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Posts Tagged ‘thinkbeyond’

The growth of ebooks

Sunday, January 24th, 2010

The Horizon Report 2010 suggests that ebook technology will develop rapidly over the next two years. Perhaps by the end of this year we may see the sales of ebook readers tripling and a 200% increase in the sales of ebooks. The technologies surrounding ebooks will improve significantly, with an exponential increase in e-friendly apps, use of touchscreens and the development of user-friendly interfaces.

This year I am launching a series of ebooks to explore these developing technologies. The first of these is a series on Talking the Walk: Walking the Talk. These are for educators who wish to use a learning walk process to develop their pedagogical leadership skills. Aspects of the Kiwi Leadership for Principals that are highlighted in this book include relationships (since these underpin learning walks) and the power of context. Leading change, problem solving, culture, pedagogy, systems and awhinatanga are also key strands throughout this book series. Talking the Walk: Walking the Talk also relates well to the Leads Other for Learning section of the ACEL Leadership Capability framework which you may also want to explore further.

Talking the Walk: Walking the Talk experiments with flip book technology, giving the look and sound of the pages of a book as they turn over. You can read it online or download as a pdf. Adding embedded audio and video will be the next stage in my learning. If you come across new ideas and tools that I could use please let me know. Ebooks are on the rise!

You will find more information about the content of  my first ebook on the News! page and can place orders at the Store.

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Fear and Hope

Friday, September 18th, 2009

Today I had the opportunity to share some of my reflections on my voluntary work in Cape Town, as part of the Rata Teachers Support group. I hope that those who came to listen could see what a profound effect my experience has had on me. It reinforced the importance of giving to others in order to help understand yourself. I had never been involved volunteering overseas before and all I could do was hope that I would have something to offer. The experience took me out of my comfort zone – and I believe that this is where real learning happens.

Margaret Wheatley says that hope propels us to action and that when hope enters the room fear is always by its side. That is because while hope looks to the future, fear is based on the past and the ‘what ifs’.

I have really become aware of the many people who are seeking to make a difference to others, throughout the world and for many different causes. They are driven by passion and commitment. They have high hopes that their work will make a difference and at times, fear that the difference is not great enough. They are not paralysed by this fear, but rather more determined than ever because it is worth the risk. One example is the Adonis Musati Project, based in Cape Town, yet another ripple of hope to help humanity:

I fear for a world where we cannot reach out and help others, instead focussing on greed and self interest. Is that not what got us to this place we are today? These are times for courageous leadership, for each of us to have a strong moral compass that compels us to lead ethically, driven by clear beliefs for what could be. Again, Margaret Wheately describes this profoundly:

We may not succeed in changing things, but we choose to act from the clarity that this is right action for us. People who endure and persevere for their cause describe clarity as a force arising within them that compels them to act.

They express this by saying, “I couldn’t not do it.”

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Killing the golden goose

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

Many years ago I completed a programme called “The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People”. This had, and still has, a profound effect on my life. One of the key stories that I remember was of the goose and the golden egg. You know the story – the farmer has a goose that lays golden eggs. He becomes greedy and decides to cut open the goose to get more eggs. Alas the goose dies and the farmer gets what he deserves – nothing.

The goose and the golden egg

The goose and the golden egg

The key messages as they apply to us are:

  • effectiveness is not just about results. it also involves looking after our assets so the goose not only lives but thrives.
  • It is not enough to focus on things. People matter. Relationships are paramount.

I have been reflecting on this story as it relates to expectations placed on schools by their governments, school districts and boards. And I have a problem. Let me share this in the context of recent changes in NZ education. The new government of the day has moved to fulfill its election promise of introducing National Standards to schools. They have received feedback from the community and educators regarding the standards and will now proceed with indecent haste towards implementation.

I don’t have a problem with some aspects of standards, if they increase the accountabiilty of schools to improve student achievement. Trouble is I’m not convinced that you can measure some of the really important things that students should be achieving.

During my recent trip to South Africa I pondered the rigidities of curriculum and the lack of a focus on teaching students to think for themselves. The focus was on covering the curriculum whether the students were ready for it or whether it was relevant to them.  Literacy (for the digital age) and numeracy remain indisputably important, but if people aren’t actively taught to think for themselves South Africa won’t move forward. Neither will any other country, including New Zealand. To even begin developing a future focused curriculum requires a huge amount of energy and the more we focus on testing the less we have for action.

If the implementation of standards is to be successful we need to learn from failed attempts in other parts of the world and this takes time. Feedback from teachers indicated that there were concerns with the extra workload the national standards would create. My concern is that it will take the ball off the implementation of the new curriculum and a wonderful opportunity to move the future thinking of schooling will be lost. That poor golden goose looks even more threatened. We are being implemented to death.

My plea?

  • Take another year to sort out what will work and how the golden goose (teachers and principals) can be supported, otherwise mindsets will stay the same, people will hunker down and students will be no better off.
  • Listen to the experts on learning – from within NZ (educators and researchers) and overseas (such as Andy Hargreaves). I mean, really listen rather than just watch their mouths move. I mean, ask inquiring questions and seek first to understand rather than be understood. Engage with them and mean it.
  • Think about education for the future not the past. Use the opportunity created through breathing space to develop ongoing systems of reporting that link into the use of web 2.0 tools and make the partnership between home and school based on a continual conversation between parents, teachers …oh and let’s consider even involving the students. Wouldn’t that be novel…
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