joemacchia.com

Jan 17

29 Ways to Stay Creative

A nice collection of ideas to keep us creative and on our toes!

29 Ways to Stay Creative

~from the Fast Company Design Blog

Jan 02

[video]

Dec 05

[video]

Nov 15

[video]

May 21

Considering our Audience

Do you consider your audience when using social media? Personal/Professional differences?

May 19

End of Year Projects

Why are high school projects left to the end of the year? More on this later…

Image: http://www.flickr.com/photos/argonne/4422658469/sizes/o/in/photostream/

May 14

[video]

Mar 31

What Evidence do you need?

The blog post written by American entrepreneur Seth Godin titled The limits of evidence based marketing, got me thinking.

He writes,

We present facts and proof and expect a rational consumer/voter/follower/peer to make an intelligent decision on what’s better. That’s how science works. Thesis, test, evidence, conclusion. All testable and rational.

Is this how we expect to change practices inside the classroom? The best professional development I have ever experienced was not in some all day seminar, but inside of a classroom. Observing a teacher. A great teacher. However, the merits of professional development is for another post. 

Let’s continue to dive into what Seth is saying. He goes on to write about how Apple Computer in the 1980’s tried to persuade large corporations to switch to Apple computers. They used ad after ad and study after study to no avail, but it was not until they realized,

It was only the gentle persistence of storytelling and the elevation of evangelists that turned the tide.

You can find example after example of this idea in many of the “new” non-fiction business books.

It is clear, in at least the media and powerful lobbyists want us to think, that our education system is failing and needs change. I don’t necessarily agree with everything out there, but at a minimum I believe we do need to take into consideration the changing learner. 

Classrooms at the secondary level are traditionally teacher-led. There is a ton of research out there that says, this is not how students learn best. So we need to shift the focus in the classroom from the teacher to the learner.

How can we help push us to consider the learner above all else? Mr. Godin writes:

What would change the mind of many people resistant to evidence is a series of eager testimonials from other tribe members who have changed their minds. When people who are respected in a social or professional circle clearly and loudly proclaim that they’ve changed their minds, a ripple effect starts. First, peer pressure tries to repress these flip-flopping outliers. But if they persist in their new mindset, over time others may come along. Soon, the majority flips. It’s not easy or fast, but it happens.

Flip the hardest one to flip, the one you think won’t change, don’t use statistics just show them how other teachers are embracing the paradigm shift. Who knows they may end up being your biggest supporter!

Mar 27

The Symphony of Science gave me goosebumps while watching, and thinking about learning…
An entire site dedicated to educating about science concepts utilizing a pop culture phenomenon (Auto-tune) while embracing the remix culture…This is educational technology like I have never seen before…Producing/creating something CAN be proof of knowledge.

The Symphony of Science gave me goosebumps while watching, and thinking about learning…

An entire site dedicated to educating about science concepts utilizing a pop culture phenomenon (Auto-tune) while embracing the remix culture…

This is educational technology like I have never seen before…

Producing/creating something CAN be proof of knowledge.

Mar 19

“A pattern describes a problem that occurs over and over again in our environment; and then describes the core of the solution in such a way that you can use the solution a million times over without ever doing it the same way twice.”