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Twelve habits of Top 21st Century Teachers Vicki Davis @coolcatteacher www.flatclassroombook.com
Twelve habits of Top 21st Century Teachers
ITEMIZED BILLBrian Tracy, Focal Point: A Proven System to Simplify Your Life, Double Your Production and Achieve All Your Goals, p 8 For placing “x” on gauge 			$    1.00 For knowing which gauge to place the “x” on 				$9,999.00
Write this Down! Top Teachers begin by: Determining the focalpoint for myself.
ME!
ME!
ME!
CAN’T
CAN’T
CAN’T
CAN
CAN’T
ME!
Can
EDUCATION
ME!
ME EDUCATION
ME!
EDUCATION ME
EDUCATION
SUPER Majority
SUPER CAN
ME!
Write this Down! Top Teachers begin by: Determining the focalpoint for myself and my classroom at each moment.
FOCUS
Guinea Worm
Write this Down! “Discover a few vitalbehaviors, change those, and problems – no matter their size – topple like a house of cards.” Kerry Patterson et al, Influencer: The Power to Change Anything, p 28
We’re looking at the vital behaviors  that move us towards effective  21st Century Classrooms
Isn’t the way we’ve always taughtgoodenough?
Facts for your future Caucasian white people will be the minority in the US by 2042. There Is Growing Demand For An Increasingly Educated Workforce Workforce job requirements, by education level Graduate degree Bachelor’s degree Associate’s degree Some college HS diploma HS dropouts 1973 1992 2007 2018 Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce, December 2009
Memorizing and not going to college will not create success!
ME!
Why do we even care about  having a 21st Century Classroom?
The FACTS of 21st century life. Successful people will have to work with and market to China,India,and beyond.
ME!
Your revolution starts with evolution!
The most important “A” in your classroom Att-I-tude
Write this Down! Habit#1 I believe in myself, my students, and my school. Personal Habits
“Santa’s Motto” in my childhood home “If you believe you receive.”
Study of Expectations 20% of students in the student were said to have “unusual potential for intellectual growth” Three teachers selected were told they were selected because they were the best in the school Rosenthal, R., and Jacobson, L. (1968). Pygmalion in the classroom: Teacher expectation and pupils' intellectual development'. New York: Rinehart and Winston.
The end of the school year Led the school and district in standardized test scores Jumped 20-30% in academic achievement over previous year. Rosenthal, R., and Jacobson, L. (1968). Pygmalion in the classroom: Teacher expectation and pupils' intellectual development'. New York: Rinehart and Winston.
Guess what? The selections were RANDOM. Students were a mix of good/bad/ medium. So were teachers! Rosenthal, R., and Jacobson, L. (1968). Pygmalion in the classroom: Teacher expectation and pupils' intellectual development'. New York: Rinehart and Winston.
You Believe, You Receive! “In experiment after experiment, it has been demonstrated that when teachers EXPECT their students to perform well, the students work hard and live up to their teacher’s expectations.” Brian Tracy, Maximum Achievement
90%
They are part of this Best Wiki in Education 2006, 2008 ISTE Online Learning Award 2007 TIG Best Online Project 2006 WISE Shortlist Finalist, Pluralism Open Sim Pioneers 2009 Finalist Best Wiki 2010 Digital Youth – Edutopia Winner Wall Street Journal, WIRED, Boston Globe, Edutopia
Our Technology First Flat Classroom® Project used 6 year old computers. New Computer Lab July 2007 20 computers 7 in library Wireless
2 kinds of people: ,[object Object]
TransformersDale Carnegie,  How to Stop Worrying and Start Living
Transformers “Turn the negativity into something positive.”
“The budget cuts have become opportunistic because we are having to think outside the box.”Jody Kennedy, Teacher White Plains Middle School New York
ME!
Leaders CAN  Remove the obstacle. Be the obstacle.
Policies, Filtration, Admin
You don’t have to influence everyone at once Leverage Influence:  Formal Leaders Opinion Leaders
You don’t have to be the admin if you can influence the admin.
You don’t have to be the teacher if you can influence the teacher.
Leaders ARE  Knowledgeable Trustworthy Generous with their Time The Influencer  by Kerry Patterson,  et al, p 154
Successful technology integration ispeople-centric.  People-Related Habits
ME!
