Books I Read in October 2022

Yes, I’m aware it’s mid-November as I post this. It’s been a busy month šŸ˜‰

Here are the books I read, re-read, listened to, or re-read in October 2022:

No products found.

Boarding Party: Green Zone War, Book 0
  • Audible Audiobook
  • Jake Elwood (Author) – Johnathan McClain (Narrator)
  • English (Publication Language)
  • 01/19/2021 (Publication Date) – Podium Audio (Publisher)
Sale
Frankenstein: The 1818 Text (Penguin Classics)
  • Shelley, Mary (Author)
  • English (Publication Language)
  • 288 Pages – 01/16/2018 (Publication Date) – Penguin Classics (Publisher)
Sale
THE CALL OF CTHULHU
  • Hardcover Book
  • Lovecraft, H.P. (Author)
  • English (Publication Language)
  • 64 Pages – 11/05/2019 (Publication Date) – Design Studio Press (Publisher)
The Strange Case Of Dr. Jekyll And Mr. Hyde
  • Stevenson, Robert Louis (Author)
  • English (Publication Language)
  • 113 Pages – 07/09/2022 (Publication Date) – Independently published (Publisher)
Sale
Shadow Divers: The True Adventure of Two Americans Who Risked Everything to Solve One of the Last Mysteries of World War II
  • Hardcover Book
  • Kurson, Robert (Author)
  • English (Publication Language)
  • 375 Pages – 06/29/2004 (Publication Date) – Random House (Publisher)
Sale
Dracula: Collector’s Special Edition (Deluxe Illustrated Classics)
  • Hardcover Book
  • Stoker, Bram (Author)
  • English (Publication Language)
  • 464 Pages – 11/23/2021 (Publication Date) – Union Square & Co. (Publisher)
The Legend of Sleepy Hollow
  • Irving, Washington (Author)
  • English (Publication Language)
  • 32 Pages – 02/21/2016 (Publication Date) – CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform (Publisher)
The Wise Mans Fear: The Kingkiller Chronicle: Book 2
  • English (Publication Language)
  • Penguin (Publisher)
Sale
Beowulf: A New Verse Translation
  • Hardcover Book
  • English (Publication Language)
  • 256 Pages – 02/15/2000 (Publication Date) – Farrar, Straus and Giroux (Publisher)
Sale
Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can’t Stop Talking
  • Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can’t Stop Talking [Hardcover]
  • Susan Cain
  • Hardcover Book
  • Cain, Susan (Author)
  • English (Publication Language)
Robots and Roommates: Star Kingdom, Book 0
  • Audible Audiobook
  • Lindsay Buroker (Author) – Fred Berman (Narrator)
  • English (Publication Language)
  • 01/19/2021 (Publication Date) – Podium Audio (Publisher)

Overall, it was a very spooky month as I revisited some of my horror favorites. Hopefully, you had the chance to knock a few items from your TBR.

Advice for Brand New Teachers: You Donā€™t Have to Impress People

From Mastery by Robert Greene

Reflecting on my first year in the classroom, I was utterly obsessed with impressing everyone. Maybe it was because I came to teaching as a second career. Maybe it was due to my involvement at conferences and summits, even as a brand-new teacher.

Whatever my reasons for wanting to show everyone how good I was, those reasons led me down a path of exhaustion and stress that did nothing for my health and certainly didnā€™t help me when I wasnā€™t at school.

So, to help out any new teachers, I thought Iā€™d pass on some advice I wish Iā€™d known when I started teaching. Hopefully, you can avoid the stress, anxiety, and exhaustion I experienced and live a balanced life while still being a fantastic teacher.

You donā€™t need to be perfect ā€” no one is

Perfectionism is a curse. The voice in your head tells you that youā€™re not good enough and that you need to try harder and do more. Itā€™s the constant striving for an unattainable goal. And itā€™s exhausting.

I should know. Iā€™m a perfectionist. Iā€™ve always been a high achiever and always strived to be the best. And itā€™s taken its toll. Iā€™ve spent hours obsessing over minor details that no one else would even notice. Iā€™ve put immense pressure on myself to succeed, and as a result, Iā€™ve often felt like a failure.

