Skip to main content

Minnesota Personalized Learning Summit Keynote: John Spencer

John Spencer, co-author of Empower and Launch, was the Monday keynote at the Minnesota Personalized Learning Summit. John also created "Pencil Chat" many years ago, and I've been in auw of his ideas and thinking.

Spencer began with a "Disclaimer" that while many keynotes will only share the highlights, he is a teacher on a journey trying to figure things out, and behind the success there has been failure.



No one has dysentery in Oregon!


He began by a story of being nerdy and shy in 8th grade, and hiding out in the bathroom. During a History Day project, he didn't like the sound of his voice. His teacher, Mrs. Smoot said, 
"when you hide your voice, you rob the world of your creativity, and I'm not going to let you do that!"
He presented to his class, then school, then regionally, then at the national conference, which changed his life!

Every day he asks his kids, "What did you make today?"
Making is magic, and makes us human.
He shared a "Sketchy video" that took his son 9 hours to make.

Things are changing right now. It used to be that to create with technology required lots of physical equipment to make it happen. Now much of that can happen on a phone with apps.

Our devices have connected power and great creative potential!
Unfortunately, students today still spend more time consuming rather than creating. 
There are outliers...
Kids making a functional graphing calculator in Minecraft
"Sugar Kills" blogs where kids skip recess to create a campaign

The outliers have a "Maker Mindset."
Sudents need to be wildly different

The purpose drives the maker mindset. The framework to do this is design thinking.

The most powerful force to bring out the maker in every student is the teacher!

Launch Framework

  • Look, Listen, Learn-Goal is awareness
    • Could be a product
    • Observe a phenomenon-NASA studying Geckos to learn about adhesives
    • Awareness of an issue
    • Geeky Interests
    • Problem to be solved
    • Empathy-Caring about an issue. 

  • Ask Tons of Questions
    • Gift baskets for the custodial staff
    • Michelle Baldwin-"Sometimes the bravest thing you can do is ask a question."
    • How do we make this happen with no time and a tight curriculum map?
  • Understand the Process or Problem
    • Research that fuels ideation
    • Innovation doesn't happen in a vacuum
    • Take research "off-road" (Scaffolding can sometimes be a cage that stifles student's ability)
    • We need a bigger definition of research (Write letters/e-mail, make phone calls, video conference) Adults are often happy answering kids questions.
  • Navigate Ideas
    • Brainstorming
      • Alone first
      • Then meet as a group w/ no judgement untimed
      • Outside members to add ideas
      • Combine similar ideas
      • Develop final idea
      • Find the PARTS
        • Product idea
        • Audience- If they start with Empathy, they should know the audience
        • Roles-Who will do what? (Let older groups decide on their own.)
        • Tasks (Draw out and visualize, then put on visual calendar rather than a list.
        • Solution-What problem was solved?
  • Create a Prototype
    • Sometimes it's physical
    • Sometimes it's virtual
    • Sometimes it's Art (The Arts have been maker spaces for a long time!)
    • Sometimes you make a difference! (Service Learning
    • What if you don't have the best materials?
      • Every road block is a chance to solve a problem!
      • Often the best choice in technology is a roll of duct tape!
  • Highlight what works, fix what fails Itteration
    • Every failure is one step closer to success! Iteration!
    • The worst pixar movie you've never seen was a Zombie movie. Pixar iterated it into Bolt.
    • Monster's Inc iterated from another film, which 10 years later iterated into Inside Out!
    • Nobody hates revision at the skate park, but try it in math or english!
    • Celebrate creative risk-taking!
Ready to LAUNCH

They send it to an authentic audience
Because the moon landing was broadcast to a world wide audience, it inspired a generation!
Sharing your journey is so important. 
This year, the Global Day of Design was a great way to share with others!

What if...
I don't have time, technology, etc.....

Spencer shared a project students in Michigan did where they created a documentary on World War II. All but one student showed up on a Friday night to share the video. The soldiers and families showed up. 
It's not a silver bullet...

Students at his school used design thinking to paint murals so that the walls at school wouldn't be tagged. They did 8 murals in 3 years. Then a new principal came in and the walls were painted white and others taken down. 

A student asked Spencer why did we do this?
Spencer said, You share your work even if it is destroyed, or isn't appreciated. "When you hide your voice, you hide the world of your creativity!"

Ultimately it is up to teachers to make their classrooms bastions of creativity!



This fall, our Hopdina Teaching and Technology cohort will be using Launch as a basis for our Design thinking and Maker Education course. It was great to get a cliff-notes version of the book and hear John's voice as he shared his success and failure and how he has learned from both.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Nos Chemins vers la paix: Award Winning Video!

Valley View Middle School French Imersion teacher, Heather Palmer created this award winning video, Nos Chemins vers la paix , for the Tel.A.Vision " Vision For America " Contest. Photo and video editing at www.OneTrueMedia.com Powered by One True Media , Tel.A.Vision.tv allows students to create videos that share their vision for the future. Heather wanted to use this video to promote the Wiki she and her students created for "6 Billion Paths to Peace." On the wiki, Palmer states: Our project was inspired by the program " Six Billion Paths to Peace ", an initiative of the Shinnyo-en foundation. We like the challenge the program offers us: commit to making a difference in this moment, in this day, in this lifetime! Palmer received her award last week at the National Service Learning Conference, in Nashville, TN. Way to go, Heather! NOTE: A few weeks ago while looking at the copyright free music available on the site, I notice a cover of the "Spinal

TIES 2012: Kathryn Smith: Innovative Spaces Support 21st Century Learning

Kathryn Smith , former Bemidji State professor, presented on Innovative Spaces Support 21st Century Learning. Her presentation slides can be found here . Today, learning can happen anywhere, anytime, and on any device.  She started by using PollEverywhere to ask about the status of mobile technologies and school learning environments. She thinks that the TPACK model is a good one to use when implementing professional development around 21st Century learning. We are using this model in our BYOD professional development. Smith notes that the National Educational Technology Plan , is a great road map for change. Research has shown that the appropriate use of technology and the appropriate design of learning spaces is having a significant positive impact on learning. The learning spaces today are not that far removed from 19th Century classrooms. She showed this video from the University of Michigan on research on design of learning environment. Here are more videos fro