E! M W
Write this Down! Habit#1 I believe in myself, my students, and my school and transform situations by removing barriers and with my positive attitude.
Write this Down! Habit#2 “My classroomevolves and ______ with multiple audiences …”  People-Related Habits
“Cool Cat Teacher”Vicki Davis
Research  Based Cooperative Learning Differentiated  Instruction Project Based Learning Best Practice Authentic  Assessment Keys to a Flat Classroom
Flat Classroom http://flatclassroomproject.wikispaces.com Dhaka, Bangladesh Camilla, GA  United States
“was its own society itself” “taught us a lesson in life”
 Student Produced Video
Write this Down! Habit#2 “My classroom evolves and connects with multiple audiences …”  People-Related Habits
CONNECT
Horizon Project 2008
21st Century Skills 21st Century CONNECTIONS
Audience is Important “Technology creates opportunities for students to do meaningful work that has value outside school, receive feedback on their work, and experience the rewards of publication or exhibition.” Peck & Dorricott, 1994http://caret.iste.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=evidence&answerID=9&words=audience
Teams “Working with people across the world has challenged me.” “The majority of my partners wanted to contribute something meaningful to the project.” Horizon Project Studentshttp://horizonproject.wikispaces.com
India 2010 Qatar 2009
Write this Down! Habit#2 “My classroom evolves and connects with multiple audiences, peers, and cultures using both synchronous and asynchronous communications methods.”  People-Related Habits
Synchronous ,[object Object]
Examples:
Instant Messaging
Voice over IP (Skype)
Video Conferencing
Face to Face Interactions
Webcasts
Webinars,[object Object]
Examples:
Blogs
Wikis
Podcasts
Virtual classroom recordings
Recorded Video,[object Object]
What are you bringing in?
How are you connecting?
Write this Down! Habit#2 “My classroom evolves and connects with multiple audiences, peers, and cultures using both synchronous and asynchronous communications methods.”  People-Related Habits
ME!
“Institutional leaders will need to seek out ‘reverse mentors’ among (often younger) individuals who can help them understand and master edge practices.” John Seely Brown et al, The Power of Pull, Kindle loc. 495
Write this Down! Habit#3 “In my classroom,students are involved in the evolution of technology integration.” People-Related Habits
“If they help build it, they are already THERE.” Build a participatory culture
“Flatten piloting and implementation of new technology.”
Interoperability “					Rather than dealing with each technology in isolation, we would do better to take an ecological approach, thinking about the interrelationships among different communication technologies, the culture communities… the activities they support.”Confronting the Challenges of Participatory Culture, McArthur Report
Think of one thing you learned from your students last year!
ME!
Write this Down! Habit#4 I promote change by influencingBEHAVIOR… People-Related Habits
“We are better at coping than exerting influence.” Kerry Patterson et al, Influencer: The Power to Change Anything, p 8
[object Object]
Weight Watchers App,[object Object]
Mirror Neurons: GiacomoRizzolatti et al., “Premotor Cortex and the Recognition of Motor Actions,” Cognitive Behavior Research, 3 (1996) 131-141.
We mirror the behaviors of those we are around.
Self Control is Contagious University of Georgia Website, Michelle van Dellen, Physorg.com 1/14/2010 9:10 am
Write this Down! Habit#4 I promote change by influencingBEHAVIORwhich I do not confuse with outcomes. People-Related Habits
ME!
Habit#5  I connectmyself to a good personallearningnetwork. Personal Habits
Information Tools Push Search strategies Deep web Pull RSS enabled tools Mobile devices CONNECT YOURSELF
Push Do you know how to search? Advanced operators "" quotes + add terms - take out terms Where to search Engines Deep web
Push Do you know how to search? Advanced operators "" quotes + add terms - take out terms Where to search Engines Deep web CONNECT YOURSELF
What is pull? “The Power of Pull" John Seely Brown, John Hagel et. all
Seren -DIP- ity
Serendipity Being in the right place at the right time! You can create an environment that brings learning to you!