As a teacher, I work with perfectionists all the time ā€” students who are afraid to make mistakes and who are afraid to take risks. And working with them has made me realize that perfectionism is a Learned Behavior ā€” something we can unlearn.

Your students donā€™t need you to be perfect. They donā€™t need for your fantastic lesson to always happen exactly the way you envisioned. In fact, you likely already know that the perfect lesson rarely happens. If youā€™re like me and teach the same topic several times daily, you change something during every class period.

And sometimes, things still donā€™t work.

Your students need to see that youā€™re not afraid to fail or to try something new. They need to see you participate in the productive struggle. You donā€™t have to be perfect.

We can choose to let go of the need to be perfect, and in doing so, we can live happier, healthier lives.

So if youā€™re a perfectionist, take heart. Youā€™re not alone. And thereā€™s hope for us yet.

Photo by Toa Heftiba on Unsplash

Itā€™s okay to ask for help

Asking for help is often seen as a sign of weakness, but it takes a lot of strength to admit that you need assistance. We all need help from time to time, whether weā€™re struggling with a personal issue or trying to figure out how to use a new piece of technology. Asking for help is nothing to be ashamed of. In fact, itā€™s often the smartest thing you can do.

When it comes to asking for help in the classroom, teachers shouldnā€™t hesitate to reach out to their colleagues. A fresh set of eyes can make all the difference when it comes to spotting problems with a lesson plan or finding new ways to engage students.

And when it comes to assessment, colleagues can provide valuable insights that can help improve the quality of your work. So donā€™t be afraid to ask for help when you need it. Itā€™s okay to admit that youā€™re not perfect ā€” we all are.

Take time for yourself

As teachers, we often put the needs of our students above our own. We teach because we want to make a difference in the lives of others, and that means sometimes sacrificing our own time and energy.

However, itā€™s important to remember that we canā€™t pour from an empty cup. To be the best teachers we can be, we must take care of ourselves first. That means taking time for rest, relaxation, and self-care. It might mean saying no to after-school activities or planning days off with family.

Seneca said this about guarding your time:

ā€œNo person would give up even an inch of their estate, and the slightest dispute with a neighbor can mean hell to pay; yet we easily let others encroach on our lives ā€” worse, we often pave the way for those who will take it over. No person hands out their money to passers-by, but to how many do each of us hand out our lives! Weā€™re tight-fisted with property and money, yet think too little of wasting time, the one thing about which we should all be the toughest misers.ā€

The only person who will prioritize your time is you. Donā€™t let someone else make their time more important than yours.

Whatever form it takes, self-care is essential to being a successful teacher.

So next time you feel run down, remember to take a little time for yourself. Your students will thank you for it!

Donā€™t compare yourself to others

If youā€™re like most people, you probably compare yourself to others regularly. Whether youā€™re comparing your work to a colleagueā€™s or your teaching methods to a master teacherā€™s, itā€™s easy to feel like youā€™re falling short.

There is always someone further along in their career than you, but donā€™t worry ā€” youā€™re not supposed to compare yourself to them! Thatā€™s because, as anyone with imposter syndrome will tell you, everyone feels like a fraud sometimes.

The only way to become a better teacher is to gain experience and keep learning. So instead of comparing yourself to others, focus on your journey and trust that youā€™re exactly where youā€™re supposed to be.

Photo by Luwadlin Bosman on Unsplash

Build relationships with your colleagues and students

Thereā€™s no denying that relationships are essential. Whether youā€™re trying to build relationships with your colleagues or students, itā€™s essential to put in the effort to create connections. After all, relationships are the foundation of any successful teaching experience. Establishing relationships with your students creates a supportive learning environment where everyone can thrive.

Donā€™t be the teacher who doesnā€™t smile until Christmas. Get to know your students. Laugh with them (not at them!), talk with them, and learn what they love about the world. It may help you connect with that student who never speaks to anyone.

And by developing relationships with your colleagues, you create a collaborative team that can work together to improve student outcomes. So if youā€™re looking to build relationships, remember that creating strong bonds takes time and effort. But the effort is well worth it when you see the positive impact that relationships can have on teaching and learning.

