Archive for the ‘Education Books’ Category

Teaching Outside the Lines: Developing Creativity in Every Learner by Doug Johnson

Tuesday, July 4th, 2017

Teaching Outside the Lines: Developing Creativity in Every Learner by Doug Johnson encourages teachers to believe that all students can be creative and gives specific advice for how to allow for it in schools. Be sure to get one for every teacher you know.

Teaching Outside the Lines

Introduction: How Did Vasco da Gama Spark My Interest in Creativity?

  • Why do educators not only fail to encourage creativity, but also seemingly discourage it? If you agree with Doug you see creativity as important in education as literacy. While we accept creativity in art class and on the athletic field, we discourage it with stay-within-the-lines rules, one-right-answer tests, praise for conformity, and using tests to judge school and teacher effectiveness. Teachers often see that creativity has no roll in core subjects. It’s also important to realize the creativity without skills, knowledge, discipline, hard work, and practice isn’t worth much. Doug also sees that just like there are multiple types of intelligence, there are also multiple types of creativity. And don’t think that just using technology allows for creativity. Creative people can make others nervous or upset, which explains why it is often discouraged in schools. If problem solving is important, we need to realize that higher levels of problem solving give creativity full reign.

1. The Rise of the Creative Classroom: Why is Creativity No Longer a Nice Extra in Education?

  • Creativity may be the only way people can stay employed in good jobs in a postindustrial, automated, global economy. Jobs that require complex communication and expert thinking have increased since 1969. Since then jobs featuring routine cognitive or manual work have been decreasing. If machines or people in developing nations can do a job, they soon will. A poll of 1,500 CEOs identified creativity as the number one leadership competency for the future. It’s not hard to find creativity in the standards promoted by many organizations, but studies show that schools in the US have not succeeded in fostering creativity. In fact, they are doing just the opposite. The obvious culprit, of course, is our obsession with testing.

2. I Can’t Define It, But I Know It When I See It: What is Creativity Anyway?

  • After looking at many definitions, Doug sees that creativity has an element of the new, the innovative, the original, and something not yet done or done in a new way. Definitions also include the notion that creativity adds value to the task or objective to which it’s applied. Craftsmanship is also essential. That is why it is important for schools to also work on skills and knowledge acquisition. Craftsmanships is what separates scribbles from art and cacophony from music. As craftsmanship gets stronger, the creative process is enhanced.
  • It is important that teachers and parents believe that all students have the capacity for innovation. There are also several other characteristics that promote creativity. Girt, which is more highly correlated with success than IQ, is necessary. Empathy also helps as does the courage to take risks. You certainly need a growth mindset so you believe that your metal and physical capacities are not fixed. (See my summary of Carol Dweck’s Mindset to review this concept. One needs self-esteem and confidence along with lots of curiosity. Finally, you need to realize the you might be fighting people and establishments that want to keep things just the way they are. A creative idea can undermine the status quo.>/li>
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Teaching with Poverty in Mind: What Being Poor Does to Kids’ Brains and What Schools Can Do About It by Eric Jensen

Sunday, November 13th, 2016

Teaching with Poverty in Mind: What Being Poor Does to Kids’ Brains and What Schools Can Do About It by Eric Jensen explains how the stresses encountered by poor students can impact their achievement in school and what schools can do about it. All schools should get some copies into their teachers’ hands.

Poverty

Introduction

  • Eric’s Three Claims.
  • 1. Chronic exposure to poverty causes the brain to physically change in a detrimental manner.
  • 2. Because the brain is designed to adapt from experience, it can also change for the better. In other words, poor children can experience emotional, social, and academic success.
  • 3. Although many factors affect academic success, certain key ones are especially effective in turning around students raised in poverty.
  • Eric points out that many poor students have not succeeded, and he claims that its due less to parents than to certain school-site variables that he thinks may surprise you. A goal of this book is to provide a better understanding of what poverty is and how it affects students. He goes on to explain what drives change within schools and inside a student’s brain. To help you make changes in your school and classroom, Eric draws on successful schools that serve poor children.
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Test-and-Punish: How the Texas Education Model Gave America Accountability Without Equity by John Kuhn

Thursday, January 8th, 2015
Test-And-Punish

Test-and-Punish: How the Texas Education Model Gave America Accountability Without Equity by John Kuhn follows the history of the modern education reform movement from its roots in Texas. While the tone is strongly one-sided, John makes a compelling case for reforms that diagnose-and-support and finds a way to finance schools in a more equitable manner. If you haven’t joined his battle, it may be time. Click at the bottom of any page to purchase this powerful argument.

