- Episode this time is 8.5 MB. I had to use an FTP client to upload the thing. That’s how much I care.
- Powering Up With Technology conference was awesome.
- Minecraft shows potential as a tool for student learning in the classroom. We’ll see.
Academic Aesthetic 169
Moving right along. In today’s ‘cast, I ramble on about:
- My county’s Sharing Technology with Educators Program, or S.T.E.P.
- My new favorite Android App (still), AndRecorder, which I keep calling “AndRecord” because long names are abbreviated below my little phone icons.
- Gimp.org, because it’s free and awesome.
- SumoPaint.com, because it as well is free and awesome.
- Frames, because while it is not free, it is still awesome.
- A rant against looking for things because they “work in the classroom.” That’s great if we’re preparing our students for spending the rest of their lives in our classrooms, but there’s that “real world” thing going on outside. Getting something to work in the classroom is good and necessary, but we should be finding and using things that will work outside of our classrooms as well as in them.
Today I teach my last classes of the Quarter, so as I reflect on the first 9 weeks I’ve asked my students to do the same.
Next quarter will be different. Why? Because it has to be.
Oh, and the programming language I couldn’t remember? Scratch.
It’s about time I started publishing these again.
Show Notes:
- Today is Day 3 with no intranet in my computer lab. More like this and I’ll start showing withdrawal symptoms.
- Replacement Technology = switching pencils for pens, but having students write the same things.
- Disruptive Technology = throwing out the pencils and pens to do something that pencils & pens would not help with at all.
- Even with only replacement technology in your lessons, you can be very dependent on technology.
- Always have a Plan B.
What I Teach
Want to know a secret? A deep, dark secret that I’ve kept off this blog for over a year now? One that will shock you?
Well, too bad. I’m going to tell you anyway.
Ready?
Here I go …
I’m not a part of my school’s Art Department.
Yeah, that shocks me, too. Here’s a guy whose screen name on an umptillion of Web 2.0 sites is “The Art Guy,” who may or may not have been the first art teacher podcaster (at the time I started I couldn’t find another one … that’s far from the case now of course), who isn’t even a part of his own school’s Art Department.
How’d THAT happen?
It’s a bureaucratic issue, to be honest. I teach in a computer lab in a K-8 Arts Academy. If it was a high school, I’d be a Computer Graphics teacher. Unfortunately there is no course number for such a class in middle school, let alone elementary.
Instead, I teach a class called Technology Concepts. It’s a fun class to teach, if you’re as geeky as I am, but it’s not inherently an art course. Therefore, I have no reason (on paper, at least), to be a part of the Art Department. Instead, I’m a part of the Enrichment Department.
It’s not so bad…
I recently was chatting online with a former coworker from a previous school, and she lamented my change of departments.
“I’m so sorry,” she said, “You’re far too talented to not be teaching art!”
At that point I puffed out my chest and my head swelled with pride – and not just because she said I had talent.
“Oh, I’m still teaching art. Do you honestly think I could stop teaching art if I tried?”
Of course she could not.
I’m an art teacher. I teach art.
Your definitions may vary, but in my book, ART is anything that involves creativity. I don’t care if it’s a painting, story, play, song, dance, or video game. An ARTIST is anyone who creates art, and an ART TEACHER is anyone who teaches students how to be artists.
I’m a teacher at a Creative & Performing Arts Academy. Whatever subject is taught by any teacher, they had darned well better be teaching art as well or they don’t belong there.
Math is art.
Science is art.
Social studies is art.
Reading/Language Arts is art to the point that the R/LA Department should be part of the Art Department as well!
Conclusion
Does it sting a bit to know I’m not part of a department named for my degree and certification? Yes, yes it does. But it doesn’t change what I teach.
Art is universal. Only the styles and media change.
And I’m an art teacher.
Return to Technology Concepts
No, no that’s not true. For me, School started several weeks ago when I came in during the Summer to put my lab back together. (The custodial staff needed me to break it down so they could move the desks and wax my floors.)
I found out only recently that many of the students I had last year will also be returning. I met this news with mixed feelings. First, I had some awesome kids last year. There was more than one time that I took student work to my principal and said “This is why I need majors.” Seriously, we’re an Arts Academy. We have dance, drama, visual art, chorus, media production, band, AND orchestra majors – why not computer graphics, too?
That may happen in the future, but for now the red tape is in the way.
Unfortunately, for every student who was absolutely thrilled to have my class there was another who was only there because the Guidance dept. needed to give them an elective.