Be yourself

An old saying goes, ā€œWhen in doubt, be yourself.ā€ And while that may not be the most sage advice for every situation, itā€™s definitely something to keep in mind regarding your career.

After all, being authentic and genuine to yourself is one of the best ways to be successful.

Consider the classroom. As a teacher, you have the unique opportunity to connect with your students personally and help them learn in a relevant way. But to do that, you need to be genuine.

Your students will be able to sense if youā€™re being fake or if youā€™re going through the motions. Trust me; they have a BS detector that can spot a fake teacher from a hundred miles away. Theyā€™ll know if youā€™re doing something that is not authentic to who you are.

Donā€™t be that teacher who tries to do things in class so you can look cool to your students. (As a matter of fact, donā€™t use the word cool. Iā€™m pretty sure itā€™s not cool anymoreā€¦)

But if youā€™re authentic, theyā€™ll be more likely to engage with the material and learn from you.

Of course, there are times when itā€™s essential to put on a professional persona. But in general, itā€™s best to just be yourself. It might not always be easy, but itā€™s always worth it.

So there you have it: some advice on not being a perfect teacher and trying to impress everyone from a (spoiler alert) far-from-perfect teacher. Remember, itā€™s okay to ask for help, take time for yourself, donā€™t compare yourself to others, build relationships with your colleagues and students, and most importantly ā€” be yourself!


As always, thanks for reading. This blog is a reader-supported publication. The best way to support it is to shop for some ofĀ my favorite stuffĀ (I get a cut) orĀ hire meĀ to speak or consult with your organization.

The HyperRubric: A Rubric for the Digital Age

Iā€™ve long been a fan of Hyperdocs; a lesson-building format that focused on providing students with the resources they need to work at their own pace throughout a lesson or unit.

Hyperdocs also gives teachers the chance to support students in a lesson exactly when they need it most. The format works well in either virtual or blended learning environments, giving students control over the pace of the lesson.

With a bit of a different twist, thereā€™s now the HyperRubric.

Think of it as a traditional rubric super-powered with examples and supports that will give students the resources they need to complete a task.

HyperRubrics can give help students answer the ā€œwhyā€ behind what they are doing in a lesson rather than just the what. Weā€™ve all had great lessons that students loved, but at the end of the lesson, students canā€™t really express what they were supposed to be learning during the lesson, only remembering the cool stuff they did.

Image from Cult of Pedagogy

Using HyperRubrics can provide a focus for students and help teachers think critically about what support students will need to achieve outcomes.

Technology in the Classroom: Why It Matters

Technology has become ubiquitous in society, and its presence is increasingly felt in schools. Many school districts have invested significantly in hardware, software, and digital resources for teachers and students. However, some educators remain reluctant to use technology in their classrooms. This blog post will discuss four reasons students need to use technology in school.

Why is it important for students to use technology in school?

Technology allows students to engage in authentic tasks requiring them to synthesize multiple information sources and effectively communicate their findings.

In the past, many classroom tasks were limited by what materials were available in the textbook or on the library shelves. With technology, students can now access a wealth of information with a few clicks of a button.

They can also collaborate with classmates around the world on complex projects. To prepare our students for the global economy, we must provide them with opportunities to use technology authentically.

How does using technology reinforce learning and memory encoding?

Using technology also reinforces learning and memory encoding. Studies have shown that when students interact with digital content, they encode information more deeply and retain it for longer periods of time.

This is due to what cognitive scientists call ā€œthe testing effectā€ ā€“ the finding that retrieval practice (i.e., testing oneself on material) enhances subsequent retention.

With technology, teachers can easily create formative assessments that help students practice retrieving information from their long-term memory storage. These formative assessment activities can be games, quizzes, or other types of interactive activities that are engaging and fun for students.

What are some of the best digital tools for making meaning?

There are also many great digital tools available for helping students make meaning of complex concepts. One example is Google Earth, which allows users to explore specific locations from a birdā€™s eye view or even go on virtual field trips to places they would never be able to visit in person (e.g., the bottom of the ocean floor).

Another example is SketchUp Make, a free 3D modeling program that can be used to create visual representations of mathematical concepts like volume or surface area (see image below). There are literally thousands of other examples out there ā€“ the possibilities are endless!

