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New
stories
for
learning

                                                 

                     Connected
autonomy
and
talent
development

Carmen
Tschofen                     Minnesota
Educators
of
the

tschofen@email.com                  Gifted
and
Talented

slideshare:                         February
7,
2011
A
travel
story
A
family
story
A
family
story

                 ‣School
choice
                 ‣Alternative
learning
                 ‣Dual
enrollment
                 ‣Supplemental
enrollment
                 ‣Community
schooling
                 ‣Exchange
programs
                 ‣Homeschooling
                 ‣Unschooling
A
learning
story
A
learning
story   Gifted
models
                      ‣Pull
out
model
                      ‣Push
in
model
                      ‣Cluster
grouping
                      ‣Special
classes
                      ‣School‐wide

                       enrichment
                      ‣Acceleration/
                       Compacting
                      ‣Full
time
grouping
The
stories
we
create:

          The
Overton
Window


             S.O.P

  Outdated            Optimal               Outrageous
                           ~Mackinac Center for Public Policy
The
stories
we
create:

          The
Overton
Window
                     Obstacles
                        Structural
                       Conceptual
             S.O.P     Worldview
                      Psychological
                      Neuroscience
                            Optimal
  Outdated                            Optimal               Outrageous
                                           ~Mackinac Center for Public Policy
                                              (modified C. Tschofen 10/10)
Stories
we
can’t
afford
Stories
we
can’t
afford

        Gifted
children
as...
Stories
we
can’t
afford

        Gifted
children
as...
        ‣Economic
engines
Stories
we
can’t
afford

        Gifted
children
as...
        ‣Economic
engines
        ‣Weapons
of
world
domination
Stories
we
can’t
afford

        Gifted
children
as...
        ‣Economic
engines
        ‣Weapons
of
world
domination
        ‣Academic
(testing)
wonders
Small,
old
stories
‣Age
groups
                     ‣School
                     ‣Classrooms
                     ‣Subjects
                     ‣Grading
                     ‣Sequences
and
diplomas




Small,
old
stories
Legacy
stories
Legacy
stories
‣   In
2025:
4
year
college
=
$400,000

    (current
rate
of
increase)

‣   Past
20
years:
tuition,
room,
board
and
fees,

    increased
at
a
rate
6
x
greater
than
the

    increase
in
the
average
earnings
of
college

    graduates.

‣   Past
10
years:
college
graduates'
earnings

    have
fallen.

Lataif,
Louis
E.
Universities
On
The
Brink

http://www.forbes.com/2011/02/01/college‐education‐
bubble‐opinions‐contributors‐louis‐lataif_print.html

Legacy
stories
                  70%
of
high
school
graduates

                  enroll
in
college






http://completionagenda.collegeboard.org/reports
Legacy
stories
                  70%
of
high
school
graduates

                  enroll
in
college




                  57
%

of
those
graduate





http://completionagenda.collegeboard.org/reports
Legacy
stories
College
students,
last
12
months:

   ‣30%
so
depressed
that
it
was

    difficult
to
function

   ‣49%
reported
overwhelming

    anxiety
   ‣10%
diagnosed
or
treated
for

    depression
(reported)
   ‣6%
seriously
considered
suicide

                      American
College
Health
Association,
2008
Legacy
stories
Misleading
stories...
Misleading
stories...

"The
digital
facelift"


                           Clay
Shirky
Misleading
stories?

Learning
technology
phases:
‣ Textbook
on
a
screen
‣ Enrichment/
“motivation”
‣ Universe
in
a
box
‣ Walled
“social”
garden
‣ All‐seeing
eye/Technological
embrace
Leading
stories

“...for
the
first
time
we
are

understanding
the
act
of
learning
as
a

response
to
changes
in
the
learning

environment,
rather
than
as
an

adaptation
to
a
predetermined
learning

system.”
Bouchard,
Paul.
Network
Promises
and
Their
Implications,

January
2011
http://rusc.uoc.edu/ojs/index.php/rusc/article/viewFile/v8n1‐bouchard/v8n1‐bouchard‐eng
Stories
of
connection
Stories
of
connection

        Connectivism

          ‣ Biological/Neurological
          ‣ Conceptual
          ‣ Social
Stories
of
connection

        Connectivism

          ‣ Biological/Neurological
          ‣ Conceptual
          ‣ Social


          ‣ (Physical:

           geographic/kinesthetic)
Stories
of
connection

        Connectivism

          ‣ Biological/Neurological
          ‣ Conceptual
          ‣ Social


          ‣ (Physical:

           geographic/kinesthetic)

                  Stories
of
human
beings

Betts’
2010
revised
profiles
of
the

gifted
and
talented


                              The
Successful
                                The
Creative
                           The
Underground
                                 The
At‐Risk
                 The
Twice/Multi‐Exceptional
                   The
Autonomous
Learner
“Passion‐based”
Gifts
to
Talents...   “To
lead
a
good
life”
Academics



           formal learning




                teachers
   Provisions



                             Schools


                              “Passion‐based”
Gifts
to
Talents...           “To
lead
a
good
life”
Mindset/Environment


     Gifts
                                                    Expertness




                                            Academics



                     formal learning




                          teachers
             Provisions
                                                         Tribes
                                                      Networks
                                                    Communities
                                          Schools


                                           “Passion‐based”
Gifts
to
Talents...to
Tribes               “To
lead
a
good
life”
Seth
Godin
on
the
tribes
we
lead
http://www.ted.com/talks/
seth_godin_on_the_tribes_we_lead.html

Seth
Godin
on
the
tribes
we
lead
http://www.ted.com/talks/
seth_godin_on_the_tribes_we_lead.html

Seth
Godin
on
the
tribes
we
lead
http://www.ted.com/talks/
seth_godin_on_the_tribes_we_lead.html

Seth
Godin
on
the
tribes
we
lead
http://www.ted.com/talks/
seth_godin_on_the_tribes_we_lead.html

Three
new
frames
of
understanding
Three
new
frames
of
understanding

    ‣ Information
Abundance
    ‣ Complexity
    ‣ Networks
Information
Abundance
An
information
story




                        21st
Century
Fluency
Project:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ECAVxbfsfc
Information
Abundance
An
information
story

      10,000%
increase
in
information
in
6
years
      (digital
output)

      500
Exabytes
=
500,000,000,000
Gigabytes


      In
books:
13
stacks
from
Earth
to
Pluto




                         21st
Century
Fluency
Project:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ECAVxbfsfc
Information
Abundance
An
information
story


      Printing
it
would
deforest
the
planet...





                        21st
Century
Fluency
Project:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ECAVxbfsfc
Information
Abundance
An
information
story


      Printing
it
would
deforest
the
planet...




