Saturday, October 25, 2008

THOUGHT-LEADERS: Surrender to Open-Sourced, Self-Organizing (ORGANIC), Generative Alignment to Purpose

The Characteristics of "FLOW" Employed in the Accomplishment of Meaningful WORKS!

Friday, October 24, 2008

Bring On the Computers and Let the Value-Chain Expand







Monday, October 20, 2008

Featured: Friends of Detroit & Tri-County (Club Technology)

Saturday, October 18, 2008

AT OUR CORE: A Quantum Jump or Leap of Faith

ASCERTAINMENT!

























ON the ACT and ART of "FREELY REVEALING"

http://opensource.mit.edu/papers/evhippel-voluntaryinfospillover.pdf

Monday, September 01, 2008

Update: September 1, 2008

Jim,

I have been volunteering over the summer at ClubTech. Mike has gotten an associate who is really getting the place packed with people. We have the computer lab at capacity with more people wanting to learn basic computer skills. We need to build a second and maybe a third lab in order to accommodate the demand. The rest of the previously donated machines are either in use to manage the network or are defective. Would it be possible to get the contact information from John Iras of the person at Beaumont who had previously donated those computers?

I hope all is well! -Dan

Daniel:

Thanks for the Birthday e-mail. Best present I could have EVER received! John will be returning late this evening (from hosting his annual family Holiday bash). We will be getting together tomorrow for a "catch-up meeting" and I will make sure this gets on our agenda.

How many computers do you need? And are desktops your preference and/or are laptops of any value to the mix?

Of course we have other resources available if need be.

Tell Mike we are working with the Detroit ONE-D Drop-Out Prevention project in combination with our NSF ITEST Grant (we briefly discussed last fall) which began unfolding in January 2008.

CONGRATULATIONS on the continuing SUCCESS at Club Technology, Friends of Detroit and Tri-County!

Please convey our regards to Mike and Mrs. Wimberly. THEY and YOU are indeed TREASURES!

Best,

Jim

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

ALERT: Position Practicum!

Students 2.0


21st Century Education: Thinking Creatively

Posted: 22 Jan 2008 01:15 AM CST

This was originally written for publication for my school’s newsletter’s edition on “21st century learning”. I present it to you here not as an attempt to present any new ideas, but in the hope that it might help to pull together many of the ideas that are floating around in online education discussions. Those familiar with Dan Pink might see some of his influence here. Enjoy.

Twenty-first century education won’t be defined by any new technology. It won’t be defined by 1:1 laptop programs or tech-intensive projects.

Twenty-first century education will, however, be defined by a fundamental shift in what we are teaching—a shift towards learner-centered education and creating creative thinkers.

Today’s world is no longer content with students who can simply apply the knowledge they learned in school: our generation will be asked to think and operate in ways that traditional education has not, and can not, prepare us for.

Education has long tried to produce students who can think (and at times, think critically) and it has, for the most part, succeeded. As we move into a world where outsourcing, automation, and the ability to produce a product, physical or intellectual, at the cheapest cost, become the cornerstones of our rapidly evolving global economy, the ability to think critically is no longer enough.

The need to know the capital of Florida died when my phone learned the answer.

Rather, the students of tomorrow need to be able to think creatively: they will need to learn on their own, adapt to new challenges and innovate on-the-fly. As the realm of intellectual accessibility expands at amazing rates (due to greater global collaboration and access to information), students of tomorrow will need to be their own guides as they explore the body of information that is at their fingertips.

My generation will be required to learn information quickly, use that information to solve new and novel problems, and then present those solutions in creative and effective ways. The effective students of tomorrow’s world will be independent learners, strong problem solvers and effective designers.

If we accept the above to be true, I would argue that there are two types of education that will prepare students for the world of tomorrow: experiential learning and project-based learning.

Physics Lab

Experiential learning can be best seen in extracurriculars and in some schools, senior projects. These experiences give students the opportunity to face first-hand the challenges that arise when applying the theoretical knowledge provided by traditional classroom learning to real-world challenges. Light designing for MICDS Theatre has taught me how to take my technical knowledge of lighting and apply it to a creative and artistic end. As issues arise, I must problem-solve within the constraints provided by my technical knowledge and my creative vision—I must think creatively.

Project-based learning is the in-class complement of experiential learning. The concept behind project-based learning is simple: give students the basic tools, then ask them to go above and beyond on their own projects, exploring the information in their own way, and on their own terms. The effect can be awe-inspiring. Our students are diving deeper into subject matter than ever before, and doing so on their own terms in ways that they enjoy. Whether it is through producing a movie on burlesque dance or deriving Kepler’s laws using calculus, students are not only learning, but they are learning how to learn.