How can teachers use technology situationally to demonstrate knowledge?

Finally, teachers can use technology situationally to demonstrate their own expertise and understanding of specific content areas. When teachers effectively integrate technology into their instruction, it sends a message to their students that they value using 21st-century skills and believe that these skills are important for all learners ā€“ not just those who are ā€œtech savvyā€ or ā€œgood at computersā€.

In addition, by modeling effective uses of technology, teachers can help their students see how these tools can support deep understanding and provide additional ways of knowing beyond what might be possible without technology.

Technology has become ubiquitous in society, and its presence is increasingly felt in schools. Although some educators remain reluctant to use technology in their classrooms, there are many reasons why it is important for students to have opportunities to learn with technology ā€“ including increased engagement with content, deeper learning and memory encoding, exposure to new digital tools for making meaning, and Situational demonstrations of teacher knowledge.

As school districts continue to invest in hardware, software, and digital resources, it will become increasingly important for educators to understand how they can use these tools effectively to support student learning.

Wednesday Wisdom: Don’t Let Your Emotions Overwhelm Your Choices

I read a passage from Robert Greeneā€™s Daily Laws during my morning quiet time today. This morningā€™s entry dealt with a topic every educator – and person – deals with daily; handling our emotions.

Too often, we make choices based on our emotions. This is true for educators since we see the sides of society others often ignore. Hunger, abuse, indescribable home environments, and abandonment are just a few things we see as our students walk into the building.

We want to do whatā€™s best for our kids because we love them. Too often, we become invested in their success and allow our emotions to take charge.

Of course, even if we can learn to master our emotions (something extremely difficult to do because weā€™re human), we canā€™t ever control the emotions of those around us.

The people you work with may not master their emotions. Administrators, other teachers, vital staff members, parents, and students have their own emotions to deal with, and many wonā€™t make decisions detached from emotions. You, on the other hand, will do your best to control your emotions.

Itā€™s not about having no emotions. That, frankly, is impossible. And utterly, completely boring. The goal is to control your emotions and choose not to let them be involved in decision-making. But perhaps even more important to this process is not getting sucked into the emotional whirlpool created by others.

Understand Wizard’s Third RulePassion Rules Reason. Most people we meet and associate with allow their emotions to guide every decision.

But not you. You remember Wizard’s Sixth RuleThe only sovereign you can allow to rule you is reason.

Stay focused, stay reasoned.


As always, thanks for reading. This newsletter is a reader-supported publication. The best way to support it is to shop for some of my favorite stuff (I get a cut) or hire me to speak or consult with your organization.

Friday Finds: Spooky Edition

Itā€™s the end of another week, and weā€™re heading straight into the very witching time of the year. Hocus Pocus 2, Halloweentown, and The Nightmare Before Christmas have been on repeat at my house.

Many of us enjoy a good scare from time to time (because humans are weird), so here are ten things I found this week to help get you in the spooky moodā€¦

  1. I love old-time radio shows, which likely explains my love for podcasts.Ā Hereā€™s a playlist of 149 vintage Halloween radio showsĀ to enjoy while you hand out candy.
  2. While weā€™re on the topic of spooky sounds, this was the soundtrack of my early Halloween memoriesĀ that I thought had been lost forever. Thanks, random stranger on YouTube.
  3. One of my favorite spooky stories is The Legend of Sleepy Hollow. Poor Ichabod Crane. For added creepiness,Ā hereā€™s a retelling of the tale done with shadow puppetsĀ and aĀ cool behind-the-scenes video.
  4. Itā€™s not all that spooky, butĀ the tale of how Toy Story 2 was almost deletedĀ before ever being released is certainly scary and a great lesson in backing up your digital life.
  5. For streaming fans,Ā here are some new spooky talesĀ to check out this spooky season (I am hearing amazing things about Werewolf by Night and Cabinet of Curiosities from my friend, Brian Rodman).
  6. Speaking of Brian, if youā€™re a fan of all things comics & horror,Ā you should check out his work. Heā€™s venturing into prose in the coming months, and I canā€™t wait.
  7. I keep talking about AI art generators and their ability to create some amazing creations from strings of words. Of course, they canā€™t take the place of true artists, nor should they. But theyā€™re fun for projects likeĀ reimagining scary movie posters.
  8. At my house, we buy one box of Boo Berry cereal as soon as it hits the shelves in the fall.Ā I had no clue that the monster cereals had such a weird history.
  9. If you happen to get a littleĀ tooĀ spooked,Ā here are some tips to help you calm down and maintain your sanity.
  10. Finally, here are some of my favorite scary books. Like, super scary. Thereā€™sĀ Something Wicked This Way Comes,Ā It, andĀ everything Edgar Allan Poe ever wroteĀ (The Tell-Tale Heart is my personal favorite).
woman wearing tank dress
Photo by Edilson Borges on Unsplash

