On Praxis: Making teaching “real”

Thinking is easy, acting is difficult, and to put one’s thoughts into action is the most difficult thing in the world.
- Johanne Wolfgang von Goethe

How do we take our teaching to the next step? From mere classroom activity and into the wide, open world?

The world is changing so fast, we don’t even know for what world we are preparing our students who will graduate many years away. Isn’t it imperative that we invoke the “now” and put “purpose” into our classrooms? If not now, when? If we don’t effect change through our students, if we don’t get them changing the world and “doing”, isn’t all our knowledge and teaching but puffery and dross?

Praxis is a word that came up over the last few weeks in my classes. A number of teachers didn’t seem to get it, so I thought I’d write something and clarify my own thoughts about this.

To me, praxis has always been “informed action”. Thought put into action. This is certainly how Paolo Freire, the biggest proponent of “praxis” defined it. He said,

“It is not enough for people to come together in dialogue in order to gain knowledge of their social reality. They must act together upon their environment in order critically to reflect upon their reality and so transform it through further action and critical reflection.”

Crucial to this process is the realization that acting in the world is not an end of thought/knowledge/reflection, rather it is the start of more informed thought/knowledge/reflection. A truly constructivist theory of knowledge that says to all progressive educators – “if you are just being constructivist in the classroom (and your teaching has no purpose, no outside force/life), you are not constructivist, just cardboard.”

The Greeks took praxis as a form of knowledge that could not but lead anywhere but into action and into  ”the practical”.   In a sense, this spirit has shone some light in ELT. We have ESP courses, we have “communicative teaching”, we have “life skills English” etc…  However, I’m not so sure we’ve really done much in terms of praxis – rather just pretended to point outside the classroom rather than go “into the world” and “enact”.

In language teaching, we play the part of “the teacher” so well. We stand and deliver, state rules and exceptions, collect assignments. But isn’t it all kind of a shadow dance, a pantomine? That unless we impact the world and our students use the word in the real world – we are just spinning our wheels and “pretending” (but collecting our paycheck).

This is where technology, the power of connecting people that is available now, steps in. We don’t need to shadow box in our classrooms anymore. Lets bring the world into our classrooms. Let’s take our students out into the streets. Here’s a previous post I have about using “live cams”. I also offer this video of a brave teacher skyping in his parents into his class. Wow! Talk about “praxis”. The Granny Cloud is also an inspiring example.

In addition, two educators I highly value in terms of how they hold up the flag of praxis are Alan November  and Kiernan Egan. Look at both their projects and how they make learning purposeful and relevant to the real world.  Let’s try in our own way to knock down the walls of our classes and schools. However we can. Let’s embrace “Praxis” as part of our teaching philosophy and orientation. Join me…..

If you liked this post – you may enjoy my page of resources/videos on educational thinkers.

Minimally Invasive Teaching

“The greatest sign of success for a teacher is to be able to say, “the children are working as if I don’t exist.”
- Maria Montessori

During the last year, I’ve been following the KhanAcademy locomotive as it chugs on to distant fertile lands and glory.   I’m a big believer of video and its revolutionary impact to disrupt normal channels of educational delivery.  The KhanAcademy user group (google) emails are just mind boggling. Seems everyone from the granny on the couch to CEOs of major companies are leaving desperate messages – “get intouch with me!”, they scream.  However, I must say that they are on the wrong educational bandwagon.

This post I recently read, highlighted one problem not addressed by the Khan Academy – the motivation of the learner.  Even self directed learning won’t just magically generate a “self directed learner”.  What counts is the environment in which the learner is found. The teacher is essential to this. However, in a very indirect and “get out of the way”, way.

I firmly believe that given a free start, each child, each student, wants to learn and will learn.  We must create the environment from which their seed will grow.  Just like there are seldom any “bad” teachers, just teachers in the wrong environment and place – so too we must get students encountering a world of learning that they themselves encounter, they explore, they engage and nurture. Sugata Mitra has it right – learning is a self-organizing principle.

So without further ado, here is the man. Click the photos of the presentation to get to my favorite presentations detailing his beliefs. See my own posts mentioning him.  Here’s my bio of the man for further reference.  Sugata Mitra

I sure wish Bill Gates would have given him that big bundle of cash. 

 

 

 

 

 

Reality check – TEFL Certificate Course


I will also add to this, “Give a man a fish and he’ll just expect to not work for any more. Make him pay a little and he’ll value that fish and his work to purchase it”.

