21st Century Skills
 
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Here is an article that I wrote, Garth helped edit, for Phonedog.com.  Phonedog is one of the leaders for information concerning cell phones and mobile technology.

I work in a middle school full of kids in sixth through eighth grades.  Just a few years ago cell phones were seen as the newest teenage addiction, a drug that had to be repressed and condemned by schools.  It’s not really all that bad, though.  

I am willing to wager my Android smartphone that parents are paying for students’ cell phones.  It stands to reason then, that parents are okay with their kids using these devices.  So parents are okay with cell phone use, the students are okay with cell phone use, yet schools have adopted zero tolerance policies.  

The question of how to provide students with technology plagues the majority of school districts.  Rising costs and disappearing school funding makes it difficult to provide necessities like chairs and chalkboards, let alone laptops and smartboards.  Challenging obstacles require creative thinking by schools; the same creative thinking that we want from our students.  Schools need to realize that many students already have all the technology they need, right in their pockets and lockers.  Most statistics agree that upwards of 80% of teenagers have cell phones.  These kids are not just making calls, they are texting, checking email, updating FaceBook accounts and Tweeting.  They are making social connections, sharing information, collaborating, planning and researching.  Schools are becoming more flexible with cell phone usage policies, but it is a slow process.

Our school policy is that cell phones must be kept in lockers and turned off during school hours.  Yet, kids text during lunch, in bathrooms and even during class. The invention of “skinny jeans” makes it even easier to see students carrying their cell phones through the halls. As a teacher I have a choice: become cell phone Gestapo, scanning pockets and Uggs for phones, ignore the problem entirely, or turn the problem into an opportunity.  

This year I am inviting students to use their cell phones to leave a positive digital footprint in their wake.  I want students to embrace technology and learn skills that will help them throughout their lives.  I want students to communicate with me and with other students.  I want students thinking about history (which I teach) when they are at home watching television, eating dinner or walking around the city.  Kids need to develop an empathetic view of the world.  They need to think critically about why things happen, what influences their choices and how they can positively impact on the future.  This year my students will blog, Skype with their peers at another middle school almost forty miles away, create Delicious accounts and learn to tag.  This year’s students will work on a digital textbook that my students last year collaborated on with another school.  

My goal this year is to use the technology that students already possess.  I want my students to use their cell phones to learn, collaborate and create knowledge.  I will be teaching in tandem with Garth Holman, a colleague and friend in a school district some forty miles down the road from us.  Everything I mentioned that I’ll be doing, he’ll also be doing - it will be happening in two schools, between two heterogeneous groups of students.

Using cell phones in an educationally appropriate way is difficult.  My district is not going change its cell phone policies based on my beliefs alone.  This year’s cell phone use will hopefully give me concrete examples of positive cell phone use that I might use to help enact policy changes in the future.  For now I will ask my students to use their phones for class participation – homework – beyond the forty minutes I have with them each school day.  Students using websites like Wiffitti and Flickr will engage in learning and have active roles in shaping their experience in my class.

For those of you unfamiliar with Wiffitti, you may have used it without even knowing.  Wiffitti allows you to create a “wall” where people can post messages.  Each wall is assigned an SMS number and short code used to post texts; stadiums and television shows have used this technoology for years.  Garth and I have a shared page set up where we can post a question and have all 230 of our students respond and engage with each other in a digital environment.  Then we can project our virtual wall on our real classroom walls for discussions, or even discussions between our two classrooms via Skype.

We are also going to post Twitter feeds on our blog and give our students the opportunity to “follow” experts via their cell phones and computers.  This will enable students to see, hear and learn from real historians, archaeologists and scientists who post information and questions in real-time.  What’s nice about Twitter is that students without mobile data plans can still use their home computers to engage in the world around them.

One last idea to consider concerning the use of cell phones in education:  We want students to understand that history and geography are all around them, at all times.  Students are going to have the ability to text pictures to our class Flickr account, assemble the more significant photos into a Google Earth layer, and use Mosaickr to turn our collected images into giant mosaic prints.

It’s been said a hundred times: Today’s students learn differently than those of just 10 years ago.  Technology is not a choice, it’s a reality that has changed the world in which we all live. School needs to be organic, not linear: It is not about testing and standard, but about nurturing creative question-askers, collaborators, and thinkers.  We need students who can use cell phones, Twitter accounts, and the rest of today and tomorrow’s tech to collaborate with field experts, classroom teachers and one other.

I challenge you to open your classroom to the world this year.  Adapt, create, and take a risk or two.

 


Comments

09/08/2010 22:03

I love what you've said. I want to note especially the value of integrating classroom learning into real life. Cell phones and computers are important parts of students' lives today, and incorporating them into classroom activities makes these activities applicable to real life situations. We don't want students who mourn their lack of experience as Goethe's Faust; we don't want students whose only learning is contained in a classroom. If, suddenly, texting is connected to history, it makes the concepts more concrete rather than abstract.