As always, thanks for reading. Enjoy yourself this Halloween, and remember to check your candy for anything suspect or ridiculous (Seriously, drug dealers arenā€™t going to randomly give their product away. They make money selling it.)

This newsletter is a reader-supported publication. The best way to support it is to shop for some of my favorite stuff (I get a cut) or hire me to speak or consult with your organization.

Respecting Solitude and How Students Work

I finished Susan Cain’s Quiet this week and came away with several notes. Of course, my interest in this book on all things introverts was personal. I’m the introvert’s introvert. Yes, I stand in front of students and teachers every day. And I have given more in-person talks than I can remember, but I pay a price for that work.

I’m more comfortable at home. I curl up with a good book or build something in Minecraft. Both are more comfortable for me than being in front of people. I’m more expressive in my writing than I am while talking. I have time to collect my thoughts, and even now, I still worry about sounding like an idiot when I’m in front of people.

I’m much better in public now than when I was a kid, but I still have to put on my super-suit to make it through the day. And I often come home and collapse from the weight of being around people.

Reacting to the World

Turns out, there’s a reason why introverts like me respond to the world in the way we do. Cain presents research on people who have low- and high-reactive nervous systems. At first glance, you’d think that introverts are low-reactive and extroverts are high-reactive.

My friend, it’s the opposite. Introverts have high-reactive nervous systems. We have visceral reactions to the smallest events. Extroverts are extroverts because they’re looking for external stimulation. They need the excitement.

Introverts? We have plenty of excitement walking out the door in the morning, thank you very much. We don’t need anything else.

Now, put yourself in the place of one of your introverted students. How often do we do things in our schools that will throw this student’s nervous system into chaos?

I often think about why we do so many things in education the same way for every student. Yes, we provide interventions when students aren’t meeting achievement standards. But why do we make them sit in overfilled classrooms when we know some of them would rather be alone or in a small group?

We’re stifling great students by putting them in situations that wreck their world. And sometimes, we keep them from learning all they can.

Photo by Robynne Hu on Unsplash

Group Work isn’t Always the Right Choice

Teachers ask students to collaborate all the time. We’re trained that collaboration makes for great student experiences. And that “we’re better together than we are apart.” I’m the first to admit that I follow that motto when working with students and teachers. Many times we’re right to put folks in groups.

But sometimes we’re not.

Thanks for reading The Eclectic Educator! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work.āœ“

Steve Wozniak, the co-founder of Apple, Inc., created the first Apple computer alone. He worked early mornings and late evenings around his job at HP. No workgroup, team, or other souls to talk with about his ideas. But he created the computer that began a revolution.

Musicians, especially professional musicians, know what makes or breaks their careers. It’s not the time they spend practicing with their ensemble. It’s how much time they spend in solitary practice. Great musicians practice around 4 hours a day alone, then practice more with their group.

Students sometimes don’t want to work in groups because they don’t want to do the work. Sometimes, it’s because they know they work well alone.

Flexible Collaboration

What if we allowed students to collaborate as they see the need? How could we design our classrooms and schools to facilitate this option?

We can use tools like instant messaging or chat tools. These tools create spaces where students can share ideas as needed. Jason Fried from 37Signals tells his employees to practice “passive collaboration.” Don’t meet unless you have to do so.

As a matter of fact, Jason tells people to cancel meetings. If you attend the same meetings I do as an educator; you know this is a good idea.