                                              ...12
times


                        21st
Century
Fluency
Project:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ECAVxbfsfc
Information
Abundance
Doing
the
math
Information
Abundance
Doing
the
math

   12
years
of
school
x
6
subjects
per
year

    with
1
textbook
per
subject/year
Information
Abundance
Doing
the
math

   12
years
of
school
x
6
subjects
per
year

    with
1
textbook
per
subject/year
+ 4
years
of
college
x
8
courses
per
year

    with
1
textbook
per
course
Information
Abundance
Doing
the
math

   12
years
of
school
x
6
subjects
per
year

    with
1
textbook
per
subject/year
+ 4
years
of
college
x
8
courses
per
year

    with
1
textbook
per
course
+ a
generous
100
books
for
research
papers
Information
Abundance
Doing
the
math

   12
years
of
school
x
6
subjects
per
year

    with
1
textbook
per
subject/year
+ 4
years
of
college
x
8
courses
per
year

    with
1
textbook
per
course
+ a
generous
100
books
for
research
papers
= 204
books
of
“knowledge”
Information
Abundance
Doing
the
math

   12
years
of
school
x
6
subjects
per
year

    with
1
textbook
per
subject/year
+ 4
years
of
college
x
8
courses
per
year

    with
1
textbook
per
course
+ a
generous
100
books
for
research
papers
= 204
books
of
“knowledge”
Schools
as
“scarcity‐generating
institutions.”
Information
Abundance
An
analogous
story




      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4wp3m1vg06Q
Information
Abundance
An
analogous
story




      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4wp3m1vg06Q
Information
Abundance
Beyond
Just‐In‐Time
Learning
Information
Abundance
Beyond
Just‐In‐Time
Learning
     Many
educators...consider
the
principle
...
“Give
a

     man
a
fish
and
feed
him
for
a
day,
teach
a
man
to

     fish
and
feed
him
for
a
lifetime,”
to
represent

     the
height
of
educational
practice
today.

     Yet
it
is
hardly
cutting
edge.

     It
assumes
that
there
will
always
be
an
endless

     supply
of
fish
to
catch
and
that
the
techniques
for

     catching
them
will
last
a
lifetime.
And
therein
lies

     the
major
pitfall
of
the
twenty‐first

     century’s
teaching
model...
                             
Thomas
and
Brown,
A
New
Culture
of
Learning,
in
press
Information
Abundance
Beyond
Just‐In‐Time
Learning
     A
real
challenge
for
any
learning
theory
is

     to
actuate
known
knowledge
at
the
point

     of
application.
When
knowledge,
however,

     is
needed,
but
not
known,
the
ability
to

     [locate
and
integrate]
sources
to
meet
the

     requirements
becomes
a
vital
skill.

                                       George
Siemens
(2005)
Information
Abundance
Beyond
Just‐In‐Time
Learning


                  ‣ Just
in
time
information
                  ‣ Just
in
time
skill
                  ‣ Just
in
time
connection
Complexity
Zone
of
complexity




                     Michael Quinn Patton, 2009
Complexity
Zone
of
complexity
                                     Connective
and

                 Inquiry‐based
     personal
learning
                and
personalized

                    learning





Standardized
                           Michael Quinn Patton, 2009
                                        Modified: C. Tschofen 10/10
content
and


 instruction
Networks
Network
Stories
Networks
Network
Stories
Networks
Network
Stories




                       Core‐periphery
network
                  http://www.monitorinstitute.com/
Networks
Qualities
of
networked
learning




                  ‣Text



‣ Diversity          ‣ Interactivity
‣ Autonomy           ‣ Openness





(Downes
2005)
Why
is
this
right
for
gifted
learners?
Why
is
this
right
for
gifted
learners?
 Gifted
students:

 Make
greater
use
of
learning
strategies

 [representing]
the
triadic
spectrum
for
self‐
 regulating
learning,
managing:
 ‣ personal
processes

 ‣ behavior

 ‣ environment

 In
addition
to
peer
assistance,
gifted
students

 sought
significantly
more
adult
assistance
than

 did
regular
students.
 Student
Differences
in
Self‐Regulated
Learning:
Relating
Grade,
Sex,
and
Giftedness
to
Self‐Efficacy
and
Strategy

 Use
Zimmerman
and
Martinez‐Pons,
1990
Why
is
this
right
for
gifted
learners?
“If
there
is
one

word
that
makes

creative
people

different
from

others,
it
is
the

word
complexity.

Instead
of
being
an

individual,
they
are

a
multitude.”

          Mihaly
Csikszentmihalyi

Why
is
this
right
for
gifted
learners?
 A
gifted
individual
is
a
quick
and
clever
thinker,

 who
is
able
to
deal
with
complex
matters;
an

 individual
who
is
autonomous,
curious
and

 passionate;
a
sensitive
and
emotionally
rich

 person,
who
is
living
intensely.

He
or
she
is
a

 person
who
enjoys
being
creative.
 Nauta
and
Ronner,
2009.
Giftedness
in
the
Work
Environment:
Backgrounds
and
Practical
Recommendations.

 http://www.sengifted.org/articles_adults/nauta_and_ronner_giftedness_in_the_work_environment.pdf
Why
this
right
for
talent
development?
Why
this
right
for
talent
development?
 
"We
were
looking
for
exceptional
kids
and
what
we
found
were

 exceptional
conditions."


                                                         Benjamin
Bloom
Why
this
right
for
talent
development?
 
"We
were
looking
for
exceptional
kids
and
what
we
found
were

 exceptional
conditions."


                                                                 Benjamin
Bloom




 “Relative
experts
are
not
merely
better
at
doing
the
same
things

 that
others
do;
they
do
things
differently,
and
the
same
differences

 appear
in
various
domains."


                                                  Bereiter
and
Scardamalia
(1986)
Why
this
right
for
talent
development?
 
"We
were
looking
for
exceptional
kids
and
what
we
found
were

 exceptional
conditions."


                                                                     Benjamin
Bloom




 “Relative
experts
are
not
merely
better
at
doing
the
same
things

 that
others
do;
they
do
things
differently,
and
the
same
differences

 appear
in
various
domains."


                                                      Bereiter
and
Scardamalia
(1986)




 “Expertise,
whether
demonstrated
in
such
everyday
feats
as
reading

 and
writing,
or
in
the
exceptional
accomplishments
of
artists,

 athletes,
and
scholars,
reflects
the
outcome
of
people’s
active

 engagement
in
the
world
around
them.”


                                             Cianciolo,
Sternberg,
and
Wagner

(2006)

What
makes
this
something
other
than

“a
parent
thing?”

What
makes
this
something
other
than

“a
parent
thing?”

   Your
goal
as
a
parent
is
to
foster
your
child's

   development,
not
to
impress
other
adults

   with
your
parenting
skills...
   The
most
significant
and
potentially
valuable

   influence
you
can
have
on
your
child
comes

   from
macromanagement
of
the

   environment,
not
from
micromanagement

   of
your
child's
behavior.

                                      Dr.
Peter
Gray,
Boston
College
What
makes
this
something
other
than

“a
parent
thing?”

 Interest
in
apprenticeship
has
been

 keen
in
the
K‐
12
reform
conversation...

 [whereby]
one
of
the
things
people

 notice...
is
how
utterly
teacher‐
 dependent
American
education
has

 become.
Even
at
the
college
level...
We

 preach
the
goal
of
preparing

 independent
learners,
but
...
                                Theodore
J.
Marchese
1998

                   The
New
Conversations
About
Learning:
             Insights
From
Neuroscience
and
Anthropology,

                   Cognitive
Science
and
Workplace
Studies

What
makes
this
something
other
than

“a
parent
thing?”