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Gene
09/09/2010 11:34

I absolutely agree. Technology is a vital part of the lives of our students. If we want students to be engaged and excited about learning, we need to actively engage them. Using the technology that is part of their everyday life is one way to do that. I love your idea developing a class mosaic of pictures.

Have you talked to your principal about changing the cell phone policy in connection with your class? When I presented my idea of using cell phones in class, my principal was all for it, because I had an educational purpose. Good luck!

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Kai
09/11/2010 08:45

When I read your blog entry, I realized many of the issues that you are experiencing with resistance to technology, especially cell phone usage, is present in my teaching situation. As I strive to advance my students technologically, I find myself learning about the varying options that are present. However, because of regulations and fear of abuse, I am reluctant to implement them.

For example, as a yearbook adviser, I encourage my students to find inspiration for their yearbook all over their world. This involves students noticing the minute details of their surroundings--ranging from billboards to gum wrappers. But how do they record what they find? They text each other. They make posts to their Facebook accounts. They take pictures with their highly advanced Blackberry or iPhones. All of these methods are extremely effective and exciting. They are also necessary because, as I teach 6-8 grade, the students tend to forget what they saw or feel that they cannot describe adequately their inspiration. Therefore, the fire behind the idea is lost. Regulations against students using cell phones prevents me from being able to take full advantage of these opportunities. I want to continue to encourage my students to think outside the box. For example, we can appropriately use a Facebook account for students to update their wall with inspiration and information that they find. Students can send theme ideas whenever they are "struck" with them to an active Twitter account--all completed through the use of their cell phones. With the cell phones a staple in the students' lives, I am excited about the opportunity to attempt to use them for educational purposes.

I appreciate your posting and the ideas you have provided that strengthen my resolve and awaken new ideas for implementation.

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09/13/2010 05:50

Kai,

Thank you for your comments! Using cell phones for the year book is a great idea! I actually talked to my yearbook adviser and she is going to write up a proposal for our principal. When this document is done, if you email me at: mike@teachersfortomorrow.net, I can forward it to you and maybe that will help you make some headway into allowing cell phones in your building. You also bring up a great point about students being able to instantly record what they are seeing/doing.

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09/15/2010 06:20

Students today get as much information from the classroom as they do from online or digital sources. It just seems logical that schools districts and teachers, themselves find new ways to dissemenating information to students. The conventional methods are being rejected by studnets or the student shows no interest in whats being taught in class because of the belief that the subject matter has no/will have no impact on their daily lives. What the available technology wether its Twitter, blogs, Youtube, or any other electronic recource does is bring information right to our homes and to the individual. With so much going on in today's world should we try to arm our students with as much right information as possible? We may not be able to force our students to learn, but we can do a better job of showing them how to access the informaiton that is available and promote the necessity to be self motivated and active when it comes to their education.

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Garth
09/15/2010 07:02

JCollier
Your comments spoke to me. I am looking at having my 7th graders open twitter accounts and following three to five historians at major universities. I am unsure how the community or administration will react to this, but I am going to chat with them later this week. Mike and I really want to expand students view of the world and learning. Something worksheets and reading from a text can't always do.

We have reserved 120 blog sites for my students (Mike is doing the same) that will be the main homework for the rest of the year. It will become their reflections on content, links to powerful information and a view into the development of their thinking. We will report on what happens in this blog in the future.

Thanks for sharing your ideas. You might want to check out our teacher website: http://www.7aworldhistory.com/index.html Keep in touch. Garth

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Robbin
09/15/2010 13:33

I agree with what you have come up with. I have a middle school aged son that has a cell phone and they have the same "keep it in the locker" policy. It is a great idea that you have decided to embrace the postive usage of cell phones. My son uses his phone to text his friends, check sports information, and to check his e-mail. I think that your idea will make the kids excited about learning and more engaged in their class work.

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kfhvxcjkvfhjkc
12/13/2010 07:38

i agree with this statement

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02/25/2011 23:45

Wonderful journey and experience!

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03/15/2011 22:40

I am launching a website soon, and your information will be very useful for me.. Thanks for all your help and wishing you all the success in your business.

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03/27/2011 18:28

The article is worth reading, I like it very much. I will keep your new articles.

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03/18/2012 04:49

Correct Declan! I was privileged to visit a few years back and will never forget it. I might post a few pictures on the blog soon actually. A trip down memory lane

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Natalee Isaacs
05/01/2012 06:14

I having been going through several of your old posts (Garth and Mike) and wanted to check out this one about cellphones. I completely agree that cell phones can be a help in the classroom, especially when funding is lacking. I think that by allowing students to use their phones in the classroom, it is allowing them greater opportunities for learning. Along with that, cell phones can be very helpful in case of emergency. As far as I know when Chardon experienced what they did recently, cell phones seemed to be beneficial to let parents know students were okay. I have heard since the situation in Chardon happened, many schools have started to allow students to carry cell phones, which I think is a smart idea.

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