Microsoft has offices that offer sliding doors and removable walls. When appropriate, people can chat with their peers on a project. But then, they have the control to retreat into solitude and work.

closeup photo of body of water in timelapse photo
Photo by Dave Hoefler on Unsplash

Getting Into a Flow

Cain speaks about the “flow state” that people enter when they can concentrate and work. I experience this myself often when I’m working. It isn’t easy to get there without planning to do so, but when I can, oh my.

For me, I put on my headphones and crank up a playlist of techno, lo-fi, or some other repetitive music. It’s always in the background but never in the front of my mind. Sometimes I’m like Tim Ferris, and I’ll repeat a movie or TV episode repeatedly.

When do we allow students to get into a flow state? Do we ever? Introverts love to get into this flow state of uninterrupted work. They hate distractions.

Yet, we break it up every 50-60 minutes of every school day. Imagine how frustrating this is for some of your students.

Finding Your Restorative Niche

Your restorative niche is the place you go to rebuild your strength. This holds true for introverts and extroverts alike; their restorative niches look different. It doesn’t have to be a physical place; it can be a mental state of being.

Regardless of what it looks like, our students have restorative niches they need to visit. Many times per day. Likely, you have a restorative niche yourself that you need to visit.

What Now?

I don’t have answers for what I’ve talked about, but I know that we need to be more aware of how we take care of our introverts. Because I’m one of them, I know how terrible my school experience was all those years ago.

Is there a place for collaboration and group work among students and teachers? Yes. Is there also a place for solitude and quiet focus? Yes, and yes.


Thanks for reading. This newsletter is a reader-supported publication. The best way to support it is to shop for some of my favorite gear (I get a cut) or hire me to speak or consult with your organization.

Thinking about Lesson Redesign for Deeper Learning

Thereā€™s a project that Iā€™ve wanted to begin for a few years. I thought Iā€™d have the chance during my first year as a full-time digital learning coach, but then COVID happened, and things went off the rails.

Now, my project is running. Iā€™m working with a group of teachers in my district; the Future Shift Fellowship. The teachers represent grade levels from K-12 and several different content areas. Our focus is on redesigning lessons to createĀ deeper learningĀ experiences for students.

In case you werenā€™t aware, this process isnā€™t easy. But, with the right outlook and tools to help, weā€™re making some headway on this journey.

The Right Tool for Framing Conversations

Weā€™re using the wonderful 4 Shifts Protocol as our guiding light during all our conversations. If youā€™re not familiar with this protocol, hereā€™s an overview:

The 4 Shifts Protocol is a questioning protocol that focuses on redesigning lessons in four areas: deeper thinking & learning, authentic work, student agency & personalization, and technology infusion.

Itā€™s a simple tool to begin using, but it opens the door to much deeper conversations about what we ask students to do and how those tasks align with meaningful work in settings beyond the classroom.

purple and black computer keyboard
Photo by Syed Ali on Unsplash

Before this weekā€™s meeting, I asked the fellows to read through the 4 Shifts handbook to guide our discussions. From the group, here are some of the thoughts they shared and their takeaways from the book:

The 4 Shifts Takeaways

My fellows know that one of my rallying cries about any change we undertake in our classrooms is to ā€œembrace the suck.ā€ Itā€™s a military term used by trainers to get their trainees to understand that you must lean into being uncomfortable and push through difficulties. I use it to encourage teachers and students to keep going despite whatever difficulty they face with technology usage, rethinking lessons, or anything that ā€œsucksā€ about change in education.

The fellows agreed that this book and protocol give them some support and encouragement to embrace the suck. And to know that things wonā€™t always suck.

Next, they realized that lesson redesign will look different for different people because of the protocol’s flexibility. The 4 Shifts protocol respects teachers as professionals and masters of their craft. There is no dictation to use certain tools or methods in any of the shifts, merely yes/no/maybe questions to start conversations about how to change. Itā€™s up to each teacher to determine how to best change each no to a yes.

people sitting down near table with assorted laptop computers
Photo by Marvin Meyer on Unsplash

One fellow brought up how, when used properly, infusing technology into lessons can give students greater control over their learning. Good technology integration should provide students with greater agency and provide them with opportunities to present their work to an authentic audience and setting. Thinking about lesson redesign with deeper learning in mind makes this possible.