 Interest
in
apprenticeship
has
been
                         Does
passion
in
fact

 keen
in
the
K‐
12
reform
conversation...
                    re‐shape
our
brains

 [whereby]
one
of
the
things
people

                                                              in
ways
that
make
it

 notice...
is
how
utterly
teacher‐
 dependent
American
education
has
                            harder
and
harder

 become.
Even
at
the
college
level...
We
                     for
those
who
lack

 preach
the
goal
of
preparing
                                this
passion
to

 independent
learners,
but
...                                compete
with
us?
                                Theodore
J.
Marchese
1998

                                                                   Edge
Perspectives
with
John
Hagel:

                   The
New
Conversations
About
Learning:
                                                                              Passion
and
Plasticity
‐

             Insights
From
Neuroscience
and
Anthropology,
               The
Neurobiology
of
Passion
                   Cognitive
Science
and
Workplace
Studies

What
makes
this
something
other
than

“a
parent
thing?”

  Future
of
Learning,
MacArthur
Foundation,
2009:
        ‣ Self‐Learning
        ‣ Horizontal
Structures
        ‣ From
Presumed
Authority
to
Collective
Credibility
        ‣ A
De‐Centered
Pedagogy

        ‣ Networked
Learning
        ‣ Open
Source
Education
        ‣ Learning
as
Connectivity
and
Interactivity
        ‣ Lifelong
Learning
        ‣ Learning
Institutions
as
Mobilizing
Networks
        ‣ Flexible
Scalability
and
Simulation
 Davidson and Goldberg. Future of Learning Institutions in a Digital Age. The John D. and Catherine T.
 MacArthur Foundation. MIT Press, 2009. http://mitpress.mit.edu/books/chapters/Future_of_Learning.pdf
A
New
Culture
of
Learning
A
New
Culture
of
Learning
Culture
of
teaching              Culture
of
learning
                                 Culture
emerges
from
the

The
culture
is
the
environment
                                 environment,
grows
with
it

                                 Playful,
information‐rich

The
classroom
as
a
model
                                 surroundings

Teaching
us
about
the
world      Learning
through
engagement

                                 within
the
world

Students
must
prove
that
they

                                 All
embrace
what
we
don’t
know,

have
received
the
information

                                 come
up
with
better
questions

transferred;
that
they
quite

                                 about
it,
and
continue
asking...
literally
“get
it.”

                                    
Thomas
and
Brown,
A
New
Culture
of
Learning,
in
press
A
New
Culture
of
Learning?




                             Barnett Berry, et al, January 2011
Connective
Educators

                  ‣Technical
competence
                  ‣Experimentation
                  ‣Autonomy
                  ‣Creation
                  ‣Play
                  ‣Capacity
for
complexity
                                  (George
Siemens,

2010)
Connective
Educators
Connective
Educators
    KnowledgeWorks
Learning
Agents
for
2020
       ‣Learning
Fitness
Instructor
       ‣Personal
Education
Advisor
       ‣Community
Intelligence
Cartographer
       ‣Education
Sousveyor
       ‣Social
Capital
Platform
Developer
       ‣Learning
Partner
       ‣Learning
Journey
Mentor
       ‣Assessment
Designer
                            http://www.futureofed.org/about/LearningAgents/
Connective
Educators
    Instead
of
focusing
on
teaching
as
an

    undifferentiated
whole...look
at
the
specific
needs

    of
students,
identifying
where
...
more

    appropriately
focused
services
would
offer
the

    needed
support...
    Downes,
Stephen.
The
Role
of
the
Educator
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/stephen‐downes/the‐role‐
    of‐the‐educator_b_790937.html



    Agitator,
Alchemist,
Bureaucrat
,
Coach,
Collector,
Connector,
Convener,

    Coordinator,
Critic,
Curator,
Demonstrator,
Designer,
Evaluator,
Facilitator,

    Learner,
Lecturer,
Mentor,
Moderator,
Programmer,
Salesperson,
Sharer,
Tech

    Support
What
does

connected
autonomy

in
gifted
learners

look
like?

Professional                                                           Design
                                      Participation                                      Crochet               &
                      Fleadh                                                            Instructi           Amusem

                                                                         Craft &
                                                                        Engineerin
Classica
l Violin        Irish
               Fiddle                  Peter
                          Music
                                                                                                 Online
                                                                           Maker
                                                 Online                   Culture/
                   Global                       Schedulin
                 Community

Internatio
    nal
                                                                                                          Farmer’s
                                                                 Frog                                      Market
                                                                                         Mary
   Video
 Analysis &                               Circus
  Sharing

                 Movement
                  /Dance                                                                                      Ecologic
 Urban                           Gifted                Uprigh                                                    al
awarenes                                               t Child

           Sponsore                                                                           Environme
               d                                                                                 ntal
           performa     Alternative                                Clowning
                          School               Traditiona              /
                                                l School              Social and conceptual learning network, S.T., age 14
Professional                                                                Design
                                      Participation                                           Crochet               &
                      Fleadh                                                                 Instructi           Amusem

                                                                             Craft &
                                                                            Engineerin
Classica
l Violin        Irish
               Fiddle                  Peter
                          Music
                                                                                                      Online
                                                                                Maker
                                                 Online                        Culture/
                   Global                       Schedulin
                 Community

Internatio
    nal                                                          Frog
                                                                                                               Farmer’s
                                                                                                                Market
                                                                                              Mary
   Video
 Analysis &                               Circus
  Sharing

                 Movement
                  /Dance                                                                                           Ecologic
 Urban                           Gifted                Uprigh                                                         al
awarenes                                               t Child

           Sponsore                                                                                Environme
               d                                                                                      ntal
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                                                l School                   Social and conceptual learning network, S.T., age 14
Professional                                                                Design
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                      Fleadh                                                                 Instructi           Amusem

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                                                                                              Mary
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awarenes                                               t Child

           Sponsore                                                                                Environme
               d                                                                                      ntal
           performa     Alternative                                     Clowning
                          School               Traditiona                   /
                                                l School                   Social and conceptual learning network, S.T., age 14
Professional                                                                Design
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                      Fleadh                                                                 Instructi           Amusem

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l Violin        Irish
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                                                 Online                        Culture/
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    nal                                                          Frog
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                                                                                              Mary
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           Sponsore                                                                                Environme
               d                                                                                      ntal
           performa     Alternative                                     Clowning
                          School               Traditiona                   /
                                                l School                   Social and conceptual learning network, S.T., age 14
Professional                                                           Design
                                      Participation                                      Crochet               &
                      Fleadh                                                            Instructi           Amusem

                                                                         Craft &
                                                                        Engineerin
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l Violin        Irish
               Fiddle                  Peter
                          Music
                                                                                                 Online
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           Sponsore                                                                           Environme
              d                                                                                  ntal
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                          School               Traditiona              /
                                                l School              Social and conceptual learning network, S.T., age 14
The
big
picture
of
connected
autonomy

The
big
picture
of
connected
autonomy

                          Learners

                          understand

                          how
they
are

                          uniquely

                          connected
and

                          able
to

                          contribute
in

                          the
world.
Saying
“yes”
Connected learning for educators

     PLEK12
     Personal Learning Environments
     for Inquiry in K-12
     An Open Course for Educators
     Across the Globe
     COURSE DATE: February 7, 2011 through April 3, 2011