I don’t fault students for not being thrilled with technology. It’s my passion, it doesn’t have to be everyone’s. I was, however, concerned about credit. There have been two other occasions where I’ve had students put in a class after they had already earned credit. In one case discipline problems were a concern.
But then again, I’ve been assured that if the students couldn’t get credit for taking Technology Concepts a second time the scheduling software wouldn’t have let them into my class.
And it’s not like I’m teaching all the same lessons again, either. As technology and my own skill sets evolve, so do the projects I assign. Granted, some lessons will be repeated – every class starts with students using PowerPoint to introduce themselves to the class – but others were already on the chopping block not because they were old news to the students (I didn’t know I’d have returning students yet), but because they were old news to me.
The media we use will still be the same. Students will still create animations, avatars, wallpapers, posters, and more. I don’t think I’m wrong for repeating those things so long as there’s something new about them. After all, I doubt the chorus majors will be saying “But we sang songs LAST year!”
I just have to keep things interesting, but you know what?
I think I just might be able to do that.
Climbing The Wall
The photo above is the front wall of my school. On the day I stopped by to interview for my position (one of the best career choices I ever made, in my honest opinion), I saw this wall and thought “If I was a few decades younger, I’d try climbing that.”
Indeed, with all of those bricks pushed away from the flat surface, this wall was full of hand holds and toe holds. Perfect for climbing, except for the concrete and asphalt below you.
No, I never tried to climb that wall. After a childhood accident where I fell off a porch railing and broke a wrist I decided not to climb things where I could severely hurt myself. (I did later go cliff diving – repeatedly – but water landings aren’t so bad.)
Flash forward to our school’s end-of-the-year field day celebration. A couple enterprising students looked at that wall and had the same thoughts I had – without the “Oh, we could probably really hurt ourselves” thoughts to go with them.
Fortunately these students were far from unsupervised, and stern words and looks managed to stop them before they got more than a couple feet off the ground.
So what does this have to do with education?
Everything.
My experience kept me from climbing that wall, and my experience kept those students from doing the same. They hadn’t yet learned that the benefit of climbing that wall (“Look how high I am!” “Look what I can do!”) was overshadowed by the drawback of a potential injury.
Switch gears to a Kindergarten classroom, where the teacher has decided not to let her kids use oil pastels because the benefits of learning a new media do not (in his or her mind) outweigh the drawbacks of potential hard to clean messes.
Switch again to a classroom where students are not allowed to create blogs because the perceived risks (Do I have to list them?) don’t outweigh the perceived benefits.
I’ve seen many teachers, administrators, and parents that thought of climbing a brick wall with no safety gear in the same light as student blogging, cell phones in schools, oil pastels in Kindergarten, or even letting special needs students use scissors.
What’s the difference?
The difference is that we as teachers would be fools to ignore taking proper precautions before a learning activity.
I’ve blogged about this before.
I argue that it’s not the same thing if we keep safety in mind. Let the Kindergarten students use oil pastels after setting out “placemats” (newspaper works fine) and reminding them that when a color is done it goes back in the box. Let students blog in a moderated setting, perhaps even in a “walled garden” environment where only the students, school employees, and parents can see what’s being said.
When a student wants to climb a wall, for goodness’ sake give them a helmet, safety line, and something soft to land on.
Then cheer with them when they see how high they can go.
Paper “Transformer” Reaction
Here’s a quick video response to this video I found on YouTube that shows how to make a 3D paper sculpture that can be bent along hinges in different ways.PaperTransformerReaction
Summer To-Do List
In no particular order, perhaps simultaneously:
- Build up Teachers20.com, hopefully recruiting others so that I don’t get that nagging feeling that it’s a one-man show any more.
- Spend some more time looking at a pastime of mine through the eyes of an educator.
- Take more photos.
- Leave more footprints (I need to exercise more).
- Get some cleaning done around the house.
And, if there’s time, maybe relax a bit.
Going Public
For a variety of reasons I’ve decided to make 3 of my World of Warcraft characters public knowledge and start blogging about how what they’re doing relates to education.
I will not be doing that here.
While I do think that posting about World of Warcraft would stay within the bounds of the “Art, Education, Technology” tag line that I’ve had since I created this blog, the majority of my target audience here is probably not interested in what my level 10 dwarf did last night.
I feel the same way about teacher blogs where they’ve just discovered Second Life, really. More power to them, but Second Life doesn’t really interest me so I tend to read those blogs less if they suddenly are infused with posts about it.
Instead, I’ve created another blog just for that. Posts that involve Warcraft and education will go there. Posts that involve Art, education, technology, and not Warcraft will go here. Hopefully this will keep everyone happy.