. 

Hopefully it’s a LITTLE revolutionary, though?

Districts in sufficient proximity to one another could choose to work together in order to offer a greater array of options to their students. One might focus on STEM subjects and their real-world application in cooperation with local businesses or other institutions, while another combines arts programs from several schools to benefit from economies of scale. 

Bokachita High might offer a wider variety of AP courses than they could on their own, while Patumba Academy focuses on mechanical skills and FFA. These are just examples from my less-than-imaginative, old-schooled brain. I’m sure that districts given a little freedom would do much, much better. 

As to the potential for error, malice, or incompetence when granted such freedom, yes – stuff might happen. On the whole, however, I’ll trust a bunch of career educators who’ve stayed with their profession despite state abuse to make decisions about what’s best for kids over a bunch of career politicians who’ve done little to demonstrate similar priorities. 

The leadership of one district might be tempted to follow the path of least resistance, or place other priorities over the long-term good of students, but not five districts meeting together. Certainly not a dozen. 

I’m not saying we’re saints or martyrs, but we don’t get paid to bestow favors and we don’t get reelected based on our public posturing – given the choice, I’ll risk placing my faith in the educators. 

Irresponsibility

How do we judge the success or failure of a district or a collective? The resources currently devoted to standardized testing and those horrible companies would be redirected to a new branch of the State Department of Education in charge of communication with and feedback from universities, technical schools, and employers, both within and beyond state boundaries. 

They’d gather statistical and anecdotal feedback regarding how prepared students were for post-secondary education, employment, training, etc. They’d also do both short and long-term follow-up with randomly selected students to gage their perceptions of how prepared they were for college, career, life, etc. 

This is an imperfect process, made less so by limited resources, but as far as I know we don’t do anything at all like this under the current system. We just give this one multiple choice test in March, and… that’s it. That’s the summary of your entire educational experience, boiled down to a number. 

OK – that’s not fair. We give seven mutiple choice tests in March. THOSE are the summary of your entire educational experience, boiled down to seven numbers.

None of this is about tying this or that school district to one kid’s success or failure, but over a period of years we could accumulate some very useful feedback regarding the effectiveness of different things tried in various districts. All information would be made available to all districts for consideration in their collectives. I suppose the existing state tests could be available to districts as well, should they find internal value in administering them under whatever conditions they find appropriate. 

The more conservative elements of our state leadership are fond of talking about choice and competition in regards to public schools. If they mean it, they should be quite fond of a system giving so much choice to local districts. And while it’s not strictly ‘competition’, I’m not sure we want ‘winners’ and ‘losers’ in our education system. We just need more flexibility figuring out what ‘winning’ looks like from place to place. 

We hear ‘accountability’ thrown around like a double-edged trump card every time talk of eliminating testing is broached. This setup includes plenty of accountability – the sort of professional oversight we like to think is common in medical or legal fields, as well as state-gathered feedback from universities and employers. 

You know all those times you’ve heard politicians talk about deregulating this or that industry so they’re free to create jobs and grow the economy and such? We need to tap into some of that libertarian fervor when it comes to state schools and tell the folks at the capitol to get out of the kitchen for a bit and let us cook. We promise, we’re taste-testing as we go. 

Fixing Education

The full potential of such a system is, like everything else, limited by funding. It’s more or less revenue-neutral, however, and if there are inherent flaws based on lack of resources, they can’t be much different or worse than those we face currently. In my unicorns and rainbows idealism, such a setup might encourage more participation on the part of state industries or those folks already dumping cash into #edreform – assuming they lack a specific agenda of their own in so doing. 

So turn us loose to really try to reach and teach our kids. We’ll hold one another’s feet to the fire, challenge and encourage and suggest and share. It’s not like the current system is working, and in almost every school in the state you’ll find teachers and administrators already bending and stretching and violating the rules as best they can to accommodate those in their care. Let us do it without having to pretend we’re not, and without so much resistance from people who’ve never met our kids. 

And if, in a decade, the industries and institutions to which you pay such deference are unhappy, then you’ll have your license to have your way with us – charters and virtuals, border to border, Pearson proudly stamped on every faux-ploma. 

Or… it might work. We might start finding better ways to help a wider variety of students not only graduate but go forth and prosper – in whatever way that might mean for them. The top can be toppier, the academic middle can be fished out of those cracks they’ve perpetually fallen into, and many, many more of those we’re currently losing altogether can find some reason and some pathway to make themselves useful economically and personally – contributing to the good of all instead of further draining what we have now. 

What, exactly, do we have to lose?