Traditional-rote learning has its place too, as a jumping-off point for our intellectual endeavors.

We are, however, crippling our students if we don’t give them the tools necessary to be life-long learners.

Friday, January 11, 2008

Video: Learning by Design (Communities of Designers)

Learning by Design

Video: Learning by Design: Build San Francisco Institute

Architectural projects and internships help students build math and science skills.

Studios for the Mind!

Master Classroom: Designs Inspired by Creative Minds

Let Leonardo da Vinci, Albert Einstein, and Jamie Oliver show you the future.

by Randall Fielding
Jeffery Lackney
Prakash Nair

Master classrooms

Laddies Who Lunch:

English chef Jamie Oliver, with one of his own creations -- and a satisfied customer -- has cooked up his own design for a perfect learning environment.

Credit: Corbis

The industrial era had a long run, both gritty and great, but it's over. The problem is, someone forgot to tell the education establishment. In schools across America, the factory model is still alive, and nowhere is it more readily apparent than in the classroom.

In these little factories, every day we can find teachers encouraged (and often compelled) to mass produce learning and marginalize the differences in aptitudes, interests, and abilities. The industrial-age classroom was not all bad in its time; after all, America did all right in its heyday. But this model is no place to prepare students for the fast-changing global society they will inherit.

As school planners and architects, we challenge communities and clients to explain why a regimental row of desks facing a chalkboard needs to remain as a school's primary building block. We ask them to review the eighteen modes of learning (see www.designshare.com) that educators accept as essential for success in today's world, so they can see how a traditional classroom can accommodate only two or three of them.

But if not the old-style classroom, then what? How should the model evolve? In exploring this question with educators around the world, we've come up with at least three distinct "studios." To help us, we called on illustrious thinkers who shaped the ideas of their times: Leonardo da Vinci, Albert Einstein, and a modern master named Jamie Oliver. Destroying the traditional learning environment and creating something entirely new was a major challenge for our three maestros, but here's what they came up with.

master classrooms

Laboratory in Three Dimensions:

Leonardo da Vinci's work space would incorporate the hands-on elements of an artist's studio, a science lab, and a model-building shop.

Credit: DESIGNSHARE

The Da Vinci Studio: Action Through Synthesis of Knowledge

In the coming years, no educational paradigm shift will be more forcefully felt than the enrichment of disciplines through cross-pollination. Context and connection are fundamentally changing the way teachers teach and students learn. Not only are we hurtling at breakneck speed into an era in which traditional hard lines between the arts and the sciences are blurring, but we are also doing so with one eye firmly fixed on the way design can help the left brain and the right brain work in harmony.

Leonardo da Vinci has already provided a highly workable model for how this shift might be accomplished. In da Vinci's world, the lines between the disciplines, pervasive in today's schools, were absent; the works he did as a scientist, mathematician, and artist all informed the other efforts. No wonder one can look at his scientific drawings and wonder whether they were meant to be works of art and at his artwork and marvel at its scientific rigor. This kind of free-flowing interchange was accomplished in a workplace that was part artist's studio, part science lab, and part model-building shop.

So, what would a modern-day da Vinci studio look like as a classroom? Imagine a place with lots of daylight and directed artificial light, connection to an outdoor deck through wide or rolling doors (for messy projects), access to water, power supplied from a floor or ceiling grid, a wireless computer network, lots of storage, a floor finish that is hard to damage, high ceilings, places to display finished projects, reasonable acoustic separation, and transparency to the inside and outside with the potential for good views and vistas.

To take full advantage of today's da Vinci studio, teachers would need to collaborate more, offer students the opportunity to work on real projects, and encourage cross-disciplinary thinking in a way rarely seen within the four walls of traditional, unrevised schools.

master classrooms

Relatively Reflective:

Albert Einstein preferred solitude in his work. His studio would be the place to go for inspiration -- whether from sitting quietly with your own thoughts, enjoying a view of the outdoors, or strolling in nature.

Credit: DESIGNSHARE

The Einstein Studio: Creative Reflection and Inspired Collaboration

Albert Einstein's workplace was more study than studio. Preferring solitude and connections to nature, Einstein gave himself lots of time to stay in his own head. Because so much of what he did was cerebral, his inspiration could have come during quiet walks and in places other than his primary workplace (among other activities, he loved sailing on Long Island's Peconic Bay).

His official workplace may simply have let him develop ideas he had generated elsewhere. And so, when we talk about the Einstein studio today, we do so more in a metaphorical sense than as a way to actually duplicate Einstein's workplace in the modern school.