It Doesnā€™t Have to Be Hard

We talked about our overachiever desire to do something spectacular with our students. If weā€™re going to redesign a lesson, we thought, we need to do something thatā€™s never been done before and end the lesson or unit with some impressive technology project to show off to as many people as possible.

Of course, thatā€™s not the point of this process. And the redesign doesnā€™t have to be difficult to implement or require huge changes to lead to deeper learning. Even small tweaks to your existing lessons can open new doors for students. Changing one small part of your lesson can give students a greater opportunity to think more deeply or, if appropriate, lead them down the path of becoming creators of content rather than consumers.

Ultimately, our goal in lesson redesign is moving students fromĀ inert learningĀ to active learning, getting away from simple test prep to acquiring knowledge that sets them up for success in the world beyond our school walls.

What Happens Next

Our journey is just beginning with this fellowship. Weā€™re starting small to spread this work across our school district. We will learn much along the way, and Iā€™ll be sharing our work with all of you as we go. Itā€™s an adventure for us and, we hope, for our students, too.

Change does not happen quickly, especially in education. However, our students are worth whatever changes we can make to help them be successful and live the life of their dreams, whatever that may be. The struggle is worth it because our kids are worth it.



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Will Students Use AI to Write Papers?

Since the dawn of time, students have been looking for ways to get out of writing papers. How do I know this? Because I was a student who tried to get out of writing papers.

I was terrible at it since Iā€™d mostly just end up not writing the paper (Have I told you how horrible I was as a student in middle school & high school? Or maybe I wasnā€™t horrible, I just didnā€™t want to do things that were busy work and it all seemed like busy workā€¦) and placing all my hopes for decent grades on awesome test-taking abilities.

Regardless of the wonderful technologies our students can use today, at some point, they are going to write a paper. Until we convince every teacher in the world that there are other ways to demonstrate learning mastery, thereā€™s a paper in every studentā€™s future. And there are times when a paper is the best form of assessment or communication.

With advances in artificial intelligence, we may need to rethink writing assignments for students.

Rethinking Writing with AI in Mind

As we think about creating deeper learning experiences for students and moving past work that doesnā€™t have applications outside the classroom and only asks for evidence of low-level learning, we educators need to know whatā€™s possible with AI writing programs.

If youā€™re asking students to give an answer that looks something like a ā€œlisticleā€ you might find on a website, an AI writer can craft an incredibly decent response.

Without AI, innovate_rye says the homework they consider ā€œbusyworkā€ would take them two hours. Now homework assignments like this take them 20 minutes.

from Vice

And some budding entrepreneurs learn quickly that if they know how to use AI writing software, they can make a quick buck from classmates.

I quickly searched for ā€œai writing appsā€ and retrieved around 82 million matches. The first page of the search results is littered with articles like ā€œ21 Best AI Writing Software Tools of October 2022 (Top 3 Picks)ā€ and ā€œ21 Best AI Writing Tools of 2022,ā€ amongst many others.

My point is this: students will find a way to game the system. They will put more effort into getting out of work than they will in doing the work if the work they are asked to do seems pointless.

white robot
Photo by Possessed Photography on Unsplash

Can we honestly say we donā€™t want to do the same? If we could have an AI attend the average staff meeting in our stead, wouldnā€™t we?

You could even use AI to write up some helpful tips for other teachers if you want to. The quality of the work may not be what youā€™re looking for, but is that wrong?

Technology is a tool that we can leverage to complete mundane tasks. The part of that statement that is difficult to define is the mundane part. Who decides what tasks are mundane and which ones arenā€™t?

A Plea for More Authentic Tasks

Iā€™m not saying that papers canā€™t be authentic; Iā€™m saying that we have to think carefully about what we ask students to write about. As with all the work we ask of students, a move toward more authentic, student-centered learning is essential in our modern world.

Planning frameworks like the 4 Shifts protocol can help us think about the tasks we ask of students and how we can modify those tasks for more authentic work.

And maybe worry a little less about software writing student responses.

BONUS: I had this newsletter ready to launch when I saw an AI-generated podcast between Joe Rogan and Steve Jobs. Disturbing? Yes. We need to know whatā€™s out there and what it can do. The future is now.


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