John Kuhn

  • John Kuhn is a public school administrator in Texas and a vocal advocate for public education. His Alamo Letter and YouTube videos of his 2011 speech at a Save Texas Schools rally went viral, as did his 2012 essay The Exhaustion of the American Teacher. He has written two education-related books, 2013’s Test-and-Punish (Park Place Publications) and 2014’s Fear and Learning in America (Teachers College Press).

Prologue

  • Although this book talks a lot about Texas, it is actually a book about national education policy. It’s focus is the test-and-punish craze that has dominated education policy-making in the United States since former Texas governor George W. Bush worked to introduce No Child Left Behind legislation. John sees this law and subsequent iterations as a series of big mistakes. This would include the use of data to punish schools, teachers, and students; the reduction of school quality to a simple menu of labels; vacating the concept of supports in favor of consequences; the misuse of test scores to force privatization; the implementation of accountability algorithms to attain political goals; the increasing investment of limited funding and time for the sake of standardized tests; and the sidelining of teachers in favor of lobbyists and politicians in designing accountability legislation. He takes heart in the fact that a band of passionate parents and feed-up teachers, board members, and administrators are fighting back, and he sees this push back to the reform movement spreading to other states.
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Thank You for Listening by Marc Wong

Saturday, June 29th, 2013

Thank You for Listening: Gain Influence & Improve Relationships, Better Listening in Eight Steps by Marc Wong (©2012) will help you learn how to put someone else’s speaking, thinking, and feeling needs ahead of your own. By so doing, you will build trust, earn respect, and gain influence. Marc’s eight steps are practical, and the book is an enjoyable read. Click the icon at the bottom of any page to purchase this fine book.

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That’s Special: A Survival Guide to Teaching by Dan Henderson

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2015

That’s Special: A Survival Guide to Teaching by Dan Henderson tells the story of a special education teacher who is still surviving in spite of some pretty wacky student behaviors he has faced along the way. Dan follows real stories in each chapter from this career with tools that other teachers can use to survive in difficult situations. If you click at the bottom of the page and buy the book, 10% will go back to local schools.

Still Surviving

  • When educators tell real stories of what students do and how they deal with it, they are often told by the listener that they should write a book. Dan Henderson is one of those teachers who followed through. In addition to helping rookie and veteran teachers alike, this book will help parents understand what teachers have to deal with when faced by troubled students. In Dan’s case he was given the most troubled and thanks to his persistence and some trial and error, he is still surviving.
  • The special children Dan deals with are the one’s who have not fully accepted social behavioral norms. While most are eventually classified for special education services, some are not. The trick is to socialize these students so they can learn and prosper rather than dropping out or being suspended. While Dan’s experience is limited to elementary school, I can assure you that much of it certainly applies to older students as well.
  • Each of the ten chapters starts with a real story about a student Dan has worked with. While they can tear at your heart, Dan tries to see the humorous sides of their stories. When I dealt with difficult kids I tended to do the same thing, and I know it helped me survive. I can fully relate to Dan’s stories as I was a principal in a school where 20% of the students received special education services and many exhibited behaviors that would make them candidates for this book. Following the stories, Dan offers what he calls tools. This is advice will help teachers deal with and prevent the kind of behaviors described in his stories as they promote their own sanity and survival.

