Today is a good day to laugh at myself, every day is.
Yesterday was a day to almost cry but then still end up laughing at myself, as you always should.
Yesterday I presented my first ever Webinar lesson (luckily I had an awesome partner to co-experience the stress with me - thanks Lauren!). Planning a lesson for your peers is already hard enough in teachers college. My peers are all very creative and deep critical thinkers. We have learned many of the same things and therefore sit on a lot of the same knowledge, it can be hard to teach them anything they don’t already know or sometimes even understand at a deeper level than they do. However throw a webinar into the mix and you not only have to start thinking about how expansive you can make the material included in the lesson, but oh no, now you have all the potential technological blips to worry about as well.
The day the webinar was introduced moans and groans filled the room. “We have to use technology?!” We all said with worry as we typed away on our macbooks and began researching on our iphones and ipads….
It was only as I sat down to write my blog this week that I realized just how funny this situation would have looked for a fly on the wall.
Yes Millennials (or Gen Y or where ever we fit in) , we, the golden age of technology, have to use.. that’s right… technology for a presentation.
Maybe I’m exaggerating the feelings in the room, or maybe I’m projecting my own feelings on my peers (if so, I apologize). However it seems to me that many of my peers share my love for ‘the old ways’: the smell of textbooks in hand, the calming feel of pen to paper and the personalized connection of in class lectures. Or on the other side, they perhaps shared the fear of technological errors: a wifi complication, a software crash or complexity outside of my techknowledge (see above my mention of the absolute ruler of user friendly devices, the ever trusted Apple product).
Fast forward to Webinar Presentation day…
All is going well. Google Hangout’s is working just fine, all of my peers have joined and we are halfway through the presentation. Nerves have subsided, activities are opening, softwares are co-operating, the technological sun is shining!
Presentation ends, we say goodbye to our peers, stop our Broadcast and a wave of relief washes over us. All that’s left to do is a simple copy>paste into Sakai and we are home free. However, when we check the video it only shows 32 minutes when we were certain our webinar lasted at least 52 (including the warm up). We check again, the thumbnail says 52 minutes. Phew! Home free again. However, when we open the video, only 32 minutes shows. Where did the rest of the video go? All of our hard work, gone. PANIC. Breathe. PANIC. We search for Dino, the resident tech genius at the Hamilton campus. As soon as we arrive at his office, I open the software to show him our issue, open the video and low and behold our webinar, in its entirety, appears on the screen. We submit it quickly and breathe once more. We have done it, technology crisis averted.
I, the student terrified of math and only concerned with pen and paper have completed a math webinar and believe it or not, enjoyed it!
One day later, I sit here with my cell phone beside me, once again typing on my laptop and laughing at the silliness of my initial worries. I am a part of the technological era, it is my everyday. Why should I ever let that scare me?
Jo Boaler's informative videos have taught us the importance of taking on these fears, whether in math or anywhere else in order to progress our minds. If we do not challenge our minds by taking on new and exciting tasks we will never expand our brains. When we set out to complete a challenge our brain has to work harder and by working harder it fires synapse that help our growth and expand our capacity to deepen our understanding.
Inquiry Based Learning tells us that providing students with an opportunity to be personally invested in an assignment or task (ie. by giving the athletic student a math student about the circumference of a basketball or allowing a music students to find the perimeter of a picture of an instrument) will make them more likely to work hard and stay engaged and therefore deepen their understanding.
This week I feel like I was the perfect example of how effective Inquiry Based Learning can be. I was provided with a topic I was interested in (*inquiry based learning*) but very few directions of what direction to go in. I was simultaneously given the challenge of doing something I am unfamiliar with (*teaching a lesson online*). However, I was unable to spend any time focussing on how scary the webinar would be because I was too engaged in the topic. In the end, not only did I gain a lot of knowledge about a topic I was interested in but I learned some really amazing techniques about how to use technology in a classroom.
This week’s reading talked about the importance of differentiating instruction for our students. How can we ever expect our students to be successful if we are not setting them up, based on their individual, needs for success? Differentiating is not just important for the individual, it is beneficial for the whole class. Inquiry Based Learning talks about the importance of classroom collaboration and reflection. If we can pair differentiated instruction with collaboration and group discussion we can provide the students with a variety of different perspectives to help them expand and refine their own thinking while also ensuring the success of every. single. student.
This is what we need to do for our students. This is what Inquiry Based Learning and Growth Mindset is all about. It is easy to say ‘have a growth mindset’ but we need to give our students a reason to be open-minded and positive and a pathway to be successful. We need to give them freedom and opportunities to show their passion and then challenge them once they have a reason and the resources to be invested. We need to show them that math is not all formulas and numbers and black and white understanding. It is creative and it is personal and it is everywhere.