OK, OK, I get the idea – not everything on the Internet is true and, for sure, not everything on the Internet is meaningful or helpful. Since April of this year I have started following a bunch of people on Twitter (before that I really didn’t even know what it was or care) and thought that there were so many people out there that I wanted to learn from. I would read other people’s blogs and try my best to think about what I had to learn from others. Mind you, I know I am definitely not the god of teaching, that’s for sure, but many of the things that are written out there – should I guess – with the hope of being “inspirational” or meaningful to others, I find less than helpful.
One site that I have really enjoyed reading which often has some great links and blogposts is Mindshift. But they just tweeted this blog entry that cited an article about creating a business that fosters creativity. OK, I see the connection to education, but honestly, it is a very different machine. Kids and adolescents have a very different mindset than adults who are out there making money. Not to mention the consequences of risk-taking in the classroom vs. risk-taking in the office have the potential for being very different. (Assessment for grades has a different meaning possibly for a 13-year-old mind than brainstorming on the job, vs. assessment for a salary raise, etc for an adult who we hope can handle the pressure a little more.)
Then the blogger writes two short paragraphs at the end about how schools are just “incurious and risk averse” places. Basically stating that schools don’t ever allow students to practice risk-taking or mistake making at all:
“Too few schools are incubators of curious and creative learners given their cultures of standardization, fear, and tradition. No doubt, external pressures exist that drive that culture. But if there ever was a time to shift gears, this is it. “
No doubt…sadly, our blogger, Will Richardson doesn’t really give us any advice on what to do about it….except, to do something about it. (Admittedly, he may have written something someplace else that I missed.) And I don’t want to single out Mr. Richardson – I find tweets and blogs like this all day long – “Exploration, inquiry & problem solving are powerful learning mechanisms…” or “asking good questions and promoting discourse is an integral part of teaching and learning”…. Hmmm, well let me think about ways in which we can talk to teachers in terms of mistake making and risk-taking:
- Blogpost on making mistakes and classroom activity tied to Kathryn Schultz’ TED talk On Being Wrong
- Discussion about article “Wrong is not always bad” with teachers
- Modeling risk-taking in Problem-Solving in my course at ASG conference in June
- Discussion of Relational Pedagogy to foster Risk-taking
- Using a PBL curriculum to foster mistake-making and communication
I found that many teachers that I work with and who contact me are entirely dedicated to changing the culture of the mathematics classroom in the U.S. and making it (as Mr. Richardson writes) an “incubator of curious and creative learners.” We need to make changes to our curriculum, our classroom relationships, our classroom culture and the authoritarian hierarchy that traditionally is prevalent in our mathematics classroom. Students need to be able to feel safe enough, from judgment, alienation and failure to make those mistakes while learning. We, as teachers, need to begin the discussion with each other about how to move forward with these initiatives and make sure that student voice is heard in the mathematics classroom as they question each other and us, the teachers, with true questions – ones we may not be able to answer. These are the important aspects of creating curious learners who make mistakes and learn from them. But we, as the adults in the room have a responsibility to let them feel safe in doing that.
I think teachers are aware of the fact that it’s time to “shift gears” – to make the classroom more conducive to students working together and taking chances. There are so many subtleties to making this shift, however. Students who need to shift, parents who are not used to that, assessment changes to be made – the list goes on and on. I am doing what I can to help people with this conversation. The pedagogy of relation (I believe) is at the heart of all of this – keeping in mind that in order for people to be vulnerable and make mistakes, we need to consider the interhuman aspect of learning. In a classroom where this connection has for too long been typically so acceptably removed, it will take a lot of work to make this big “gear shift” but I’m up to it – bring it on!