The Tools

  • Tool 1 Conduct a student survey. This is perhaps my favorite tool. It suggests that you start the year by conducting a student survey. The goal is to find out as much as you can about a student like their interests, what they like about school, and what they don’t like. If possible find out what makes them angry and how they calm themselves down. Dan offers some specific questions you can use.
  • Tool 2: Create a Behavior Management System. Dan recommends that rather than taking something away that you refuse to give them something. For these kids it is essential to take breaks that feature physical movement. (Doug: I’ve posted many pieces of advice along this same line.) Like others, Dan knows that exercise will improve mental performance. When you threaten consequences, you must follow through, but you also need to give kids a chance to redeem themselves. This allows a chance for self-regulation. Try to reinforce positive behavior and let students know that what they do is their choice.
  • Tool 3: Build Routines and Respond to Needs. Dan believes that routines are important for the students he serves. He also has a system, which includes a request box, that allows students to let him know what their needs are. He even has an emergency signal for students to use. Needless to say, the routine allows for lots of movement and brain breaks and this type of student needs routines.
  • Tool 4: Positive Reinforcement: Here Dan gives eight methods he uses. You might not agree with all of them, but I’m sure you will find some good ideas here.
  • Tool 5: Tracking Data: Teachers need to keep track of what students know and can do. Dan recommends pretests so you know where students are starting. Your data sheets should be organized by standards. There is no mention of state test data here which makes sense as I don’t find it very useful.

More Tools

  • Tool 6: Creating Centers or Stations: Centers allow kids to move and can be rigged to differentiate instruction. They also allow more time for individual and small group instruction. Technology can be involved here with computer activities, assessment, and direct instruction via videos.
  • Tool 7: Differentiate Your Instruction: This is the holy grail for teachers. Ideally each student gets instruction at their own level. In addition to his centers, Dan gives many ideas here about how to reach this goal including multiple lesson plans or multiple approaches within the same lesson.
  • Tool 8: Check for Understanding: If you lose a student early on, the rest of what you do is not likely to succeed. As you find out which students understand each item, it will inform your efforts to differentiate as you move forward. It is also necessary to know which students have the necessary prerequisite skills and knowledge.
  • Tool 9: Higher-Order Thinking: Just because students have a special education tag doesn’t mean they can’t engage in real thinking. Open-ended questions can help. Projects can elicit thinking as well. In some cases letting students to work on projects together works.
  • Tool 10: Make Your Lessons Fun! Look for good learning games and try to inject music when possible. Real-world connections can also make things fun and interesting. Make sure that students believe that their intelligence is not fixed and that you care about them personally. Be sure that the students’ best work is on display in school and on the classroom blog.

Reflections

  • If you were considering a career in teaching special education students and read Dan’s stories, you might think twice. After reading about his tools, however, you should see how it can be a rewarding option thanks to his tools and your own hard work and caring. If you know anyone working with these types of students or considering it, see that they get a copy of this book.
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The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood I Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness by Jonathan Haidt

Wednesday, October 30th, 2024

Anxious
The Anxious Generation: Hoe the Great rewiring of Childhood I Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness by Jonathan Haidt warns of the harm done to children who live in a phone-based world with limited opportunity to play and connect with the real world. There is serious research to support banning phones in schools and keeping kids off of social media until they turn 16. This could well be the most important book I have summarized out of well over 200. Every principal, teacher, and parent needs to read it.

Introduction<: Growing Up on Mars

  • Jonathan uses the analogy of letting your kid live on Mars or giving them a smart phone with limited or no constraints. The people of generation Z (born after 1995) are at ground zero for increased mental health problems caused by overprotection in the real world and under protection in the virtual world.
  • While there wasn’t research when the tech industry foisted technology on this generation, we have it now. It shows that kids with smart phones are more depressed and depression increases with more use. It’s more harmful for girls who favor social media, but it is also a problem for boys who get lost in games and porn. Childhood has gone from play-based to phone-based.

Part 1: Tidal Wave – 1. The Surge of Suffering

  • In 2010 the iPhone 4 was introduced, the first cellphone with a front-facing camera. The Android version followed the same year. That year, the Instagram app was introduced. Although it was popular, it took off when Facebook bought it in 2012. The years from 2010 to 2015 are considered to be, by the author, as the years of the Great Rewiring of Childhood.
  • It was these years when rates of anxiety, depression, self-harming, and suicide increased from 67% to 134%. Anxiety happens when you perceive threats. This is normal. What isn’t normal is perceiving many threats that aren’t real. Depression is marked by sadness and not feeling pleasure. These are things that seem to happen to kids when they have constant access to the Internet.