Media Diet “A bit literate approach involves creating and maintaining a media diet, a constantly pruned set of publications (digital, print, and other media) that keeps us informed about what matters most to us, professionally and personally.”  Mark Hurst, Bit Literacy, Loc 781
Connect yourself! PersonalLearningNetwork / Media Diet! RSS Reader  - www.igoogle.com eBook Reader - Kindle Diigohttp://groups.diigo.com/groups/educators Listen  in – http://www.edtechtalk.com Join Twitter – http://www.twitter.com K12 online – http://k12onlineconference.org Networking Organizations Discovery Educators Flat Classrooms – http://flatclassrooms.ning.com
ME!
Habit#5  I connectmyself to a good personallearningnetwork. Personal Habits
“Exercise boosts brain power.” Brain Rules by John Medina
If people mirror you, what will they look like?
Habit#6 I connect to myself through exercise, humor, time aloneand time with family. Personal Habits
I CAN  Care about ME!
I CAN  Care about ME!
I CAN  Care about ME!
CAN  Care about OTHERS
E! M W
Habit#7 I usevicarious learning and the teachable moment. People-Related Habits
Phobias we’re dealing with Ideophobia- Fear of ideas Kainophobia- Fear of anything new• Phronemophobia- Fear of thinking TECHNO phobia
How long does it take to overcome a phobia of snakes?
Influencing deep beliefs
How long does it take to overcome a phobia of snakes? Albert Bandura, N. Aclan, J. Beyer  “Cognitive Process Mediating BehavioralChange.” Cognitive Theory & Research, 1 (1977): 287-310.
3hours
Flat Classroom ConferenceDoha, Qatar 2009 Mumbai India 2010 http://flatclassroomconference.wikispaces.com
Habit#7 I usevicarious learning and the teachable moment. People-Related Habits
Habit#8 Learning is a habit embedded in my weekly routines. People-Related Habits
Our PDlooks like this
It should look likethis
Embed Learning 15 minutes2-3 times a week
Kaizen =Slow, steady improvement
“You cannot step in the same river twice.” Heraclitus
Habit#8 Learning is a habit embedded in my weekly routines. People-Related Habits
Habit#9  I examine assessment carefully because my classroom becomes a product of  what I measure. People-Related Habits
Examine Data StreamsF - alseE - videnceA - ppearingR - eal
Habit#9  I examine assessment carefully because my classroom becomes a product of  what I measure. People-Related Habits
Habit#10  I model and discuss digital citizenship by holding students accountable and includingthem. People-Related Habits
Online behavior has offline consequences.
Multitaskingis a lie.
Blockingis not the answer.
Habits of Learning Etiquette & Respect Areas of Awareness Literacy and Fluency Safety, Privacy, Copyright & Legal Rays of Understanding Technology Access Enlightened Digital  Citizenship © 2011 All Rights Reserved Vicki A Davis and Julie Lindsay
Habit#11  I embrace multisensory  learning. People-Related Habits
If Helen Keller were in your school, would she become Helen Keller?
Habit#12 Out of love and respect, I work hard to find and encourage the strengths  in every child. People-Related Habits
Autism in Austria
Do you see any numbers?
Habit#12 Out of love and respect, I work hard to find and encourage the strengths  in every child. People-Related Habits
Write this Down! Habit#1 I believe in myself, my students, and my school.
Who am I?  ,[object Object]
Modern Day Nobility
Hope Giver
Inspiration
Future Finder
The world’s bridge to tomorrow!
Eat a watermelon
Not whole!
Small bites!
The power of Three! Pick three
ME!
“Every day is a new dayto a wise man.”Dale Carnegie,How to Stop Worrying and Start Living, Kindle location 449

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12 Habits of the Top 21-st Century Teacher

  • 1. Twelve habits of Top 21st Century Teachers Vicki Davis @coolcatteacher www.flatclassroombook.com
  • 2. Twelve habits of Top 21st Century Teachers
  • 3.
  • 4. ITEMIZED BILLBrian Tracy, Focal Point: A Proven System to Simplify Your Life, Double Your Production and Achieve All Your Goals, p 8 For placing “x” on gauge $ 1.00 For knowing which gauge to place the “x” on $9,999.00
  • 5. Write this Down! Top Teachers begin by: Determining the focalpoint for myself.
  • 6. ME!