     College of Education • University of Florida

     PLEK12 is a free, open course--there are no financial
     obligations to attend.


     http://bit.ly/hviMvl
Carmen
Tschofen
Robbinsdale,
Minnesota
tschofen@email.com
Twitter:
ctscho
Skype:
ctschof

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Connected autonomy and talent development

Notes de l'éditeur

  1. Networked, connective and personal learning theories are redefining what it means to be a “high ability” learner. Linking newly defined connective learning literacies with talent development models and action research, this session will explore how stories about learning—and learning support—are changing in an era of exponential information growth and potential complexity.\n
  2. Move from consumers of education to creators of learning opportunities and environments\n “Cognitive surplus”\n Maker culture\n bricolage/tinkering\n (constructivism/constructionism)\n Connective learning\n Huge shift for anxious parents\nThe counterpart to technological determinisim. PLAY \n\nJohn Seely Brown- Reimagining Dewey http://ht.ly/1XF1Z Casual tinkering, deep tinkering\n\nwiliam Doll uses the terms science, story and spirit.\n\nCognitive suprplus- Shirky: spare brain power and the tools to share and connect it\n\n\nDecrease in Fluency after 1990: Fluency scores (quantity of the ideas: ability to produce a number of ideas) decreased by 4.68% from 1990 to 1998 and by 7.00% from 1990 to 2008.\nDecrease in Originality after 1990: Originality scores (quality of the ideas: ability to produce a number of statistically infrequent ideas that shows how unique and unusual the ideas are) decreased by 3.74% from 1990 to 1998 and remained static from 1998 to 2008. Originality scores have actually significantly decreased, but the decrease has been deflated through the use of outdated scoring lists.\nDecrease in Creative Strengths after 1990: Creative Strengths scores (creative personality traits, including being emotionally expressive, energetic, talkative or verbally expressive, humorous, imaginative, unconventional, lively or passionate, perceptive, connecting seemingly irrelevant things together, synthesizing, and seeing things from a different angle) decreased by 3.16% from 1990 to 1998 and by 5.75% from 1990 to 2008.\nDecrease in Elaboration after 1984: Elaboration scores (ability to develop and elaborate upon ideas and detailed and reflective thinking and motivation to be creative) decreased more than other subscales of the TTCT. Elaboration scores decreased by 19.41% from 1984 to 1990, by 24.62% from 1984 to 1998, and by 36.80% from 1984 to 2008.\nDecrease in Abstractness of Titles after 1998: Titles scores (ability to produce the thinking processes of synthesis and organization, to capture the essence of the information involved, and to know what is important) increased until 1998, but decreased by 7.41% from 1998 to 2008.\nDecrease in Resistance to Premature Closure after 1998: Closure scores (intellectual curiosity and open-mindedness) decreased from 1984 to 1990, increased from 1990 to 1998, and decreased by 1.84% from 1998 to 2008.\nhttp://www.britannica.com/blogs/2010/10/the-decline-of-creativity-in-the-united-states-5-questions-for-educational-psychologist-kyung-hee-kim\n
  3. \n
  4. \n
  5. Many presume delivery model of learning\n\nDual enrollment= PSEO\nSupplemental enrollment= online plus local\nTeachers are well-intentioned but struggling-- not a lot of models, teacher’s education is not keeping up. School choice\n Alternative Learning \n Dual enrollment\n Supplemental enrollment\n Community schooling\n Exchange programs \n Homeschooling\n Unschooling\n\nNeed a law, like special ed, that says every kids gets an individualized learning plan.\nIn the meantime, sit down with your child and dream one up.\n\nWhat to do: \n1. Use the new tools to participate or become aware of conversations of interest\n2. Visit other schooling models. consider having your child visit. \n\nGet/model skills in deciding, finding, creating and connecting: Model learning as a hobby.\nFollow one blog\nRSS feeds\nGoogle alerts\nLegitimate perip. participation\nIf gited is your concern, there are a number of opportunities to conenct ith other parents of figfted adn gifted adults and keep informed on a daily basis. this information is valuable as you deterine what other stesp you want to take. \nHelp your children find mentors\nBegabungs\n  \n1. mentoring 2. enrichment 3. acceleration http://www.renzullilearning.com/default.aspx #ntchat\nabout 15 hours ago via web\nEvaluate activities and assignments based on autonomy, diversity, openness and connectivity. AP classes are like training to swim the English channel by only ever having been in a pool. You can work really hard, but you’re not coping with the complexity. Plus, gifted kids can probably do AP work without a class- self study. \nSay no\nSay yes\nKeep a personal time log. Identify where cognitive surplus is being leached: TV Facebook\nDo something that makes you uneasy.\nChange your: hair, furniture, route to work, meal plan, etc.\nIf this is new for your kids, don’t expect an immediate positive response. Coasting, similarity, familiarity are EASY. Changes are HARD. (may not always be appropriate for overexcitabilities/twice exceptional)\nMake arrangements for your children to produce representations of their work-- portfolios that contain things done outside of or beyond formal academic demands. Communicate the value of these activities and attempts. Steal time-- yes, from school. On the other side: teachers need to accept alternative proposals. Consider non-graded activities. (Read Joe Bower) Create alternative recognition programs. (Kids themselves don’t recognize creativity in their midst. Adults with assumptions won’t either.)\nhttp://www.learninggeneralist.com/2010/11/understanding-tools-of-social-learning.html\n\nYou are the keeper of your child’s time. Evaluate how it is being spent. Including assignments. But understand it’s not the teacher’s job to completely replace everything. This is a cooperative zone. It is not their job to serve your child or you. It is to assist. Make an “accepting proposals” zone and time period. Remember that not all attempts will succeed. That’s OK-- you will be assessing on evidence of work, not “success.” If you are using social tools-- bookmarking, etc, this will be easier to see. “I went to the library” doesn’t cut it. Notes on what you looked at does. A bunch of websites doesn’t cut it. But highlighted and commented sections on the bookmarks shows they have been read.\n\nGifted ed is problematic because it does not recognize manyof the shifts taking place-- is trying to tinker, improve within the existing structures. Most gifted ed literature is still hidden behind paywalls, closed academic journals. Some cracks with Gifted ed chat., etc. Chat itself is unsophisticated, but finding the poeple and what they are doing in depth is significant. \n\nYou are not looking for a good transcript, you are looking for a good-- or several good- tribes.\n\n\n
  6. http://www.dukegiftedletter.com/articles/vol5no1_ef.html\n
  7. edevolving\nObstacles: Structural, Conceptual, Worldview, Psychological, Neuroscience\n  \nRT @chadratliff "If at first an idea is not absurd, there is no hope for it." -A. Einstein\n\nA historical, testosterone-fueled focus on conceptualizations of leadership and the idea of thought leaders.\n
  8. tendency to admire problems, pound away at them, rather than move to a solution \n\nedevolving\nObstacles: Structural, Conceptual, Worldview, Psychological, Neuroscience\n  \nRT @chadratliff "If at first an idea is not absurd, there is no hope for it." -A. Einstein\n\nA historical, testosterone-fueled focus on conceptualizations of leadership and the idea of thought leaders.\n
  9. in trying to create “reform” we are creating and telling stories we can’t afford. \n
  10. in trying to create “reform” we are creating and telling stories we can’t afford. \n
  11. in trying to create “reform” we are creating and telling stories we can’t afford. \n
  12. in trying to create “reform” we are creating and telling stories we can’t afford. \n