Part 2: The Backstory: The Decline of the Play-Based Childhood – 2. What Children Need to Do in Childhood

  • Human children grow quickly until about two years and they grow slowly until puberty. The brain is about 90% of its final size by age five. Then it spends a lot of time making new connections and losing old ones. Play is children’s work. Children deprived of play can come out socially, emotionally, and cognitively impaired. When adults are involved, play is less free, less playful, and less beneficial. Experience, not information is the key to emotional development.
  • Unstructured time with friends plummeted when students moved from basic phones to Internet phones. Parent distraction with their phones interferes with the bond between parent and child. Synchronous activities are essential for development. Social media draws students into endless hours of asynchronous communication. Phone-based activity can seem more like work than play. Using social media shapes children to the culture of the sites they visit. Conformist bias motivates children to copy what they see and prestige is gained by people who pile up the most likes.

3. Discover Mode and the Need for Risky Play

  • Since the 1990s, parents have tended to overprotect children from the real world and under-protect children from the online world where more dangers lurk. Human evolution has been shaped by two behavior modes. The discover mode is one where you detect opportunities and explore them. The defend mode features identifying threats and finding ways to escape them. The more time a child spends in the discover mode the happier and more sociable they will be. By overprotecting kids we doom them to lots of time in the defend mode.
  • Beginning with Gen-Z, children were given less freedom including outside play. When they started showing up on campus in 2014 counseling centers were overwhelmed as students grew up spending too much time in defense mode. They hadn’t learned to deal with stress so they weren’t very strong. They lacked the risky play that would keep them in discover mode. We need to keep kids as safe as necessary, not as safe as possible. They need to expect challenges from the real world. Safety-ism crushes play and the power it has.
  • (Doug: You won’t learn how to deal with conflict and frustration without experience.)
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The Art of Screen Time: How Your Family Can Balance Digital Media and Real Life by Anya Kamenetz

Monday, March 12th, 2018

The Art of Screen Time

The Art of Screen Time: How Your Family Can Balance Digital Media and Real Life by Anya Kamenetz reviews the scant research on the subject and provides others’ stories and her own experience and advice. In short, she advises you to enjoy screens not too much and mostly together with your family. Parents and educators are well advised to read this book.

Part 1. Kids and Screens – 1. Digital Parenting in the Real World

  • How worried should we really be about kids and screens? Where is all of this heading, and what should we actually do about it—now, in the “real world,” a phrase that as of the early twenty-first century still has some meaning? These questions have resulted in this book. Anya belongs to the first generation of parents who grew up with the Internet. Now she is raising two members of the first generation growing up with screens literally at their fingertips. For this book, Anya surveyed over 500 parents along with as many experts on the subject that she could find. While real research is lacking, this looks like the best effort to date to define the problem and propose answers.
  • The best evidence we have currently suggests that if you are functioning well as a family otherwise, there is a huge amount of leeway in the screen radiation your kids can absorb and still do just fine. The children of lower-income, less-educated parents, however, are both more exposed to screens at younger ages and are more subject to a host of other ills. Hypocrisy and inconsistency in boundary-setting makes for confused, sometimes angry kids—and lots of conflict. A better approach is to discover and unleash the joy of screen time with your kids. Particularly when shared, screen time can have meaningful benefits: creative, emotional, and cognitive. In a nutshell, enjoy screens, not too much, and mostly with others.

