Showing posts with label Text Sets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Text Sets. Show all posts

Saturday, December 2, 2023

What Does Authentic Mean In The Context of Education?

Merriam- Webster’s word of the year is authentic.  What does authentic mean to you? Where are you using it in your professional conversations?  In the past few months I have been asked to define authentic in a number of education contexts.  First up, what makes a text authentic? One way to define authentic text is real-world written material that reflects the culture and societal context in which it was created.  By using text sets made up of authentic texts, we can build student knowledge by first giving them the opportunity to read texts with explicit background information, and words that are used and defined within the context of the text. These first texts  in a text set are like keys that will then unlock doors into more complex texts and learning opportunities that are also included in the text set. Authentic informational texts bring voice and perspective to classrooms, while  authentic literature can provide windows into the culture of a period of time. Creating text sets puts historical events into a context rather than a series of isolated dates and people. And, authentic text sets help students to make connections between what they are learning and their own lived experiences and interests.  


Next conversation, authentic math.  How do you provide opportunities for students to work toward far transfer, and take the instructional leap from textbook math to choosing how to approach a real world problem through math?  Samantha Fales, a math educator with Nordonia Schools, shared her response to this question at the OCTM state conference.  She has developed a relationship with a local Tool and Die manufacturer, which led to identifying multiple industrial applications that build on the kind of mathematical thinking that students develop in a HS geometry class. Samantha then took those applications and back -mapped them to her class, creating sets of authentic math tasks based on the Tool and Die jobsite. 


My most recent conversation,  are traditional points based grades an authentic measure of student learning? No. They aren’t. In fact, points are arbitrary and may be based on multiple factors including effort, participation, extra-credit, and timeliness- along with meeting a set of criteria that is equated to a demonstrated level of mastery.  More authentic measures include standards based grading, that uses consistent, mutually developed, performance descriptors.  Even more authentic, the use of student self-assessment. Again, with access to performance descriptors and sets of exemplar work.  Well designed performance tasks that are paired with assessment tasks  give students the opportunity to build knowledge and skills through an intentional set of learning tasks, then demonstrate mastery through an authentic, novel assessment task.  This was the model that was developed through the Ohio Performance Assessment Pilot (OPAP) project. Karin Hess has done a lot of work building out resources for creating and implementing high quality performance tasks.   The link to her resources is below. 


The current conversation that I am having is around how we will reframe our definition of authentic in the age of Generative AI.  President Biden’s executive order on Artificial Intelligence includes a section on how to watermark or identify images, voices, music, and texts that have been generated by various AI tools, to distinguish them from the “real thing”.  This is in response to concerns around intellectual and creative property, deep fake audio and vido recordings, and how to interpret copyright through the lens of AI. Yet, at the same time, we are also starting to shift how we think about “real things”.  The two articles below from The Conversation, a news site featuring articles written by university researchers, reflects this current discussion. As an advocate for the use of Generative AI in the education space, I see this as an opportunity for a “Both And” discussion.  What are the upsides of human autonomy? What are the upsides of augmented human/Generative AI work?  What are the downsides of each side of this discussion? How will we know when one side or the other is out of balance? What can we do to maximize the upsides of both sides? What can we do to minimize the downsides? 



Resources To Spark Your Thinking

Friday, June 2, 2023

How To Find People Who Act As Windows, Doors and Mirrors In Your Life - The Importance of Diversity In Your Network

How do people act as windows, doors and mirrors?  I have been thinking about the people in my network as a kind of living text set that has enriched my personal and professional life , challenged my thinking, and expanded my knowledge base.   


Windows are willing to share their own experiences, customs, traditions, and points of view that are different from my own.   Taking time to see the world through their windows has helped me to develop empathy, bring a more global perspective to my own experiences, and be a more creative problem solver.  When interacting with someone who is a window, I start with a lens of curiosity.  I take time to listen… to stories, to their interests, to their music,to their ideas.  I ask questions to gather more information, to learn new words. I ask for recommendations of things to read, places to go, people to meet.   


Doors are confident in their own expertise, and are willing to challenge me to try something new.  Being willing to accept an invitation to stretch outside my comfort zone -either in thought or in action is always a learning experience, even if it isn’t always fun or successful.  When interacting with a door, I start with a learning pit mindset.  I ask questions that help me make connections between what I already know and what I hope to learn.  I am also willing to ask for help when I find myself in the pit wrestling with that new knowledge or skill.  


Mirrors are reflective and willing to ask hard questions to better help me frame my own thinking and ideas. Mirrors also share common interests and experiences with me and can help me to see my best self, especially during times when I need someone to be in my corner or help me to see opportunities to make a positive impact.  When interacting with a mirror, I welcome honest feedback, ask questions that might help me see my own blindspots, and listen to suggestions  for how I can apply my own skills to a problem.  


Who are the windows, doors, and mirrors in your life?  What steps do you take to be intentional about adding to your personal and professional network? How do we help students see the importance of having windows, doors and mirrors in their lives? How do we serve in these roles for our colleagues, students, and friends?  And…how do we use actual text sets to serve in these roles as well? 


Resources To Spark Your Thinking  - This week I am sharing resources I include in my ongoing text set

Wednesday, October 26, 2022

What Roles Can Text Play In Your Classroom? 10.25.2022

 


What are your students reading this week? How did you select it? It doesn’t matter what grade level or content area you work with.  Making informed decisions about what texts, and what complexity of text, all of your students are going to engage with is the first step in closing learning gaps or stretching student thinking. The second step is asking them questions worth answering.  We ALL use text if we define “text” as  literature, informational texts, video, music, math tasks, data sets, research articles, primary sources, photographs or pieces of art. When you are selecting text, what role do you need it to play?


Text can be the” expert in the room”. In this case, a text set will make this even more powerful.    If you are choosing a text that is the “expert in the room” look for a text that builds background knowledge, uses key vocabulary in context,  or illustrates foundational skills or techniques that students will need when they access higher complexity texts on a similar topic or subject. Students will benefit from text dependent questions that point them toward key information, essential vocabulary, or foundational knowledge and skills. 


If you are choosing a text that is meant to spark inquiry, select  texts that present a novel perspective, challenge, or problem to be solved.  Let students generate the questions to drive their inquiry by starting with a statement, a picture, a data set, or bars of music from the text.  Use the Right Question Institute QFT protocol, or encourage them to wonder and ask questions. These questions become the starting point for individual or class research or problem solving.  


When the text acts as your co-teacher, you can let it reinforce the core knowledge and skills students have learned.  This frees you up to ask text dependent questions that can push students to build conceptual understanding, think analytically, synthesize information across texts, and provide scaffolds to help all students access the text. 


Finally, a text can be a role model.  A set of anchor “texts” can support students as they work toward mastery. Find texts that help students see how to read/write like a scientist or a mathematician, play jazz, or paint with perspective.  Students can build skills if they are provided with a set of text dependent questions that help them zero in on syntax, procedures, techniques, and style.  


So, back to my question, what are your students reading this week? The more opportunities we provide to our students to engage with complex texts,  the more opportunities they will have to build the knowledge and skills they need to accomplish their goals.  


Resources To Spark Your Thinking

Upcoming Opportunities: