Sunday, 17 November 2013

Design Thinking Paradigm and The Article and Paulo Freire

Teachers and their methods of delivering curriculum are constantly under the public microscope. Parents, students and teacher themselves want to ensure that their child, themselves or their students are learning what is set out in the Prescribe Learning Outcomes or what has been outlined in government mandated curriculum packages. But what if there was another way of doing things? What if it should be the entire educational system under the microscope? I have used the beginning stages in the Design Thinking Paradigm (Empathize- Define- Ideate- Prototype- Test) to analyse one of my favourite articles on this very subject.


Empathize (with the beginnings of Define)
Every time I read This Article, I cry. I have to take several nose-blowing breaks and wipe the back of my hand across my eyes before I can continue reading. When I am finished, I feel like I have had the wind punched out of me. I also am filled with hope.
 
The Article, How a Radical New Teaching Method Could Unleash a Generation of Geniuses,”  outlines how one elementary teacher in an impoverished Mexican border town rejected formal teaching methods and allowed the students in his class to take ownership of their own learning. This lead to truly awesome and inspirational results. The Article gripped my heart from the very beginning with its harsh descriptions of life in the Mexican town of Matamoros, but it was the following which dug deep into my soul:

“…the dominant model of public education is still fundamentally rooted in the industrial revolution that spawned it, when workplaces valued punctuality, regularity, attention, and silence above all else. (In 1899, William T. Harris, the US commissioner of education, celebrated the fact that US schools had developed the “appearance of a machine,” one that teaches the student “to behave in an orderly manner, to stay in his own place, and not get in the way of others.”) We don’t openly profess those values nowadays, but our educational system—which routinely tests kids on their ability to recall information and demonstrate mastery of a narrow set of skills—doubles down on the view that students are material to be processed, programmed, and quality-tested." (The Article)
A friend first posted The Article and I read it by accident. I sat there and bawled because it spoke to my soul and my soul was saying “Other people have not given up on education. Other people have found a way to fight the factory system and to change how we learn. You can do this too.”  The Article was the soul food that I needed after working several weeks in a factory style classroom. There are things that I try to do differently, there are ways that I try to break the factory machinery, but working against such a well-oiled system is exhausting and often degrading. And quite often I find that my tools break before the machinery does. Nevertheless, The Article has become my motivation to go to work each day. It is my motivation to, bit by bit, disassemble the educational machinery that has been hard at work for several centuries. It is my personal call to action.

The same friend that posted The Article also recommended I read Paulo Freire’s “Pedagogy of the Oppressed.” She was taken aback that I had never even heard of it before. “It is teacher soul food,” she said. “It will become your bible.” A few days later, my course instructor responded to a piece of expository writing that was to jumpstart our term papers. He also mentioned Paulo Freire. Not a coincidence. It was time that I had some Paulo in my life.
Define
I have been taking Freire with me everywhere: the bus, the train, the couch, the classroom, the library, the kitchen floor, the bed, the bath… We’ve been everywhere together it seems. My friend was right, “Pedagogy of the Oppressed” is fast becoming my teacher bible. What The Article refers to as the “dominant model of public education [that] is still fundamentally rooted in the industrial revolution that spawned it,” (The Article)  Freire refers to as the “banking concept of education.” (Pedagogy of the Oppressed, page 72) Together with The Article, Freire has implanted some ideas in my mind that are starting to sprout. Where once there was hopelessness about my job there is now budding optimism and anticipation. Sergio Juárez Correa revolutionized his teaching. I can too.
Ideate
Juárez Correa recognized that for children to experience powerful learning, they must be in control of their own learning. He based his rationale on research conducted by Sugata Mitra, “a professor of educational technology at Newcastle University in the UK. In the late 1990s and throughout the 2000s, Mitra conducted experiments in which he gave children in India access to computers. Without any instruction, they were able to teach themselves a surprising variety of things, from DNA replication to English." (The Article)  Juárez Correa was well-read and despite instincts rooted in his formal training, he continued to step further back from the role of teacher and stepped closer to the role of mentor and facilitator.  Joshua Davis, author of The Article has obviously done his research on the subject and supports Juárez Correa’s method with data from a variety of brain studies. My little community of educational frustration has given way to an entire world of research and experiences! When I add Sugata Mitra to my reading collection I just might have a pedagogical holy trinity! I will have the tools to complete the "Ideate" stage in the Design Thinking paradigm and begin the "Prototype" and "Test" stages.
I still need to write my term paper and I don’t want to use all of my material here.

I will end with a quote…

To them, knowledge isn’t a commodity that’s delivered from teacher to student but something that emerges from the students’ own curiosity-fueled exploration. Teachers provide prompts, not answers, and then they step aside so students can teach themselves and one another. They are creating ways for children to discover their passion—and uncovering a generation of geniuses in the process. (The Article)

And a question:
How can we, trapped in the factory, break down the machinery and start a revolution? What tools would you use and to what purpose?

11 comments:

  1. Hi Marie
    What a great post. I could really feel how The Article affected you. I love the line "“But you do have one thing that makes you the equal of any kid in the world,” Juárez Correa said. “Potential.”" I was fortunate to go to the first 'mini school' in Vancouver where we were encouraged to think beyond books. Our field trips were application trips and we'd use our math skills to measure trees. I foolishly left the program and I struggled in conventional classrooms forever after that. I love the play in our classes and think that using that as a format for applying and educating is underrated. You have raised a lot of interesting points in this blog entry and I wish I had more time to really appreciate its depth. I too, have a paper to write though:)

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  2. Thanks Mary-Ann! I took love that line. So many times educators label children and then act surprised when the child doesn't do well.
    You were very lucky to attend the mini school! I wish I had had an opportunity to do something like that. I did, however, have some amazing teachers who definitely facilitated our interests and stepped back from the "teaching." Those are the ones that have remained strong in my memory!

