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<br><br><div class="gmail_quote">On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 3:31 AM, Edward Cherlin <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:echerlin@gmail.com">echerlin@gmail.com</a>></span> wrote:<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;">
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Here is question of some importance: Almost all education systems in<br>
the world were put in place by Imperial powers, whether at home or in<br>
their colonies, with the aim of keeping the population in order and<br>
providing soldiers, government functionaries, professionals, teachers,<br>
and so on to run the Empire without making trouble for the rulers. </blockquote><div>(...) <br></div><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;">
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But now things are different. Instead of everybody learning the same<br>
lesson from the same printed textbook on the same day by the same<br>
method, we have, with computers and Free Digital Learning Materials,<br>
<br>
o collaboration<br>
o discovery<br>
o multiple approaches<br>
o continuous improvement of teaching materials by students and teachers<br>
o sharp tools<br>
o powerful ideas<br>
o how to ask the right questions, rather than how to memorize or<br>
calculate the right answers<br>
<br>
Maybe. If we make it so. Are you in?</blockquote><div><br>I have been looking at homeschoolers' communities and practices, mostly ethnographically, to summarize "post-school" principles of organization. My list mostly focuses on what can be called "time and task management" rather than instructional design, but they are related all too directly. I think I will focus more on design specifically for the next iteration ("sharp tools" - must have!). Here is what I have now:<br>
<span id="table"><p>- Rapid prototyping of everything, short cycles of
evaluation and change, and correspondingly short educational
experiences are the norm. Families have moved from “package deal” of
whole set curricula (”this is what you do for middle school”) to
hand-picking books, teachers, and methods for each child for each 2-4
months of each subject. A kid can stay with a program that works for
years, or drop one that does not in a few weeks. This leads to
increased quality of programs.</p>
<p>- High value is placed on engagement, love for subjects and personal
relevance of activities both for activity leaders and for all
participants. It is expected that participants and especially leaders
of activities CARE. Children are much more likely to be learning topics
and subjects that are meaningful for them personally, in ways they
personally find engaging. Much discussion happens, and much know-how is
accumulated about ways of finding and developing meaningful activities
for particular subject areas.</p>
<p>- Deconstruction of “age” and shift to ability levels and styles is
frequent among homeschoolers. One often sees age spreads of 3-6 years
within each homeschool group activity. Grouping by age is rare and
loose (e.g. “teens and tweens” rather than “fourteen year olds”).
Correspondingly, friendships and informal communities form across ages,
based on common interests and activities.</p><p>- Barter economies, gift economies, network economies, coops and
other innovative (or age-old) alternative forms of education financing
are widespread. Homeschoolers value and often use open and free
software and open educational resources, as well as the culture of
exchange and communal use of resources. Interestingly, the largest
benefits of homeschooling as far as standardized tests and college
admissions go happen in the poorest families with lowest-educated
parents.</p>
<p>- Co-production models of learning, where learners and teachers are
curriculum co-creators, project learning, unit studies and other active
learning models are prevalent among homeschoolers.</p>
<p>- Homeschoolers often form “nakama” groups, small, local tight
friend and family groups getting together to achieve their goals, and
tied personally as well as educationally. High value is placed on
friendships, and day-to-day educational decisions come from these
personal ties.</p>
<p>- There are active, robust local communities and global support
networks for homeschooling families, for anything from finding an
appropriate math program for highly gifted ADHD Asperger kid who likes
computers, to helping a family through tough economic times.
Homeschoolers are some of the most socially networked demographics,
which include lightning-fast spread of politically relevant news, such
as proposed laws.</p>
<p>I think of homeschoolers as a distributed think tank and early adopters of education practices of the future. The coops and other communities they form is probably where many k-8 educational institutions will be in 20 years. <br>
</p></span>
<br clear="all">Cheers,<br>MariaD<br><br>Make math your own, to make your own math.<br><br><a href="http://www.naturalmath.com">http://www.naturalmath.com</a> social math site<br><a href="http://groups.google.com/group/naturalmath">http://groups.google.com/group/naturalmath</a> subscribe now to discuss future math culture with parents, researchers and techies<br>
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