  13. The dream we have for our kids might be dated, not nearly as ambitious as they sound. College is one. \nOur stories that have been considered large dreams are now small in comparison, but unless you know about the other stories, unelss you’re listening to stories from other cultures, you won’t know this. \nGirls are especially vulnerable to pleasing behaviors, pressures (Ruf) (And probably oldest and only children as well) Going to school\n Learning “subjects” Robinson says: subjcts to devisive, suggest content coverage, and are arranged in a tacit hierarchy. “Disciplines” better-- suggest kind of thinking, not just content. And Kinds of thinking are shared across “disciplines.” Me: so transdisciplanry thingking, applied to problems rather than coverage, offer best option for learning. \n Learning with age-based peers\n Teachers know what you must know\n Learners must be measured (i.e. grades)\n Education is linear and finishes with a degree\n Gifted students get straight “A’s”\nOne statement Grainne made will stand out, and should be repeated to all undergraduate students. Acquiring knowledge and recalling it, she said, is no longer adequate - it's not really learning anymore.\nHam story\nIdea that if we do more of this, and get better at it, we we “solve” education problems\nTechnology will, eventually, kill the academic calendar. Downes 10/17/10\nParents of highly intelligent children focus on visible qualities such as right answers, cleanliness, and good manners, whereas parents of highly creative children focus on less-visible qualities, such as openness to experience, interests, imagination, and enthusiasm. Very organized and clean home environments can stifle children’s creativity. http://www.britannica.com/blogs/2010/10/the-decline-of-creativity-in-the-united-states-5-questions-for-educational-psychologist-kyung-hee-kim/\n
  14. he College Board projects that in 15 years, the cost of a four year college education at a private university will approach $400,000 (at the current rate of cost increases).\nNow it is true that college-educated people normally earn more than non-college-educated folks. But over the past two decades the costs of university education--tuition, room, board and fees--have increased at a rate six times greater than the increase in the average earnings of college graduates. And in the past decade college graduates' earnings have actually fallen. http://www.forbes.com/2011/02/01/college-education-bubble-opinions-contributors-louis-lataif_print.html Universities On The Brink\nLouis E. Lataif, 02.01.11,\n
  15. he College Board projects that in 15 years, the cost of a four year college education at a private university will approach $400,000 (at the current rate of cost increases).\nNow it is true that college-educated people normally earn more than non-college-educated folks. But over the past two decades the costs of university education--tuition, room, board and fees--have increased at a rate six times greater than the increase in the average earnings of college graduates. And in the past decade college graduates' earnings have actually fallen. http://www.forbes.com/2011/02/01/college-education-bubble-opinions-contributors-louis-lataif_print.html Universities On The Brink\nLouis E. Lataif, 02.01.11,\n
  16. he College Board projects that in 15 years, the cost of a four year college education at a private university will approach $400,000 (at the current rate of cost increases).\nNow it is true that college-educated people normally earn more than non-college-educated folks. But over the past two decades the costs of university education--tuition, room, board and fees--have increased at a rate six times greater than the increase in the average earnings of college graduates. And in the past decade college graduates' earnings have actually fallen. http://www.forbes.com/2011/02/01/college-education-bubble-opinions-contributors-louis-lataif_print.html Universities On The Brink\nLouis E. Lataif, 02.01.11,\n
  17. 45 percent of these students demonstrate no significant improvement in a range of skills—including critical thinking, complex reasoning, and writing—during their first two years of college. \n
  18. Technology is not the solution. TEchnology is a element of process. Not computer programs, not online learning that is still content based, not a program that “fences in the Internet” and gives kids a menu of choices as “enrichment”-- all of these are based on the constraint of the classroom. Additoinal note: the conversation is becoming ever so much more pointed on this. There is an issue with men in leadership promoting technology as the answer. The tools, the programs, the packages. I’m generally reluctant to pull the gender card on anything, but this is not just my observation, and the men in educational leadership issue makes this a more pointed issue. Let’s use a machine, or a machine-made package, to make it better. \n We are also telling ourselves that we are telling new stories... but they’re not. Not relaly. \n Thes say more about teacher/institutional fears than about learning \n “Technology”\n “Online learning” \n “Social learning” \n “Curation”\n “Inquiry”\n Moving beyond speed and volume\n Today’s schools are the result of quirks of history.\n The “encyclopedia” problem\n The “pleasing” problem\n Behind the scenes:\n National “creativity crisis”\n 10%- 20% “non-graduates”\n 20% of K-12 learners in Minnesota are not in a “traditional” neighborhood school (2008-2009)\nCultural perception and emphasis on “intelligence” and academic achievement over creativity- now a crisis.\n The correlation to lifetime creative accomplishment was more than three times stronger for childhood creativity than childhood IQ.Newsweek\n6 areas of creavity- dropped in 20 years 4-36% (greatest drop in “elaboration” area\n\n Encyclopedias-- parents bought huge printed set. Defining knowledge, making it available. Now: Totally out of date, can’t get rid of them. On display at Sears for “atmosphere.” Large institutions are limited in ability to change their stories i.e. grasp and implement change. \n\nwillrich45\n  \nMore often than not, trying to make sense of the #edreform conversation makes my head hurt. All about knowing more, not learning more.\nless than a minute ago via TweetDeck\n\nCurriculum decisions made by 9-11 old white guys from Harvard in 1892, tweaked by fears unleashed by Sputnik in 1957, and worsened by 1983’s “A Nation at Risk” Where the post-war/pre-sputnik educational concerns were largely demographic—first the colleges trying to accommodate returning veterans, the likes of which had not been seen before, then quickly the schools doing the same for the young baby boomers. In contrast, the post-Sputnik concerns were curricular, focusing on what was being taught and how, rather than who was being taught. Another difference between the two eras was the assignment of blame. The military and the politicians received the blame for Pearl Harbor, not educators; in the Sputnik instance, the finger of blame quickly and sternly pointed at the schools. The third difference has to do with the public perception of the outcomes of the two reform movements: the first is almost unanimously regarded as a great success, a milestone in the history of American education not unlike that of the Morrill Act in the last century, while the second is widely regarded as having failed. http://www.nationalacademies.org/sputnik/ruther1.htm\n Typical story: educating good citizens, providing common ground and equal opportunity. \n Fear\n Control\n Competition\n\nMany teachers are fabulously successful, and excellent-- based on the succesof their students by the traditional understandings. Teachers being prepared fror traditional model of the classroom-- Richardson\n\nDefinition of success is “book smartness”, which is actually based on passive recall. \nSpeaking to you as someone who has worked outside of the traditional boxes\n\ngrad rate stats: http://www.all4ed.org/files/Minnesota_wc.pdf \n\nMany people believe that if you can get people a good education, they can get themselves out of poverty. Almost backwards. No matter how much you stuff people full of knowledge, particularly knowledge irrelevant to their personal situation, their daily circumstances will always loom larger than an imagined potential. If you are in constant physical pain, it makes it hard to do anything else. Same here with hunger and desperation which create physcial and psychological pain.\n