We can imagine that today's Einstein studio might include a place that encourages creative reflection, an inspiring setting not sealed off from the world outside or from those real problems and issues that must always have some place in abstract theorizing. To imagine an Einsteinian classroom, conjure the various ways the main lobby of a five-star hotel is furnished: It welcomes people alone or in small groups, it offers comfortable furnishings, it may nurture aspiration and inspiration with high ceilings, lots of glass, and easy connection to natural elements and water features, and it creates zones of privacy that remain firmly connected to the activity throughout the larger space.

A school isn't a five-star hotel, of course, but planners can still draw on this vision for inspiration despite budgetary constraints. The Einstein studio can also be a movable feast, a portable state of mind to be re-created around a shade tree in the spring or on a class nature walk.

Think also about visually connecting the Einstein and da Vinci studios -- one a venue for inspiration, the other a place for inspired action.

The Jamie Oliver Studio: Nourishing Mind, Body, and Spirit

Having spent some time learning from the masters of the past, whose legacy spans centuries of human history, we now turn to an unlikely hero from today's world: young English chef and entrepreneur Jamie Oliver. Using food preparation, a venerable art form, Oliver gives people a reason to celebrate a common goal -- to eat well and be healthy.

As a de facto educator, he speaks to members of the young generation about realizing their potential and making good decisions, about personal choice and real alternatives to success found in unfamiliar places far from the beaten path. But in an era that values the notion of lifelong learning, Oliver's message also resonates powerfully with other age groups.

In today's school, the Oliver studio would be a teaching kitchen connected to a cafe. With student participation as the centerpiece of its operations, it would contain a mirrored cooking station visible to the whole "class" and small, round cafe tables with comfortable chairs. Like the Einstein studio (but unlike the da Vinci studio), the Oliver studio could occupy a space with soft edges. That means it doesn't need to be defined by four walls, but might spill over into circulation areas and also onto outdoor patios. As with the other studios, the Oliver studio's design is limited only by the constraints of a particular site, the needs of the community it serves, and the imagination of its designer.

Money is a factor, of course, as it always is, but imagination is a powerful currency not often accounted for in the red and black ink of budgets. As a place for physical, emotional, and spiritual nourishment, the Oliver studio can be located so that it serves both the da Vinci and Einstein studios.

Once you begin to think of how creative thinkers actually work, the classroom as factory becomes a mere enforcer of conformity, and far more satisfying possibilities arise. Unless you have the good luck to be able to start from scratch, the trick is to adapt new design ideas into existing spaces. It's a tricky trick, but one well worth mastering.

Prakash Nair, Randall Fielding, and Jeffery Lackney are futurists and architects with Fielding Nair International, which has developed award-winning schools around the world. Write to them at prakash@designshare.com, fielding@designshare.com, and lackney@designshare.com.

This article was also published in Edutopia Magazine, June 2006


Please...I tried to locate

Submitted by Lisa-Gaye (not verified) on January 9, 2008 - 14:24.

Please...I tried to locate the '18 learning modalities' on the Edutopia site, but the only link was this article! Can someone point me in the right direction? :-)

studio spaces

Submitted by real teacher (not verified) on January 9, 2008 - 10:45.

I too have spent much time and energy developing plans for dream classrooms. However, once you are given 40 desks to fit into the "box" and all those energetic students for each seat, the ideal of bean bag chairs isn't practical. In addition, NCLB has made art, science, nature, and history irrelevant to today's schools--that is the real tragedy. Everything boils down to a test that focuses on vocabulary and lower level thinking skills. Talk to your president if you want to move away from the factory model of education. Remember, factory workers are easier to control than a populace that can evalulate ideas, detect biases and think outside of the box.

The illustrations I have

Submitted by John (not verified) on January 8, 2008 - 15:13.

The illustrations I have looked at thus far do not seem to show accessible facilities. They are beautiful.

outdoor science classroom

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on November 9, 2007 - 10:59.

I need a model for east because that is a project that she gave me so i need a model or a sketch of an outdoor science classroom to use for my project.

I appreciate your colective

Submitted by Hal Hart (not verified) on October 26, 2007 - 22:55.

I appreciate your colective expertise. As an architect, planner and person working with school districts for the past 20 years, I have to say that your message and th way you package it is not for the masses and it should be. I would like to konw, if any one of you has surveyed an exsting building personally, crawled through the crawl spaces and attic spaces, met with staff, designed a building, hanndled the construction phase and conducted a post oppucancy evaluation? My guess is NO!
Welcome to my world fellows, and that of many others like me. Your ehterial words are heeded, and respected. But gentlemen, YOU HAVE NO CLUE.

Creativity & Innovation, Disruptive (Digital Learning) Technology, Openism, the Larger Conversation! Communities of Practice!



charles leadbeater TEDTalks (video) - TEDTalks : Charles Leadbeater (2005) video