Blog 3: Me, Myself and I

I’ll be honest and own up to the fact that I haven’t finished Will Richardson’s wonderfully thought provoking and expertly curated collection of questions, critiques, and possibilities for the integration of real world literacies into the modern curriculum and classroom.  My Kindle app tells me that I’m about 30% of the way through.  And, although, as I hope my previous description of Richardson’s work suggests, I am enjoying, learning and growing from reading Why Schools?, I am also feeling overwhelmed with this course and all the resources, ideas, and inspirations that are resulting from our in-class discussions and inquiry and my own inquiry and synthesis.  When I feel overwhelmed, I tend to shut down.  It’s a protective mechanism that allows me to slowly and carefully decide where my priorities are and need to be in any given situation and to both figuratively and perhaps physically place them in an order of importance that allows me to systematically work through each task.  All this is to say that, as this first week of class wraps up, I am feeling that I am more able to assess and organize my priorities, and even more importantly, identify what I learned, how it connects to what I already know, what path of inquiry I would like to take for my final culminating project, and which resources, topics, etc. I would like to explore and implement in my practice in the future.

This week’s discussions and paths of inquiry have taught me that as a teacher and a professional I must be connected – connected through technology, through social media (e.g. twitter, etc.), and through my own inquiry, research, and exploration.  If I am going to help my students develop these new forms of literacy (e.g. digital, media, visual, social, information, etc.), I need to be “fluent” in these new forms of communication myself.  And, in order to teach my students the skills they will need to be successful, I must further develop my own skills.  This week of class impressed upon me the need for me, as the teacher and the professional, to spend time reading about, exploring, and experimenting with the possibilities of ICT in my classroom.  It is my professional responsibility and my ethical duty to push forward, so I can prepare my students for the world they will enter.  And, if I am going to be a leader in my school and professional  communities, I need to be not only looking forward but actively moving forward with regards to ICT – resources, devices, and programs.  I need to adapt.

And, in the short term, I need to finish Will Richardson’s book, comment on three of my colleague’s blog posts, and sit and think about where my interest, passion, focus lies in regards to the final project.

1 thought on “Blog 3: Me, Myself and I

  1. We have covered a lot of ideas, materials, and possibilities in this first week! I encourage you to draw from it what is useful and trust the rest will be there another day when you might be looking for inspiration or guidance. You have articulated the challenge that lays ahead very well. How will teachers support their own evolving knowledge of digital technologies, learning, and knowledge era society? How will they support their colleagues to practice in a profession where the the conditions of teaching are dynamic, in continuous states of flux and change, where certainties are a luxury that few can rely on? How do they support their students to be ethical, civic-minded, using digital technologies to shape a fair and just society, not only to download the latest music video sensation? These are big questions, and I am gratified to see you understand the ethical responsibility of educators to take up these questions and make sense of them in their own practice. Teacher Librarians are uniquely positioned in at least three ways: 1) the field of library science is rapidly moving into digitization; 2) Teacher Librarians teach across subjects, grades, and school communities; 3) Teacher Librarians provide instructional support to teachers and have an opportunity to introduce innovative instructional design through lesson planning.

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