Raising 21st Century Learners- Environment

Raising 21st Century Learners : The Environment

A short while ago, I uprooted my wife and 14 year old twin sons from a perfectly average Canadian small town suburban life to go live in Beijing, China. My sons were attending the same middle school that I attended and living in a house less than 1 km away from my old homestead. We moved as far away as geographically and culturally possible as we could to Beijing. My kids will need different attitudes and experiences than I did to be successful in the near future and a disruptive event was required to snap them out of the comfortable lull of suburbia. We are half way through our adventure, and like any good tale, there are lots of lessons, some pleasant, and others more trying. This blog entry is about the environment. Other aspects will follow.

Environmental Issues

Perhaps the most obvious new “in your face”, as well as in your lungs, on your skin and on your mind impression, is the environmental issues. Although at home we have a recycling program, observe Earth Hour and have green initiatives, it is difficult to grasp the urgency of a faraway idea of Global Warming and the need to care for our limited environment while playing in green backyards, driving through hours of forested highways, breathing crystal clean air, drinking water straight from the tap and swimming in local streams. How am I going to teach lessons of a shrinking environment when they are immersed by ubiquitous and fresh green and blue?

As we are preparing to fly to Beijing, the infamous air quality of Beijing broke records every day, for 20 consecutive days. It was so bad, that airplanes were diverted due to lack of visibility. We were told that some days in February were so bad that you could not see the building 20 ft beside you. What have we gotten into? But we could not change our minds. Tickets were purchased and my replacement was already in place at work. Off we went.

The plane landed and we walked through the connecting gangway. Still inside, the air hit us in the face with the strong smell of burning metal. It was like cutting through bolts or even brake pads after going down Fundy National Park. It burns the back of the throat. The drive from the airport had an eerie haze, somewhat similar to the fog at Cape Enrage, but yellow brown. The fog at Cape did not burn and taste. I started to cough almost immediately. This is going to be a long 3 months.

 

Our first day at the school is a Saturday. The boys decided to go and play some soccer on the field in the fog. It was not 5 minutes and the soccer coach came out and told us to moderate our outdoor time. We were told that we should minimize our walking outside. Running was absolutely not allowed without a mask. He was nice enough to give us a box of masks. What an odd concept for the twins. In Canada, we sometimes cancel games due to thunder, or rain or snow. In Beijing, they cancel games because of air quality. The school has to check the air quality readings before every lunch hour to determine if it is safe to send the kids outside to play. It might be one thing for a few months of exposure, but I wonder about the impact of smog on young developing lungs and then extended over a lifetime.

Taxi drivers, bicyclist, beggars, ladies in nice dresses and men in suits walk around the city spitting and blowing snot out of their nostrils on the sidewalks as they try to clear their airways congested from the pollution. One would have to wash their car daily because every day there is a thin film of pollution  covering everything. The odd thing is, they do not know any better. For the lifetime of the citizens, it has always been that way. It is normal. The largest contributors seem to be the coal fired factories, coal fired heating plants, diesel trucks and all the cars. This problem is similar in every city in China and it seems to be largely accepted by the population. I hope the twins have a better understanding of what it was like in London in the Industrial Revolution and Oliver Twist.

Although the air is the most obvious, there are other environmental issues at hand. The water from the tap is suitable for washing and brushing teeth, but not for drinking. When we eat at a restaurant, we have to ask for no ice. In some places we have to avoid drinking out of the glasses, choosing instead to wash the pop can and then drink directly. The school has water fountains that are safe to drink from only because of a high tech filtration system located in the basement.

There were people fishing out of the nearby canal that has no flow. The water is black, with a film of scum. Rotting reaches a pinnacle in the summer and I am told that the stench is quite strong. On a different section of the canal that was only inches deep, there were 7 people dressed in new clean crisp business suits, pant legs rolled up, wading through the water in their bare feet with nets looking for frogs. It turns out that the Chinese restaurant 3 football fields away has bullfrog on the menu. If the water is suitable for teeth brushing, but not drinking, it must be contaminated with chemicals such as the heavy metals that make China so famous. Do they really want to be eating fish and frogs from that soup?

Coming to China has allowed my boys to do many new things that we would never do at home. Some examples are surprising. My boys have never been to a farm or done much gardening despite being surrounded by them in Riverview. They are ubiquitous and therefore just something you drive by and not worth a second glance. However, in Beijing, the large population, many of whom are vegetarian, demands a large amount of food. There are many open air markets with fresh fruit and vegetables as well as fresh, unrefrigerated beef, poultry and fish hanging out in the sun. No wonder the Bird Flu is so prevalent here.

 

An organic Farm is quite a novelty here and therefore is special and worthy of a field trip. It took coming to Beijing to have my sons visit an organic farm, to get their hands dirty and plant some vegetables.