  19. Technology is not the solution. TEchnology is a element of process. Not computer programs, not online learning that is still content based, not a program that “fences in the Internet” and gives kids a menu of choices as “enrichment”-- all of these are based on the constraint of the classroom. Additoinal note: the conversation is becoming ever so much more pointed on this. There is an issue with men in leadership promoting technology as the answer. The tools, the programs, the packages. I’m generally reluctant to pull the gender card on anything, but this is not just my observation, and the men in educational leadership issue makes this a more pointed issue. Let’s use a machine, or a machine-made package, to make it better. \n We are also telling ourselves that we are telling new stories... but they’re not. Not relaly. \n Thes say more about teacher/institutional fears than about learning \n “Technology”\n “Online learning” \n “Social learning” \n “Curation”\n “Inquiry”\n Moving beyond speed and volume\n Today’s schools are the result of quirks of history.\n The “encyclopedia” problem\n The “pleasing” problem\n Behind the scenes:\n National “creativity crisis”\n 10%- 20% “non-graduates”\n 20% of K-12 learners in Minnesota are not in a “traditional” neighborhood school (2008-2009)\nCultural perception and emphasis on “intelligence” and academic achievement over creativity- now a crisis.\n The correlation to lifetime creative accomplishment was more than three times stronger for childhood creativity than childhood IQ.Newsweek\n6 areas of creavity- dropped in 20 years 4-36% (greatest drop in “elaboration” area\n\n Encyclopedias-- parents bought huge printed set. Defining knowledge, making it available. Now: Totally out of date, can’t get rid of them. On display at Sears for “atmosphere.” Large institutions are limited in ability to change their stories i.e. grasp and implement change. \n\nwillrich45\n  \nMore often than not, trying to make sense of the #edreform conversation makes my head hurt. All about knowing more, not learning more.\nless than a minute ago via TweetDeck\n\nCurriculum decisions made by 9-11 old white guys from Harvard in 1892, tweaked by fears unleashed by Sputnik in 1957, and worsened by 1983’s “A Nation at Risk” Where the post-war/pre-sputnik educational concerns were largely demographic—first the colleges trying to accommodate returning veterans, the likes of which had not been seen before, then quickly the schools doing the same for the young baby boomers. In contrast, the post-Sputnik concerns were curricular, focusing on what was being taught and how, rather than who was being taught. Another difference between the two eras was the assignment of blame. The military and the politicians received the blame for Pearl Harbor, not educators; in the Sputnik instance, the finger of blame quickly and sternly pointed at the schools. The third difference has to do with the public perception of the outcomes of the two reform movements: the first is almost unanimously regarded as a great success, a milestone in the history of American education not unlike that of the Morrill Act in the last century, while the second is widely regarded as having failed. http://www.nationalacademies.org/sputnik/ruther1.htm\n Typical story: educating good citizens, providing common ground and equal opportunity. \n Fear\n Control\n Competition\n\nMany teachers are fabulously successful, and excellent-- based on the succesof their students by the traditional understandings. Teachers being prepared fror traditional model of the classroom-- Richardson\n\nDefinition of success is “book smartness”, which is actually based on passive recall. \nSpeaking to you as someone who has worked outside of the traditional boxes\n\ngrad rate stats: http://www.all4ed.org/files/Minnesota_wc.pdf \n\nMany people believe that if you can get people a good education, they can get themselves out of poverty. Almost backwards. No matter how much you stuff people full of knowledge, particularly knowledge irrelevant to their personal situation, their daily circumstances will always loom larger than an imagined potential. If you are in constant physical pain, it makes it hard to do anything else. Same here with hunger and desperation which create physcial and psychological pain.\n
  20. Technology is not the solution. TEchnology is a element of process. Not computer programs, not online learning that is still content based, not a program that “fences in the Internet” and gives kids a menu of choices as “enrichment”-- all of these are based on the constraint of the classroom. Additoinal note: the conversation is becoming ever so much more pointed on this. There is an issue with men in leadership promoting technology as the answer. The tools, the programs, the packages. I’m generally reluctant to pull the gender card on anything, but this is not just my observation, and the men in educational leadership issue makes this a more pointed issue. Let’s use a machine, or a machine-made package, to make it better. \n We are also telling ourselves that we are telling new stories... but they’re not. Not relaly. \n Thes say more about teacher/institutional fears than about learning \n “Technology”\n “Online learning” \n “Social learning” \n “Curation”\n “Inquiry”\n Moving beyond speed and volume\n Today’s schools are the result of quirks of history.\n The “encyclopedia” problem\n The “pleasing” problem\n Behind the scenes:\n National “creativity crisis”\n 10%- 20% “non-graduates”\n 20% of K-12 learners in Minnesota are not in a “traditional” neighborhood school (2008-2009)\nCultural perception and emphasis on “intelligence” and academic achievement over creativity- now a crisis.\n The correlation to lifetime creative accomplishment was more than three times stronger for childhood creativity than childhood IQ.Newsweek\n6 areas of creavity- dropped in 20 years 4-36% (greatest drop in “elaboration” area\n\n Encyclopedias-- parents bought huge printed set. Defining knowledge, making it available. Now: Totally out of date, can’t get rid of them. On display at Sears for “atmosphere.” Large institutions are limited in ability to change their stories i.e. grasp and implement change. \n\nwillrich45\n  \nMore often than not, trying to make sense of the #edreform conversation makes my head hurt. All about knowing more, not learning more.\nless than a minute ago via TweetDeck\n\nCurriculum decisions made by 9-11 old white guys from Harvard in 1892, tweaked by fears unleashed by Sputnik in 1957, and worsened by 1983’s “A Nation at Risk” Where the post-war/pre-sputnik educational concerns were largely demographic—first the colleges trying to accommodate returning veterans, the likes of which had not been seen before, then quickly the schools doing the same for the young baby boomers. In contrast, the post-Sputnik concerns were curricular, focusing on what was being taught and how, rather than who was being taught. Another difference between the two eras was the assignment of blame. The military and the politicians received the blame for Pearl Harbor, not educators; in the Sputnik instance, the finger of blame quickly and sternly pointed at the schools. The third difference has to do with the public perception of the outcomes of the two reform movements: the first is almost unanimously regarded as a great success, a milestone in the history of American education not unlike that of the Morrill Act in the last century, while the second is widely regarded as having failed. http://www.nationalacademies.org/sputnik/ruther1.htm\n Typical story: educating good citizens, providing common ground and equal opportunity. \n Fear\n Control\n Competition\n\nMany teachers are fabulously successful, and excellent-- based on the succesof their students by the traditional understandings. Teachers being prepared fror traditional model of the classroom-- Richardson\n\nDefinition of success is “book smartness”, which is actually based on passive recall. \nSpeaking to you as someone who has worked outside of the traditional boxes\n\ngrad rate stats: http://www.all4ed.org/files/Minnesota_wc.pdf \n\nMany people believe that if you can get people a good education, they can get themselves out of poverty. Almost backwards. No matter how much you stuff people full of knowledge, particularly knowledge irrelevant to their personal situation, their daily circumstances will always loom larger than an imagined potential. If you are in constant physical pain, it makes it hard to do anything else. Same here with hunger and desperation which create physcial and psychological pain.\n
  21. No one size fits all-- and this applies to diverity within the gifted learners as well as the difference between gifted learners and other. Learning must be: \n ongoing\n cooperative\n distributed\n diverse\n autonomous \n personally significant\n “I store my learning in my friends” We need to “demystify” education-- make it relevant, meaningful, not abstract “well-roundedness.” Find out what energizes you-- even if not talented, it could have a transferable element to another domain (editing, rearranging closets- J. Fox)\n
