October 25, 2012

Five Elements to Help Redefine Public Ed

Category: Educational Practice
ivan illich headshot and quote about school as advertising agency for society

Imagine we redefine public education so that Dewey’s democratic society is co-created ongoingly, bettering each moment we practice it.

The purpose of public education is a democratic society — John Dewey

Imagine public education becomes the vehicle to social change, rather than, as Illich notes, a potential addiction to dependency. Imagine someone like Schmidt meets up with someone like Thiel and they agree on a premise that people are good, that human capital is our gold, that we really can learn/be/do anything today, and that the more we facilitate that for everyone, rather than regulate/manage some given/standard ideal, this debate becomes an ongoing conversation — a crowdsourcing — about what matters most. Not only do we then address Dewey and Illich, but GB Shaw as well.

The single biggest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place — GB Shaw

So imagine we do change the law, we redefine public education, how do we play that out?

RedefinePublicEducation.Graphic

We’re suggesting we focus on five elements in any community/city. Perhaps a means to scaling the individual, rather than waiting for incredible innovations to scale.

1of5.monika

conversation with self [detox/process of learning to learn]

Is everyone talking to themselves daily? Asking themselves if they are doing what matters most? To them? Is everyone listening to their own gut…using their own head? If you want to become indispensable, you’ll need to become the expert you (insert your own thumbprint). The best way to put in your 10,000 hours toward expertise is if you are the one driving it. Changing the world starts with changing you. Everyone is their own startup, their own entrepreneur. Via much research, but let’s look at Yong Zhao’s on the PISA, entrepreneurial people don’t come from measuring. Self-assessment/conversation replaces standardized testing. [be app to encourage self-conversations & gather data for a match.com of sorts with others in the community/city per like passions/intentions.]

DoingWhatMatters

2of5.monika

shared spaces [city as floorplan/school] — the mesh

Are spaces being utilized in the best ways possible? We really do have all we need, today, if we share. Lisa Gansky’s The Mesh models this mentality of sharing. Not only are spaces shared, but they are always morphing as perpetual beta as the city/community crowdsources gatherings that matter via ongoing conversations [5] and tech enhanced match ups [1].

3of5

connections [interdependency – networked individualism] — the brain

Is everyone known by at least some one? That is our safety net, a declaration of interdependence. Each person is free as long as they are connected, like the buddy system. Like Sugata Mitra’s grandmother model – where it’s more about the connection than anything, more about knowing the person enough to provide/strew fitting resources. Beyond that, connections/mentors are gathered per choice of each individual. Choice empowers, and so people choose/create their own network. This network, these connections, become the alluring web of the intent of their heart, their gold. We no longer spend time & money [public ed #2 market in the US], to prep youth for jobs that may or may not exist, or for credentialing that may or may not matter. Instead, we prep for uncertainty within the safety net of interdependency.

4of5.monika

facilitators of curiosity [mentoring alongside] — the app

Are mentors free to deliberately not teach? Are they free to do this same self-directed learning, following their fancy, deep practicing? Are they modeling useful ignorance, being vulnerable in context, so others can see what to do when they don’t know what to do, what to do in the face of uncertainty? And as they are freely swimming in this space of permission themselves, are they listening deeply in order to facilitate the curiosity within each person they are coming to know?

5of5.monika

conversation with others [culture of trust]

Are people coming together to listen without an agenda? Are they seeking the common good of their city/community? Are they modeling an intention economy? Are they letting tech help us find each other, listen to each other’s hearts, to each other’s stories.

GatheringsThatMatter

We are currently working on crafting an app as a means to facilitate the chaos if we set a bunch of people free to play in a city[1], and a collaboratory space for weekly community conversations.

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Via Cathy Davidson on higher ed: The point is not just to talk about ed reform but to model it realistically

and on standardizing human ability:

If a tree falls in a forest and there’s no one there to hear it, does it make a sound?

If there is no fixed standard of educational success, do learning disabilities exist?

about the lab

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Banner image credit: LearningWithoutFrontiers.com