2. The (Sometimes) Scary Science of Screens

  • The federal government hasn’t funded media research since 1982, and needless to say, many questions have presented themselves since then. The research on kids and screens is in its toddlerhood at best. It may seem that experts are just as confused as parents. It’s important to note that in order to get published, research tends to focus on the harms, and you can’t randomly assign babies to watch television or not. What’s happening all over the world is a giant experiment, and there is essentially no control group.
  • The bulk of evidence we have about kids and screens concerns television. That’s all right because children still do more passive video watching than any kind of interaction with screens. Interactive media is different, but is it more harmful or more benign? What further confounds the research is that well-to-do parents are more likely to limit screen time and their kids will probably do fine anyway. Poor kids, however, are more likely to live in homes where the TV is on all the time, even if no one is in the room. Wealthier parents can hire sitters to entertain the child while the TV is off.
  • Young children are obsessed by repetition. It helps them learn new words and concepts and provides touchstones of predictability within a chaotic and sometimes scary world. Electronic media satisfies this need for repetition. For tweens and teens, electronic media is a lifeline to the experiences they crave most: thrills, a space to explore independently, and 24/7 access to peers. Excessive screen time can interfere with sleep, which is necessary for allowing the brain to repair itself. Kids who give up exercise for screen time are prone to obesity.

3. Emerging Evidence

  • Now we take up the matter of low probability, high-risk issues. Some of the worst cases of video addiction stop hanging out with friends, stop talking to their families, stop coming downstairs for dinner, even stop going to school. Poor hygiene and obesity are also common. At some point, they become candidates for residency rehab programs like those offered to drug addicts. Reintegration after such programs can also be difficult.
  • Here are the questions that doctors ask to determine if there is an addiction. 1. How often do you find that you stay online longer than you intended? 2. How often do others in your life complain to you about the amount of time you spend online? 3. How often do your grades or school work suffer because of the amount of time you spend online? 4 How often do you snap, yell, or act annoyed if someone bothers you while you are online? 5 How often do you lose sleep due to Internet use or game playing?
  • If it is recognized as a stand-alone disorder, it can be covered by health plans and schools may have to treat it as a disability as they increasingly hand every student a laptop. Screen addiction is usually associated with other disorders like Autism, OCD, and ADHD, but so far we don’t know which causes which. Removal of screens, however, has caused symptoms of disorders to lessen in some cases.
  • No screens at all before age two, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics was first uttered in 1999. The AAP now says that video chat, and other social purposes like looking at family pictures together, is probably okay for children younger than age two. While there is no evidence of harm caused to kids by screen time. the general consensus is that parents should strive for moderation. Two hours a day or less is a common recommendation.
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The Classroom Teacher’s Technology Survival Guide

Friday, June 1st, 2012

The Classroom Teacher’s Technology Survival Guide By Doug Johnson (© 2012, Jossey-Bass, A Wiley Imprint: Hoboken, NJ) is for educators who want good teaching, not technology, as the focus of their classroom. The book outlines pragmatic ways all teachers can use computers, the Internet, digital cameras, and other technology tools to enhance professional productivity. Doug offers ways to enhance current practices and create motivating projects. He helps with project assessments, distractions technology may cause, and safe use for all grade levels. He also takes a look into the future and offers many resources for further study. Click this icon below to get at least one copy to pass around the teacher’s room or just get a copy for each teacher at your school to use as part of your technology training program. You won’t be disappointed.

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The Connected Educator – Book Summary

Tuesday, April 3rd, 2012

The Connected Educator: Learning and Leading in a Digital Age by Sheryl Nussbaum-Beach and Lani Ritter Hall, ( © 2012, Solution Tree Press: Bloomington, IN) introduces the concept of Connected Learning Communities as a three-pronged approach to effective professional development. This is valuable resource that all schools need to make available to teachers and teacher support staff. It contains step-by-step instructions, real-life examples, comprehensive research, a detailed glossary, and helpful hashtags and links.

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The Diffusion of Innovation, 5th ed by Everett Rogers

Friday, February 4th, 2022
Diffusion of Innovation

The Diffusion of Innovation (5th ed) by Everett M. Rogers is THE book for anyone who wants to understand this phenomena. This is the 2003 version, but it is still very current. I used this book a lot when I was doing my dissertation and revisit the concepts via this summary from time to time. This is my longest book summary so it may take more than one sitting to finish it. I think it will be work your time.

