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Posts Tagged ‘Pedagogy’
Monday, December 1st, 2008
Good English and Bad Grammar
Two countries separated by the same language: that was how I thought about moving to the USA as a born and bred Brit.
I already knew that a boot and a bumper on a car are a trunk and a fender. I knew that an entrée was not in fact a starter as the name might suggest. I knew that many spellings were different such as colour and color or gaol and jail.
I discovered that my spell check on Microsoft Word gives me a horrible red underline for many plurals such as: Curriculum and curricula, premium and premia, datum and data although to be honest that might just be a function of my age!
I even knew that some of the grammar was different; I take things where you might bring them and whilst I change ‘ice’ in nouns to ‘ise’ in verb, you do not. Americans are far more straightforward by sticking to ice – with one odd exception: Why do you change advice to advise but no other ice nouns?
The unfortunate thing that binds us together is the increasing and ever annoying poor use of language. This is universal on both sides of the Atlantic. Is it just me who is constantly annoyed by the inability of so many people to add a simple ‘ly’ to the end of an adverb? Do we really save that much time by saying ‘I did it quick’ or ‘think different’ rather than thinking correctly or, indeed differently.
I know some people would argue that it is merely a modern use of the language, and that in trying to be interesting and engaging to young people, correct grammar is ipso facto boring.
Maybe I am being a bit too traditional, but I firmly believe that as educators we have a duty to teach our students to use language correctly. Part of being well educated requires the good use of language to articulate our ideas well. Indeed, Superior communication skills distinguish the highly educated. As Aristophanes put it “High thoughts must have high language’
My last gripe for today centers (or centres) around the abstract addition of redundant words in sentences. I cannot help think how powerful Martin Luther King’s speech might have been:
I, er, like, have a dream!
Andrew Derry
Tags: English, IB, international, Language, Pedagogy Posted in Education, IB, International Understanding, Pedagogy | No Comments »
Tuesday, November 18th, 2008
What Really Matters 2.
Traditional education revolves around the three Rs.
No, not reading riting and rithmatic as was the case when I was at school, but Repeat, Remember, Regurgitate.
We all remember those Maths classes when the teacher would show us a problem on the board (usually a chalk-smeared blackboard), we would do the next 40 problems from the text book (all similar), another 20 for homework. Then at the end of the section, we would be given a test of another 40 almost identical problems with which we were expected to score more than 90%.
The fact of the matter is that most educational systems were designed this way. Real life was divided in to artificial domains or subject areas. Tests were devised that allowed for the “brightest” (and by that we mean “best at remembering”) to succeed and for the rest to fail.
Teachers possessed the “knowledge”, they passed it on to the students in the order and manner they felt fit, the students remembered the knowledge and then regurgitated it on tests. The best students at this process, progressed, the others did not. The more cynical among is might suggest that the old fashioned system of forcing students to Repeat, Remember, Regurgitate was considered a good way to discipline the young. It certainly put the teacher in a position of power in the classroom.
Fortunately modern brain and pedagogical research shows us how children think and learn best – and it’s not by the three Rs!
In the best educational systems, the old fashioned, knowledge based approach is replaced by skills based, contextual learning. In such systems the teacher is no longer the fount of all knowledge, but the facilitator helping each individual student to acquire the skills and concepts necessary to understand, to think, to adapt, to analyze and to do.
This is the underlying philosophy of the International Baccalaureate Organisation. Whether the PYP, MYP or DP programme, IB students are empowered to think and to do rather than to just know.
I think therefore IB
Andrew Derry
Tags: Baccalaureate, DP, Education, international, MYP, Pedagogy, PYP Posted in Community & Service, Education, IB, International Understanding, Pedagogy, Uncategorized | No Comments »
Thursday, October 16th, 2008
Welcome to this new blog page and welcome to our new website. A great deal of time and effort has gone into making this new site more informative and more user-friendly. We would certainly appreciate receiving your feedback on the look and feel of the site.
Being new to the school this year, my family and I gave a great deal of thought to our move. Moving from Europe to the USA was a big decision and we wanted to be sure that we made the right one. In making that decision, we started to ask ourselves: What really matters?
Of course, what really matters in schools is the right combination of many things; teachers, students, parents, program, and facilities to name but a few. But, for us the things that really mattered when choosing to come to Riverstone, were family, community and relationships.
Riverstone International School is a very special place and it’s not just the rigorous IB curriculum, it’s not just the college admission success, it’s not the fact that our students score in the 97th percentile on PSAT scores. What really matters at Riverstone, what really makes this school stand out, is its community and the relationships it develops among staff, parents, students. We are one big family, all working together for the benefit of our students.
Having worked in many international schools around the world, I can tell you that we should never take this for granted. Not all schools are like Riverstone, not even those that are as academically successful. To be honest, when I first came for an interview in November 2007, I knew nothing about Boise. I distinctly remember returning home and trying to explain to my family why Riverstone was the place for us. What really mattered was the sense of community and the relationships that developed as a result of that.
This was brought home to me very recently as part of the Capital Campaign to build the new Elementary School building. Teachers in any school are not the highest paid citizens in society, but our staff decided to get together to find a way to contribute to the campaign. As a group, they decided to have part of their salary set aside each month over an eighteen-month period. As a result, they managed to provide a leadership pledge to the campaign of $15,000. That is extraordinary! As a group, the staff understands how important that sense of community is to this school.
This school is extraordinary for many reasons, but being new to the school, what makes it so special for me is its sense of community!
Andrew Derry
Tags: Education, IB, international, Pedagogy Posted in Education, IB, International Understanding, Pedagogy, Uncategorized | No Comments »
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