I’m saying this as background to some reflection I’ve been doing based on the recent FREE TEFL Certificate course I launched.

It has always been my goal to provide free or low cost assess to knowledge and materials for teachers. I’ve worked night and day, year in and year out,  to counter so much of the blatant commercialism that pervades TEFL. Worked tirelessly to “fight the good fight” and use the possibilities of new technologies to the utmost benefit of hard working and low paid teachers. Sharing, community, can empower us.

However, both on my community EFL Classroom 2.0 and especially with the launch of the new TEFL Certificate course, I’ve learned an important lesson. If teachers get it for free, some really don’t value what they get. Not everyone but my guess is a good majority. Not blaming or accusing any one person – it is just human nature.

I won’t go into all the emails of support and so positive in nature. I also won’t go into how many emails I got from so many who seemed “entitled” and being very aggressive about why “this wasn’t there” or “there was a dead link, quit wasting my time”. Not going there. Want to relate something else.

With the Free TEFL Course, I was gladly going to pay the cost/ student that is incurred. My paying it forward for education. However, never thought so many would take advantage of this (I expected 20-30/month – we now have over 300 and close to 200 students taking the course right now). But most importantly, never thought so many would just NOT watch the videos, think about the ideas but rather whiz through the quizzes, just trying to complete them and get the certificate.

The nice thing about the school’s LMS is that I see everything. Loads of student data. I can tell how long a teacher stayed on a page, interacted with the content. How many times they took a quiz, the results etc… To my amazement, over 70% of teachers were just clicking the quizzes and trying to run through the lessons like it was some video game.

Example: A great student.

Example: A “quick” student.

So, I tried limiting the attempts. Also, monitoring the time on task. However, still teachers are taking very little time watching videos and reflecting/interacting with the ideas in the PDFs. And there isn’t a lot I can do.

So I’m now going to make teachers pay a minimal user fee for the course. I think this will make it so they will value the community, the resources and the certificate that results. Sorry it has to be this way but I guess I have to learn the hard way.

All those who pay the $9.99 will get my Teach | Learn coursebook when they graduate + a great certificate of completion. Also, 3 months of access to the resources (and to complete the course). The course will also serve as a pre requisite to the 120 hour accredited certificate I’ll offer in Jan. 2012.

Those who’ve already signed up for the class will get it free. I hope they slow down and savor the lessons! All those presently doing the course will have a month to graduate. Good luck! I also think this course would be a great “primer” for any teacher training program and hope trainers out there might encourage their students to take it. Even plan a course around it.

I do hope all teachers understand and realize the truth of what I’m saying, where I’m coming from. I thank you all for your support and again, not accusing any one teacher at all.

David

Teaching Online – some tips….

englishcentralI’ve been doing lots of work with EnglishCentral – helping them develop strong teacher tools and support. Slow but sure! (and if you have used EnglishCentral as a teacher – fill out our survey and get an incredible coursebook for your few minutes of time!)

Here, I outline some tips for using EnglishCentral as a teacher. These tips though, could pertain to using any website for teaching English (that has an LMS – learning management system).  Here they are in brief;

1. Blend the curriculum.

Books are great and have their own strengths for teaching English. However, technology offers its own advantages. Why not mix the two? Look at your book’s syllabus and units. Figure out what the key topics and grammar are and then look at the website and choose what content would support and extend those objectives. For EnglishCentral it is easy – we have handy topic categories and leveled videos that allow teachers to assign videos to their class.

2. Make it Official

I pound the pulpit often about this.  So often, I’ve got emails from teachers lamenting the fact that they were so excited about using a webtool and spending a lot of their own time (and dime) building stuff for students. Then, hardly any students use it! What a let down.  Don’t go this route if you can avoid it. Contact and work with your admin, curriculum staff, lead teachers and insist that the technology side of things is official and part of the total course mark. You’ll see a dramatic turn around in student use!

3. Set Goals, Set Deadlines.

This is an appendum to the above.  Students should have goals to reach and deadlines to meet. That’s life and a little discipline will help most students with their English study. It can be as simple as “watch 4 videos each week”. In fact, keep the goals simple and communicate them with a rubric if possible. Even better, set the goals as a “team” and negotiate them with students. You’ll have a better response.

4. Use Website Support Materials.

In the case of EnglishCentral, we have our own growing library of books that support the website curriculum. Most comprehensive learning websites do and they are usually well designed and invaluable for teachers. Also, quite often FREE. They give you more for your buck and enrich your course. Also, great for summer / winter camps or extra courses – where you have more flexibility with the curriculum.