  22. No one size fits all-- and this applies to diverity within the gifted learners as well as the difference between gifted learners and other. Learning must be: \n ongoing\n cooperative\n distributed\n diverse\n autonomous \n personally significant\n “I store my learning in my friends” We need to “demystify” education-- make it relevant, meaningful, not abstract “well-roundedness.” Find out what energizes you-- even if not talented, it could have a transferable element to another domain (editing, rearranging closets- J. Fox)\n
  23. No one size fits all-- and this applies to diverity within the gifted learners as well as the difference between gifted learners and other. Learning must be: \n ongoing\n cooperative\n distributed\n diverse\n autonomous \n personally significant\n “I store my learning in my friends” We need to “demystify” education-- make it relevant, meaningful, not abstract “well-roundedness.” Find out what energizes you-- even if not talented, it could have a transferable element to another domain (editing, rearranging closets- J. Fox)\n
  24. http://www.ingeniosus.net/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/PROFILES-BEST-REVISED-MATRIX-2010.pdf\n
  25. Acknowledges complexity\nAs Richard Rothstein reminds us, all school-related variables combined can explain only about one-third of the variation in student achievement; most is due to non-school factors. Still, even to the extent that the quality of teaching does matter, Futernick argues that "variations in teaching performance flow largely from variables that have little to do with the qualities of teachers themselves." Lousy classrooms are more likely due to "poorly functioning systems than [to] individual [teachers'] shortcomings.... There is simply no shortcut to helping educators "cultivate an active intelligence that allows them to negotiate principles, practices, students' needs, and the ever-changing classroom and school environment." In short, says Wilson (in a sentence that ought to be emailed to every administrator and consultant in the country), "Good teaching doesn't rest on specific practices, but on how well the educator actively thinks through hundreds of decisions that no program can script." To try to mandate specific practices -- and Wilson offers some disconcerting examples relating to "literacy systems" -- not only doesn't help teachers to become more accomplished, flexible thinkers; it gets in the way." Alfie Kohn http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alfie-kohn/operation-discourage-brig_b_777148.html\n\nDeborahMersino\n  \nWhat's interesting to note about Type 6 support is that it involves removing time/space restrictions at school. #gtchat\n
  26. Acknowledges complexity\nAs Richard Rothstein reminds us, all school-related variables combined can explain only about one-third of the variation in student achievement; most is due to non-school factors. Still, even to the extent that the quality of teaching does matter, Futernick argues that "variations in teaching performance flow largely from variables that have little to do with the qualities of teachers themselves." Lousy classrooms are more likely due to "poorly functioning systems than [to] individual [teachers'] shortcomings.... There is simply no shortcut to helping educators "cultivate an active intelligence that allows them to negotiate principles, practices, students' needs, and the ever-changing classroom and school environment." In short, says Wilson (in a sentence that ought to be emailed to every administrator and consultant in the country), "Good teaching doesn't rest on specific practices, but on how well the educator actively thinks through hundreds of decisions that no program can script." To try to mandate specific practices -- and Wilson offers some disconcerting examples relating to "literacy systems" -- not only doesn't help teachers to become more accomplished, flexible thinkers; it gets in the way." Alfie Kohn http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alfie-kohn/operation-discourage-brig_b_777148.html\nIQ is only a very limited aspect of this-- programs based on aIQ are not “the” answer-- only an ansewr to a small subset of gifts, potential talent.\nDeborahMersino\n  \nWhat's interesting to note about Type 6 support is that it involves removing time/space restrictions at school. #gtchat\n
  27. Sustainability\n
  28. \n
  29. Take Mr. Shain’s alma mater, Princeton, whose freshman class this year is 37 percent minority students, 17 percent athletes, 13 percent legacies and 11 percent international students. “Among very, very good schools, a huge percentage of the class is not in play on academic grounds,” he says. “How much can you improve the class when you’re only working with half or less?” http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/07/education/edlife/07HOOVER-t.html?_r=3&adxnnl=1&partner=rss&emc=rss&pagewanted=6&adxnnlx=1288972850-lKQWcBB5WXwRrzW2+u79QA “Out of more than 50 people I hired in the last 6 years, I didn't hire one single person because of their university education … In fact from my experience good grades at a university generally tend to be more of a negative indicator than a positive....Top students were typically people who created massive social friction in my teams, under delivered and were very slow in adapting to change...”\n http://bjoernlasse.posterous.com/the-illusion-of-disrupting-vs-repairing-the-e\n
  30. In 2008, Americans consumed information for about 1.3 trillion hours, an average of almost 12 hours per day. Consumption totaled 3.6 zettabytes and 10,845 trillion words, corresponding to 100,500 words and 34 gigabytes for an average person on an average day. A zettabyte is 10 to the 21st power bytes, a million million gigabytes. These estimates are from an analysis of more than 20 different sources of information, from very old (newspapers and books) to very new (portable computer games, satellite radio, and Internet video). Information at work is not included. http://hmi.ucsd.edu/howmuchinfo_research_report_consum.php\nDefault overlaod coping strategies: http://www.anderson.ucla.edu/faculty/jason.frand/researcher/articles/info_overload.html\nThe first coping mechanism identified by Miller is the strategy of omission, or the temporary non-processing of information. This is essentially a state of mental fatigue where we feel as if we are spread much too thin. The feeling that we just cannot deal with all the information flowing to us results in our ignoring or failing to process some of the information.\nA second coping strategy is processing information readily at hand, even if it is bad or incorrect information. This describes the concept of GIGO or "garbage in, garbage out." W orking with poor information at the start This involves working with information that may not be the best and making decisions or acting based upon this information. This effectively casts doubt on thethe outcomes of actions and decisions made using this information because of working with poor information at the start. For example, it is not uncommon to observe an individual performing a search on the World Wide Web and using only the first few items in the results whether they are good or not.\nA third strategy is queuing or delaying the processing of some information with the hope of catching up later. In other words, we may stack up a bunch of information believing we can go through it all at once at a later time. Unfortunately the flow of information does not always slow enough to get back to those piles.\nA fourth strategy is information filtering or looking at information at a higher level and saying, "I will go through this and I won't go through that." It is putting items into categories then working with those categories of information, prior to working with the information itself.\nA fifth strategy is simply walking away from the task.\nA sixth strategy is generalizing ? using minimal information to draw broad conclusions. This is akin to reading only the headlines of a newspaper and speaking as if knowing the details of the articles.\n