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  3. Hi Marie!!

    From being challenged by HEAL, I have shifted my teaching practice in one of my classes to inquiry bases learning. I am having my students develop their own inquiry focus topics. Through that development, I am hoping that students will take ownership of their learning and be empowered by it. I want my kids to think beyond the books, as Mary Ann details above,yet am finding that there is some resistance from some students who expect and appreciate the warm, lobotomized, stand and deliver format that allows them to remain disengaged, disconnected to each other, and dis-empowered.

    I wonder if kids actually thirst for the machine din and whirl of the teachers spinning their wheels at the front of the class, all the while the student remains 'connected' to everything and anything outside of their classroom via their smartphone. Our sense of communion and community is under siege. We as a society are being broken down into individual parts, pitted against each other. School is the one place in the world where we can congregate, explore, learn, and connect.

    God forbid if our teaching came to a state where we, the teachers, became the circus side-show, and our students, so disillusioned by a new teaching and learning approach, conditioned by the way they have learned for years and years, reject that approach that you have brought up here. I get the sense that is happening in my school, and perhaps that is why we have to work so hard to inspire learning.

    Your post raises some important questions for me, but reminds me of a quote from
    Macbeth... a very pessimistic outlook on life, and perhaps, on teaching if your think of it. Our efforts are not in vain. The moment that we believe that, we cease to be active, participatory learners in out community, society, and culture. I love the lines below, and work damn hard everyday to see the world as the exact opposite.


    Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow,
    Creeps in this petty pace from day to day,
    To the last syllable of recorded time;
    And all our yesterdays have lighted fools
    The way to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle!
    Life's but a walking shadow, a poor player
    That struts and frets his hour upon the stage
    And then is heard no more. It is a tale
    Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury
    Signifying nothing. — Macbeth (Act 5, Scene 5, lines 17-28)

    Thank you!

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  4. Oh wow! Thank you for this Josh!
    As educators, we often get stuck in our own little world and forget that there are other professionals out there who might be thinking and feeling the same as ourselves. One major frustration I have had in this profession is the resistance to change and the desire to maintain the educational status quo because "that is the way it has always been done," or "it's the easiest way." I have felt this resistance from teachers, parents and students. This really hit home for me: "I want my kids to think beyond the books, as Mary Ann details above, yet am finding that there is some resistance from some students who expect and appreciate the warm, lobotomized, stand and deliver format that allows them to remain disengaged, disconnected to each other, and dis-empowered." I've often gone home at the end of the day and thought "why do I even bother?" I see people heading to the mall in droves on a bright sunny day and I think "why do bother?" I see people indulging in their daily $5 coffees yet brushing off the humanitarian aid workers standing on the corner and I wonder "why do I bother?" The first stanza T.S. Eliot's "Hollow Men" loops through my mind. Then, when you are least expecting it there are one or two students who let you know that you have reached them and they tell you "this is why you bother." Then, there is a colleague who does likewise and you feel revitalized.
    Cognitive Behaviour Therapy would tell me that I am stuck in a negative thinking rut and that I have to change my thinking to change my outlook. I know I have a martyr complex, but I also know that as you say, "Our sense of communion and community is under siege. We as a society are being broken down into individual parts, pitted against each other."
    I am excited to hear about the inquiry based approach that you have taken this year! I'd love to talk more about it with you! I think we could share some ideas on how to extend this to other classes and age groups.

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  5. Just a quick thought is response to your end question:
    My sense at this time is that the current institutional model of education lacks imagination and emotion. Students are not 'engaged' ( a term used too loosely, superficially and superfluously these days, imo) wholly. Waldorf education and Egan both come to mind in illustrating ways in which we can deepen the educational content and experiences for students.
    -Krista

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  6. Heh heh. Yup, next time you are in town I am definitely setting up a nerdy teacher date with you, "the friend" and myself!

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  7. Really enjoyed your post Marie. I've also fallen in love with the work of Freire, and his work "A Pedagogy of Love" is equally as inspiring and invigorating. I've been writing based on his work as well in an article on the teaching beyond the Social Determinants of Health, and love reading your thoughts on his work.

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  8. Thanks Jenn! I think I will be reading that and "Pedagogy of Hope" as soon as I can. I will also be reading http://fuelyourlife.blogspot.ca/2013/11/is-food-this-confusing.html
    when I get home tonight! Ritz Crackers indeed!

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  9. Hi Marie, I loved your friend's comment about it being "teacher soul food". Soul food, made me think of what feeds the soul? Certainly not the factory! So much more satisfaction of self creation, independence and support and affirmation. Thanks for sharing!

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  10. Hi Marie! Thank you for sharing your thoughts and resources in this article. You know your post made me think about how we teach students to teach. Do professional development programs for teachers educate or train students? Are future teachers encouraged to think for themselves or like someone else?

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  11. Hi Jacqueline,
    The more I teach, the more I realize that there is a gap in teacher training programs. Future teachers are encouraged to "think for themselves" but usually only within the framework given. A course designed to make future teachers think for themselves and to question the current education system would not be approved because it would create teachers that would work against the system and not in it. Many teachers themselves don't want to question. They just want to do.

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