Chapter 1 – Elements of Diffusion

  • Getting a new idea adopted, even when it has obvious advantages is difficult. Therefore, a common problem for individuals and organizations is how to speed up the rate of diffusion of an innovation. Diffusion is a process in which an innovation is communicated through certain channels over time among the members of a social system. A degree of uncertainty is involved and the process can be planned or spontaneous. It results in one kind of social change and leads to certain consequences.

Element 1

  • 1) The innovation: It is an idea, practice, or object that is perceived as new. If it seems new, it is an innovation. The adoption process is an information seeking and processing activity in which an individual is motivated to reduce uncertainty about the advantages and disadvantages of an innovation. The characteristics of innovations, as perceived by individuals, help explain their different rates of adoption.
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Element 2

  • 2) Communication Channels: The essence of the diffusion process is the information exchange through which one individual communicates a new idea to others. Mass media channels are usually the most rapid and efficient means of informing an audience. Interpersonal channels involve face-to-face exchanges. A third form involves the interactions between individuals via the Internet.

Element 3

  • 3) Time: The inclusion of time in diffusion research is one of its strengths. The five steps in the process are: knowledge, persuasion, decision, implementation, and confirmation. There are five adopter categories that are time-based. The first adopters are called innovators. They are followed in time by early adopters, the early majority, the late majority, and laggards. When the number of adopters is plotted over time, an S-shaped curve results.

Element 4

  • 4) A Social System: This is a set of interrelated units that are engaged in joint problem solving to accomplish a common goal. Social systems have structure that gives regularity and stability to human behavior (norms). It allows one to predict behavior with some degree of accuracy. The communication in a system also has a structure. Knowledge of the system’s structure is necessary if one wishes to study diffusion within the system.

Some History

  • A series of independent groups started this research in the 1940’s and 1950’s. Each group was invisible to the others and used different approaches. They all, however, found the diffusion followed an S-shaped curve and the innovators had higher socioeconomic status than did later adopters. By the late 1960’s the independent groups had come together as shown by the increase in cross-tradition citations.

Gabriel Tarde

  • Tarde was a French lawyer and judge around 1900. He observed that for every ten new ideas that spread, ninety will be forgotten. He also observed that the rate of imitation usually followed an S-shaped curve and that the takeoff in the curve begins to occur when the opinion leaders in a system use a new idea. Forty years later his observations were put to the test by empirical research.

The Nine Major Diffusion Research Traditions

  • 1) Anthropology – The study of how tribes or villages use technological ideas such as the steel ax, horses, and boiling water.
  • 2) Rural Sociology – The study of how farmers in rural communities adopt agricultural ideas such as weed sprays, hybrid seed, and fertilizers.
  • 3) Education – The study of school systems, teachers, or administrators as they adopt teaching/learning innovations like kindergarten, modern math, programmed instruction, and team teaching.
  • 4) Public Health and Medical Sociology – The study of individuals or organizations such as hospitals and health departments as they adopt medical and health ideas like drugs, vaccinations, family-planning, and AIDS prevention.
  • 5) Communication – The study of individuals and organizations as they adopt technological innovations and new communications technology.
  • 6) Marketing and Management – They study of individual consumers as they adopt new products.
  • 7) Geography – The study of individuals and organizations as they adopt technological innovations.
  • 8) General Sociology – The study of individuals and other units as they adopt a wide variety of ideas.
  • 9) Early Sociology – The study of communities or individuals as they adopt things like city manager government, postage stamps, and ham radios.
  • Other traditions include economics, public administration, political science, psychology, industrial engineering, statistics, and others.

A Word About Education

  • Unlike some fields, innovations adopted by education are done so by organizations rather than individuals. Early studies were carried out by Paul Mort at Columbia University. He found that the best single predictor of innovativeness was expenditure per student. The stereotype of the rich suburban school as highly innovative was largely confirmed. Mort found that considerable time lags were required. It took kindergartens about 50 years to be completely adopted. Driver training needed only 18 years while modern math needed only 5 years. Both were promoted by change agencies. The insurance companies and auto manufacturers in the case of driver training and the National Science Foundation for modern math.
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