There you go – a few tips. I’m sure others have more. Please comment and add yours!

Present.me – fabulous!

Present.me is a real cool, “new” way to share your teaching online. It is simple and effective. I’ve been testing it out and it works like a charm! A really exciting tool.

What is it?

It is just a simple power point set beside a video recorded through your webcam. That’s it! Record up to 90 min free and save up to 10 lectures/lessons free. (and I’d just keep deleting as needed unless you really want to get into this). You don’t even need a cam, just use audio if you wish (though you’d be under utilizing it). The only one wrinkle I see is in not allowing private settings for free members. I think this shouldn’t be part of a pricing model.

The functionality is superb. Takes a little time for the power point to convert but you can use a clicker to advance the slides – this means you can get away from the monitor/computer and step back when recording the video.

I’ll be giving a a lecture at this weekend’s Kotesol National conference by skype. But I’ll be sure to record on Present.me for all who can’t attend. Still in beta – I can’t wait until it is “out there”. All sorts of great uses enabling teachers to reach a much wider audience and those students who can’t/couldn’t attend classes. Try it, you’ll like it. Just don’t be camera shy!

Want something taught? Ask a busy teacher!

salman_khan{just an update – Bill Gates recently caught onto Khan and gave him his endorsement. Also, like myself, calls for more “online” learning and taking the learning out of the 4 walls and into the great wide open. The following post appeared Dec. 09}

I often get asked the same questions over and over again. “How many hours a day do you spend on the computer?” “How do you have enough time to do so much?” “Do you ever stop?” “How do you do so much?”

I have to admit that I’m often puzzled by these questions. I’m rarely without words but these questions really have me at a loss. Usually, I just say that – “I love what I do – things get done.” It is hard to see oneself – like the old Hasidic saying goes, “The eye cannot see itself”.

Until today that is. I could see a little of myself in Salman Khan who BY FAR outdoes anything I contribute to education. He’s a brillant self made online teacher who just gives lessons / tutorials freely through his Youtube channel. Superb tutorials and lessons, I may add. He does this all from a closet in his apartment, sometimes 4-5 a day!

He’s no expert but he loves learning and “finding out”. He doesn’t just skim his subjects before he teaches them, he bear hugs them! He finds out everything, gets to their bottom and foundation and builds from there. He’s an “essentialist” if there is anyone of that educational philosophy still around.

I’ll leave you to watch this video and / or visit the article making the rounds these days. He’s my hero! May I keep giving and keep contributing to others well being. That’s all a person can ask of their life I believe. The internet has allowed me (in a small way) and Salman (in a large way) contribute to humanity and the beautiful, always giving fruit that is learning.

He also sends out a big message. People (teachers) who love what they do – always have “the” time!

Thank you Mr. Khan, you inspire me! I may not see myself but I do see myself in you and that is also precious.

Best Web 2.0 tools for learning / teaching languages

I made this awhile ago and forgot to put up on my blog! Click on any picture to go to that tool. Only the best garnered from my actual experience using all these. It is a follow up to my Teach/Learn Prezi presentation.

Get the powerpoint of this HERE. Also, see this voicethread discussion by teachers for lots of great thoughts on the use of technology in education!

Education online – not Online education! Don’t be duped.

duped-educators-400x365 Anyone whose read a little of my stuff (and fluff too), throughout the years knows with a capital “K” that I’m an ardent supporter of education being free of influence and especially profit. Be that a school where our young go each day or be it twitter or any site or social network.

However, human nature being what it is, can be duped. The ego is a tremendously weak link (but I acknowledge its strength too) when it comes to throwing ourselves into things that might parade “our” cause.

What am I getting at?

Well, recently David Truss wrote about the plethora of sites offering “badges” and “free promotion”. Pandering to the lowest common denominator of online teachers – promotion. Read his post, I won’t repeat things here nor my own and others comments therein. However, I do want to expound a little further on one of the biggest “dupers”.

First some honest self-reflection. I AM GUILTY! I have participated too much in my own share of ego boosting, get me a badge contests! If only half of that energy had gone towards teaching and educating others online! And I’ll tell you this much – when I see a contest or a list from some entity – I too can’t resist. I shake and quiver with the thought that I’ll be discovered, I’ll be read. I’ll be the next flavor on the ice cream truck of educational technology!!!!!!

So there, it is out of the closet and I’m working hard now to just keep doing the small things I do. Avoid that puffery and vanity. I can’t promise I won’t regress but I’m trying and part of that is “coming clean” here. I’ve been duped! (and I’m not going to take it anymore!)