 

As the song goes, “you don’t know what you got till it’s gone, they paved paradise and put up a parking lot. They put all the trees in a museum and charged the people a buck just to see’em.” I wonder what will go through the boys minds the next time we are hiking through a national park, or when we turn out the lights for Earth Day. 21st Century Learners need to recognize that although we share this small world, the world that they live in is not the same everywhere. Our actions in New Brunswick impact Mother Earth and people in other parts of the world. The products we buy may be contributing to pollution for many others. We need to learn from others and avoid their mistakes. I wonder how our actions will change when we return. I think our home garden will expand with the help of two teen workers.

These have all been very personal lessons. There are some other larger lessons to learn from a school and curriculum point of view. Academically, people are searching for topics and projects that will allow students to investigate the many different aspects for school rather than having them separated into course. It seems to me that air quality, water quality and food production could be a wonderful science, engineering, political, law, and design, historical and cultural project. What is in the air that we breathe? What is in the water that we drink? How do the filters work? Do the filters work? What contributes to a good day or a bad day? Is there a trend such as the day of the week? Is the weather better after a wind or a good rain? How do they make it rain? What parts of this problem are technology and what parts are cultural? Can we solve this problem with a social program, a gadget or a law? Can students design a gadget, program or policy to help? Can they present, implement and cause a change, rather than just talk about it?

There are so many 21st Century Learning Lessons waiting to be taught here in Beijing. It is not the first place I think of when one says innovative modern education. Lessons taught here in Beijing will travel to New Brunswick when we return. But these are big lessons, that take some time to percolate to the core of a person and these lessons take longer than 10 or 14 days. There are many inter-working aspects of a 21st Century Learning project waiting to be investigated in Beijing. Check back later for the next installment.

Discovery Channel Webinar with Sir Ken Robinson

Early in the morning, I asked the staff at CISB if they wanted to join me while I watched the Discovery Channel Webinar of Sir Ken Robinson as he talked about finding your element, which coincides with his new book. It was a fun way to celebrate National Teacher’s week in the US.

 

Heidi Jacobs and Curriculum 21 Workshop at CISB

Heidi Jacobs gave a day long workshop about Curriculum 21 and “Right Now Skills” on March 23rd, 2013. She highlighted a number of applications, web pages and technologies that can help in a classroom. However, it is mostly about changing the way that classroom happens.

 

Raising 21st Century Learners

In 2006, I spent a summer experiencing Shad Valley, the first real example of 21st Century learning I had ever seen. It turns out that the creator of Shad Valley wanted to instill 21st Century Learning skills in his own kids, long before there was such a label. This summer changed my teaching career and now my own kids.

While doing my teacher training, my science methods teacher asked me if Science was knowledge or a process. I intuitively knew that the right answer was that science is a process, a way of thinking, and a way to solve puzzles with applications reaching far outside of the world of science.  I did not understand the implications of my answer and my actions certainly did not match my quick response.  Teachers tend to teach the way that we were taught. It is what we know and probably with what we were successful.  Many years of customs, styles and baggage that served a certain portion of past generations was deeply engrained in my psyche. I could best serve my students by being the best teacher that I could be and that meant being the best at these historic strategies. I was going to be the best teacher by being the best at doing what was done to me. It is a natural and pervasive cycle of life that works well, until change is required.

Only when I was able to experience a concrete example of 21st Century Learning for an extended period of time, did I start to understand the subtle nuances that make such an important difference. I started to understand that 21st Century Learning was not an additional “thing” to add to an already full curriculum, but rather a “how” do I teach the existing content. I spent much time and energy working with other people’s kids trying to turn them into students of a future that we cannot predict, all the while, watching passively the learning of my own sons. Surely there is a not-so-special, not-father-of-the-year award waiting for me. This has to change. I need to expose my own kids to some of these concrete examples for more than just a weekend or a week.

The time is right for something, but what? If I am going to act, I need to act now. The twins are in middle school. They are still impressionable, old enough to absorb some lessons, young enough to change directions. They think science is a list of vocabulary words on a fill in the blank photocopy and that is my fault.  How do I teach them to be critical thinkers, to interact with the outside word in a meaningful way? How do they learn that literacy extends beyond language class that there are many different cultures in this world? They will need to interact with many of those cultures and some might even say complete with them. How can I get them to be better communicators? How can I help them be flexible? How will I create an environment where they will have a chance to become 21st Century Learners where both formal and informal learning environments are integrated? In the education field, we talk about this, but yet we seem to find few examples to follow. Maybe I can impact my own kids and provide an example simultaneously.

Although there are lots of interesting places in our own backyard, I need an opportunity that will be disruptive. They need the proverbial slap or jump start. Something shocking that will make it immediately obvious that things are going to be different. I am taking a leave from my teaching job and we are moving to China for 3 months as a family! This should be a shock to the system and provide a definite milestone, life before and after China. There should be lots of opportunity to be flexible, lots of natural writing prompts, and a chance to experience a significant world culture that is significantly different.

