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Friday, October 19, 2012

Madeline Levine on changing school

I am reading Madeline Levine's book Teach Your Children Well: Parenting for Authentic Success, and I also came across an article called Why Kids Need School to Change. Both feature Levine prodding us to rethink how we parent and educate our children. Levine makes a strong case for how school needs to change -- here are five of her suggestions:
  • PROJECT BASED LEARNING. Project-based learning has shown to be a much more effective way to think about learning, “particularly when you live in a world that’s incredibly unclear on what content is going to be relevant in not just 10 or 20 years, but in three years,” she said. “Over and over business leaders say kids need to be collaborative, work across time zones and cultures because problems are so complex.”
  • ALTERNATIVE ASSESSMENT. “You don’t have the opportunity to show what you know in a regular school because standardized tests that are mandated only show what some kids know, but leave out a whole bunch of kids who aren’t able to show what they know in different ways,” she said. We should have alternative criteria for gauging students’ knowledge and ability to show what they know.
  • SCHEDULING. Neuroscience research on sleep is becoming more compelling by the day, particularly around depression, Levine said. “We’d always thought fatigue is symptom of depression, but now it’s looking more like lack of sleep causes depression, and that’s something looked at seriously.” Kids needs nine hours of sleep, and if schools were in synch developmentally with teenagers, should would start at 10 a.m., especially when kids enter adolescence. Teachers should also coordinate their exams with each other to ensure that students are not taking multiple tests on the same day.
  • CLIMATE OF CARE. Research shows that kids do better in classes where teachers know their names and say hello to them, and when they have their own advocates or advisers at school. “Almost every private school has advisory, a person for each kid to go to,” Levine said. “But in public schools, there are just a few counselors for a thousand kids or more. By the time you’re hitting high school, you need someone apart from parents to test ideas with, to kick around problems, a go-to person who a kid feels knows them.”
  • PARENT EDUCATION. Well-meaning parents are confounded with how to approach managing their kids’ times. Kids needs playtime, downtime, and family time, Levine said. “We’ve robbed kids at each stage of childhood and adolescence of tasks that belong in that particular stage,” she said. “You can’t push kids outside their developmental zone and expect them to learn. You want to push them towards the edge of it, but not over.”
One of my favourite quotes in Levine's book is this:
There’s probably no better example of the throttling of creativity than the difference between what we observe in a kindergarten classroom and what we observe in a high school classroom.
When we choose to openly ignore these problems we fail our children more than they could ever fail us.

5 comments:

  1. Nice article, thanks for the information.

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  2. great information and inspiration, Also like to admire the time and effort you put into your blog.nice written.I would like to see more posts like this.thanks

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  3. Yes, Joe this is an excellent article. As a teacher who worked in a thriving, innovative learning environment with parents fully engaged, that part of the article resonated with me thoroughly. The 21st Century calls for a different mindset on the role of parents and we need to figure out ways to include them effectively in their children's education.

    Ivon

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  4. Quote ' “Over and over business leaders say kids need to be collaborative, work across time zones and cultures because problems are so complex.” ' and yet the same sector, business leaders are responsible for seeing education as a product = test scores and pushing a test-prep learning environment.

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  5. Great post Joe. Thank you for the insight into your reading. This book seems great. I think I'll pick it up.

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