So now the specifics and let me know what you think? What is the ethical line?

Onlineuniversities and Smart Teacher.org undoubtably drives traffic to their sites by sending out a plethora of “Top X, Y and Z” lists. They even get others to do their “dirty” educational marketing on other blogs. Yes, some of the lists are interesting but they ARE NOT from committed and informed professionals. They are a marketing tool, clear and simple.They get paid and helping educators is a sideline, an ignoble one.

Just today, I got an email from them, asking to promote and post on EFL Classroom 2.0. I politely said, “Great idea”. I will make a blog post shortly in promotion. I will send them this link. Here’s the pitch…. incessant and not in the spirit of education – in the spirit, mean spirit of profit.

Hi,

I know this email is out of the blue, but I just posted an article on my blog entitled “50 Ways to Use Twitter in the Classroom” at http://www.universityreviewsonline.com/2005/10/50-ways-to-use-twitter-in-the-classroom.html . Anyway I figured I’d bring it to your attention in case you thought it interesting enough to drop a quick mention on your site about it as I’m trying to increase readership of my blog.

Either way, hope you have a good week.

Thanks,

Now you may ask yourself, if I dislike this so much, why am I linking to them and actually giving them EVEN MORE promotion? Good question.  My thinking is that you be the judge. I’m not here to control but I will voice my opinion and try to win you over. I also think that once you look at the facts, you’ll see my side of things.

Why are onlineuniversities and other sites (probably even worse – Smart Teaching.org ) that dupe, so bad? Well, they undermine the dedicated professionals (I could list so many! Shelly Terrell and Larry Ferlazzo are two who immediately always cross my ELT radar) who take the time and energy to share their vast knowledge and experience. How will we ever find the right answers when the netiverse is flooded with this crap? (yes, I’ll say it again: CRAP).

Or how can my own TOP 100 Youtube videos list (many linked to their youtube equivalent on EFL 2.0) ever hope to compete with the likes of their intensely promoted lists? I vouch that mine is well researched, made from videos I’ve actually used and watched. Probably took my a few days to make and many more to “experience”.

But yet others promote. Go figure. They get tweeted around like the second coming or a UFO siting. And it is disturbing. So I’m doing my part to keep education clean of any motive other than creating/knowing and learning. That’s the future I hope for and let’s keep our house halfway tidy.

Please repeat after me: “I will not be duped.” Take the oath and stick to it. Thank you.

I won’t even get in to the ethics of some ELT professionals tweeting and name dropping one “new” publishers social networking site. Doing so and contributing there and being paid for it and NOT telling others that they are paid to “do the dirty work” and promote. No, I’ll leave that one alone.

But I’ll end with Eminem (thank you Karenne S. again), to reinforce my message and stance.


Find more videos like this on EFL CLASSROOM 2.0

If you liked this post – you might enjoy my contentious thoughts about twitter and the ethical use of it. Twitter – Love it / Hate it

Teachers / Students – the gap narrows

If you look at one constant in education (over 100s of years), we see one very clear trend — the blurring of the lines between teacher / student. Technology is only speeding up this process and it is especially true for English Language Teaching. We are no longer custodians of knowledge but seeds of knowledge. Self – service has come to our profession.

Power corrupts, so I’m all for this new “paradigm” and teachers will have to change their role into that of a “one who councils” and a motivator. I await the day when we chuck the term teacher for that of “language councillor” . I think the moment of truth will come when we finally shrug the ‘testing monkey” off our back. When we throw away the false and quacked up yardsticks by which we ill compare each other – we’ll be free to focus more on self improvement. The question is always – “Am I improving?” (education) not “Am I better/worse than my peers?” (schooling).

So in that vein, here is my technological council – for both teachers and students. In particular, see the links below for more reading / resources for teachers and students.

Click on any picture for examples / the site

STUDENTS: (if you don’t want to register for EFL Classroom – just use ID/PW – eflclassroom@mail.com / eflclassroom)



Tips for Learning Languages
– My Prezi!

EFL Classroom Directory – see Games / Arcade / Listening / Stories in particular.

Also our Language Lab.

Teachers:

Web 2.0 Tools – a list.
Using Technology in the Language Classroom
Best ELT Blogs
Classroom 2.0
Inductive Teaching
EFL Classroom’s Professional Development Training page & Resources for Professional Development
TEFL Training page
ELT Jobs Twitter feed.