Although visiting the UK and EU could provide lots of cultural experiences and I am certain seeing the sites would be interesting, I am hoping to change their person, not just populate their facebook accounts.  Interacting with international students should provide some opportunities for differences of opinion and the resulting debate and communication should employ critical thinking. Perhaps it will give them a chance to step outside the monotony of English and French bilingualism. Perhaps they will be more appreciative of what they have when we come back. We live in an awesome part of the world, but there is a big world out there.

So they each have more professional online presences on twitter, facebook, blogs and youtube. They are “FintheTwin” and “Sethsbreaths”. They have already learned how to create these online reputations, how to create a video and how to publish blogs. More importantly, much of the technical pieces they learned on their own or from each other. When they found out that other people would be watching and reading, all of a sudden work that was good enough for Dad is not quite good enough for their virtual friends.  Media literacy, creativity, innovation, critical thinking, communication and collaboration have begun.

We fly out in a week.

I hope I will be able to impact my own kids as much as the creators of Shad Valley or the creators of 21st Century learning movement have impacted me.

 

Discovery Channel Educator Network STAR

I’m now a Discovery Educator Network STAR teacher. I have been looking at some of the resources that Discovery Channel has to offer, and I really like them. More importantly, I have been able to interact with many of the networked teacher and I like them even more. I hope I will be able to maintain this prestigious status.

Discovery Channel Educator Network STAR

I’m now a Discovery Educator Network STAR teacher. I have been looking at some of the resources that Discovery Channel has to offer, and I really like them. More importantly, I have been able to interact with many of the networked teacher and I like them even more. I hope I will be able to maintain this prestigious status.

 

Convening Engaged Minds: Leader to Leader Program

Prime Minister Paul Martin chatting with me

I had the GREAT priviledge of participating in the C21 Canada Summit. It was fantastic reconnecting with people, many of whom were strangers just one year ago, but now strangely feel like long lost friends. The power of a face to face, social media to maintain contact and a common goal. Thanks for going out of your way to pick me up from Downtown TO Camille. Thanks to Zoe for making me feel so welcome and Thanks to Rod for challenging my perspective and making me feel my perspective is valued. The talk this year was great and necessary. I wonder if the next year needs to be the teacher, student voice. There seemed to be consensus that we agree with the 21C in principal, but few people in industry, or politics or classrooms have any real concrete examples to follow. They are out there, let’s show them off. Let’s give them glimpses of the promised land so that they can create their own!!

One of my educational mentors and friends won an award for international educational development. I was so happy when I realized you won this award.

Thanks for the inspiration personally and professionally, Bill.

And getting a chance to listen to former Prime Minister Paul Martin talk about education was inspirational. It means something more because he is waking his talk. He said many cool things, but there was one thing that he said that seems to obvious to someone as simple as me. It was almost a “self evident truth”. I am paraphrasing his content. He was much more eloquent.

Any jurisdiction that cuts funding to education, particularly in a deficit budget is causing an exponentially step spiral downwards. You cut out the hope of the future. It is paramount to child abuse to take away the education of a young person. We do not have the right. You can put off building a road for a year or two. You can put off having a balanced budget for a year or two. You will get there. But if you postpone funding for even 1 year, that 6 year old is damaged for life with impacts that last generations. If it is self evident, obvious and paramount, why is education often the brunt of budget cut??

It is like we know that smoking is unhealthy and complain about our level of health as we puff another cigarette. Maybe education should be politically agnostic somehow?

A particular thanks goes out to SMART Tech for sponsoring my attendance. Yet again, they are most generous. Thank you to RHS and Anglophone East for allowing me to be away.

We Win!…MindShare Learning 21C Classroom Video Contest

 

Students from 2 years ago come together to produce an awesome video. It is one of three classes across Canada to win. We are the Eastern Canada winners. In particular, thanks to Zoe and Katie and Isaac. Also thank you to all the social media input who gave it so many views.

 

 

Thanks Tim Gard of MindShare Learning Magazine

Excerpt from Tim Gards Reflections in MindShare, Feb 2013. 

Interactive Whiteboard Technologies

SMART was there at BETT in a big way. I had an opportunity to move between their booth and collaborative classroom where they showcased many of their new products using SMART exemplary teachers from around the world, including Ian Fogarty from New Brunswick. Ian is one of the winners of this year’s MindShare 21st Century Classroom Video Challenge.

SMART introduced several new products including their finger touch interactive projector. I haven’t had a lot of success with interactive projector technology because I’ve found them a bit quirky however SMART’s new projector was very responsive and was dual-touch as well. It was also only $2000.00 which was definitely a cost effective way to include interactive whiteboard technology in your school. SMART also introduced their re-designed SMART table. This table is sleek and durable! I know of one VP who is looking for this kind of table for her school which has a very high population of special needs students who I believe would benefit very much from these tables.