  31. In 2008, Americans consumed information for about 1.3 trillion hours, an average of almost 12 hours per day. Consumption totaled 3.6 zettabytes and 10,845 trillion words, corresponding to 100,500 words and 34 gigabytes for an average person on an average day. A zettabyte is 10 to the 21st power bytes, a million million gigabytes. These estimates are from an analysis of more than 20 different sources of information, from very old (newspapers and books) to very new (portable computer games, satellite radio, and Internet video). Information at work is not included. http://hmi.ucsd.edu/howmuchinfo_research_report_consum.php\nDefault overlaod coping strategies: http://www.anderson.ucla.edu/faculty/jason.frand/researcher/articles/info_overload.html\nThe first coping mechanism identified by Miller is the strategy of omission, or the temporary non-processing of information. This is essentially a state of mental fatigue where we feel as if we are spread much too thin. The feeling that we just cannot deal with all the information flowing to us results in our ignoring or failing to process some of the information.\nA second coping strategy is processing information readily at hand, even if it is bad or incorrect information. This describes the concept of GIGO or "garbage in, garbage out." W orking with poor information at the start This involves working with information that may not be the best and making decisions or acting based upon this information. This effectively casts doubt on thethe outcomes of actions and decisions made using this information because of working with poor information at the start. For example, it is not uncommon to observe an individual performing a search on the World Wide Web and using only the first few items in the results whether they are good or not.\nA third strategy is queuing or delaying the processing of some information with the hope of catching up later. In other words, we may stack up a bunch of information believing we can go through it all at once at a later time. Unfortunately the flow of information does not always slow enough to get back to those piles.\nA fourth strategy is information filtering or looking at information at a higher level and saying, "I will go through this and I won't go through that." It is putting items into categories then working with those categories of information, prior to working with the information itself.\nA fifth strategy is simply walking away from the task.\nA sixth strategy is generalizing ? using minimal information to draw broad conclusions. This is akin to reading only the headlines of a newspaper and speaking as if knowing the details of the articles.\n
  32. In 2008, Americans consumed information for about 1.3 trillion hours, an average of almost 12 hours per day. Consumption totaled 3.6 zettabytes and 10,845 trillion words, corresponding to 100,500 words and 34 gigabytes for an average person on an average day. A zettabyte is 10 to the 21st power bytes, a million million gigabytes. These estimates are from an analysis of more than 20 different sources of information, from very old (newspapers and books) to very new (portable computer games, satellite radio, and Internet video). Information at work is not included. http://hmi.ucsd.edu/howmuchinfo_research_report_consum.php\nDefault overlaod coping strategies: http://www.anderson.ucla.edu/faculty/jason.frand/researcher/articles/info_overload.html\nThe first coping mechanism identified by Miller is the strategy of omission, or the temporary non-processing of information. This is essentially a state of mental fatigue where we feel as if we are spread much too thin. The feeling that we just cannot deal with all the information flowing to us results in our ignoring or failing to process some of the information.\nA second coping strategy is processing information readily at hand, even if it is bad or incorrect information. This describes the concept of GIGO or "garbage in, garbage out." W orking with poor information at the start This involves working with information that may not be the best and making decisions or acting based upon this information. This effectively casts doubt on thethe outcomes of actions and decisions made using this information because of working with poor information at the start. For example, it is not uncommon to observe an individual performing a search on the World Wide Web and using only the first few items in the results whether they are good or not.\nA third strategy is queuing or delaying the processing of some information with the hope of catching up later. In other words, we may stack up a bunch of information believing we can go through it all at once at a later time. Unfortunately the flow of information does not always slow enough to get back to those piles.\nA fourth strategy is information filtering or looking at information at a higher level and saying, "I will go through this and I won't go through that." It is putting items into categories then working with those categories of information, prior to working with the information itself.\nA fifth strategy is simply walking away from the task.\nA sixth strategy is generalizing ? using minimal information to draw broad conclusions. This is akin to reading only the headlines of a newspaper and speaking as if knowing the details of the articles.\n
  33. \n
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  38. Schools as “scarcity-generating institutions.”\nJust i time learning is no longer the advancement we are seeking- Now we need to have the ability to tap into situational learning. HOw to contact those who do have the knowledge-- not just to acquire it for ourselves, but to bring this expertise into the fold of problem solving. How to indietify, adapt to and/or recover from imperfect information, to too much information.\n\n Three metaphorial interpretations: \nTeacher is Lucy, students are the candy\nStudents are Lucy, standards are the candy\nWe as adults are Lucy, candy is information/life and scene is how we re struggling to cope with all of it.\n\nThis is AP coursework\n\n
  39. Yes, you can learn it just in time, and that’s sometimes necessary, but how good is that learning? You don’t have time to become the expert- you need to find the expert. Not just-in-time Content: just in tie connection\n
  40. Yes, you can learn it just in time, and that’s sometimes necessary, but how good is that learning? You don’t have time to become the expert- you need to find the expert. Not just-in-time Content: just in tie connection\n
  41. Yes, you can learn it just in time, and that’s sometimes necessary, but how good is that learning? You don’t have time to become the expert- you need to find the expert. Not just-in-time Content: just in tie connection\n
  42. http://www.evaluationcanada.ca/distribution/20090601_quinn_patton_michael_a.pdf; \n\nSimple: follow a recipe\nComplicated: build a rocket\nComplex: Raise a child\n
  43. Since the fifteenth century, knowledge conceptualized as a straight-line kind of thing. The invention of curriculum. Ramus (ramifications).\n\nWhen is content emphasis appropriate? 1. As a stepping stone based on learner’s own assessment of need. 2. As a way to get “coverage” done quickly. Either way, a lot less of it needs to be done, and if you follow even the most conservative argument, gifted kids can get it done much faster-- why drag it out. \n\n\n
  44. Since the fifteenth century, knowledge conceptualized as a straight-line kind of thing. The invention of curriculum. Ramus (ramifications).\n\nWhen is content emphasis appropriate? 1. As a stepping stone based on learner’s own assessment of need. 2. As a way to get “coverage” done quickly. Either way, a lot less of it needs to be done, and if you follow even the most conservative argument, gifted kids can get it done much faster-- why drag it out. \n\n\n
  45. \n
  46. Even the AP folks market their materials to gifted by using the “depth and complexity” buzzphrase/ You wnat complexity? I’ll give you complexity! \n
  47. Even the AP folks market their materials to gifted by using the “depth and complexity” buzzphrase/ You wnat complexity? I’ll give you complexity! \n
  48. Even the AP folks market their materials to gifted by using the “depth and complexity” buzzphrase/ You wnat complexity? I’ll give you complexity! \n
  49. Even the AP folks market their materials to gifted by using the “depth and complexity” buzzphrase/ You wnat complexity? I’ll give you complexity! \n
  50. Even the AP folks market their materials to gifted by using the “depth and complexity” buzzphrase/ You wnat complexity? I’ll give you complexity! \n
  51. Even the AP folks market their materials to gifted by using the “depth and complexity” buzzphrase/ You wnat complexity? I’ll give you complexity! \n
  52. the only people who aren’t really talking about it are teachers\n
  53. the only people who aren’t really talking about it are teachers\n
  54. the only people who aren’t really talking about it are teachers\n
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  58. If there is still going to be a role for some sort of centralized leadership in learning-- now the classroom teacher-- it is going to be as a facilitator: as broker, agent, psychologist.. Learning does not need to be in advance, it also doesn’t need to be “just in time” because it’s available in the environment-- a slight difference. Need to correct impression that going into teaching means you’re going to help kids by dispensing knowledge.\n
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