  • 7. ME!
  • 8. ME!
  • 9.
  • 10.
  • 11.
  • 12.
  • 16. CAN
  • 18.
  • 19. ME!
  • 20.
  • 21.
  • 22. Can
  • 24. ME!
  • 26. ME!
  • 29.
  • 32. ME!
  • 33. Write this Down! Top Teachers begin by: Determining the focalpoint for myself and my classroom at each moment.
  • 34. FOCUS
  • 36. Write this Down! “Discover a few vitalbehaviors, change those, and problems – no matter their size – topple like a house of cards.” Kerry Patterson et al, Influencer: The Power to Change Anything, p 28
  • 37. We’re looking at the vital behaviors that move us towards effective 21st Century Classrooms
  • 38. Isn’t the way we’ve always taughtgoodenough?
  • 39. Facts for your future Caucasian white people will be the minority in the US by 2042. There Is Growing Demand For An Increasingly Educated Workforce Workforce job requirements, by education level Graduate degree Bachelor’s degree Associate’s degree Some college HS diploma HS dropouts 1973 1992 2007 2018 Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce, December 2009
  • 40.
  • 41.
  • 42. Memorizing and not going to college will not create success!
  • 43. ME!
  • 44. Why do we even care about having a 21st Century Classroom?
  • 45.
  • 46.
  • 47. The FACTS of 21st century life. Successful people will have to work with and market to China,India,and beyond.
  • 48. ME!
  • 49. Your revolution starts with evolution!
  • 50. The most important “A” in your classroom Att-I-tude
  • 51. Write this Down! Habit#1 I believe in myself, my students, and my school. Personal Habits
  • 52. “Santa’s Motto” in my childhood home “If you believe you receive.”
  • 53. Study of Expectations 20% of students in the student were said to have “unusual potential for intellectual growth” Three teachers selected were told they were selected because they were the best in the school Rosenthal, R., and Jacobson, L. (1968). Pygmalion in the classroom: Teacher expectation and pupils' intellectual development'. New York: Rinehart and Winston.
  • 54. The end of the school year Led the school and district in standardized test scores Jumped 20-30% in academic achievement over previous year. Rosenthal, R., and Jacobson, L. (1968). Pygmalion in the classroom: Teacher expectation and pupils' intellectual development'. New York: Rinehart and Winston.
  • 55. Guess what? The selections were RANDOM. Students were a mix of good/bad/ medium. So were teachers! Rosenthal, R., and Jacobson, L. (1968). Pygmalion in the classroom: Teacher expectation and pupils' intellectual development'. New York: Rinehart and Winston.
  • 56. You Believe, You Receive! “In experiment after experiment, it has been demonstrated that when teachers EXPECT their students to perform well, the students work hard and live up to their teacher’s expectations.” Brian Tracy, Maximum Achievement
  • 57. 90%
  • 58.
  • 59. They are part of this Best Wiki in Education 2006, 2008 ISTE Online Learning Award 2007 TIG Best Online Project 2006 WISE Shortlist Finalist, Pluralism Open Sim Pioneers 2009 Finalist Best Wiki 2010 Digital Youth – Edutopia Winner Wall Street Journal, WIRED, Boston Globe, Edutopia
  • 60. Our Technology First Flat Classroom® Project used 6 year old computers. New Computer Lab July 2007 20 computers 7 in library Wireless
  • 61.
  • 62. TransformersDale Carnegie, How to Stop Worrying and Start Living
  • 63.
  • 64. Transformers “Turn the negativity into something positive.”
  • 65. “The budget cuts have become opportunistic because we are having to think outside the box.”Jody Kennedy, Teacher White Plains Middle School New York
  • 66. ME!
  • 67. Leaders CAN Remove the obstacle. Be the obstacle.
  • 69. You don’t have to influence everyone at once Leverage Influence: Formal Leaders Opinion Leaders
  • 70. You don’t have to be the admin if you can influence the admin.
  • 71. You don’t have to be the teacher if you can influence the teacher.
  • 72. Leaders ARE Knowledgeable Trustworthy Generous with their Time The Influencer by Kerry Patterson, et al, p 154
  • 73. Successful technology integration ispeople-centric. People-Related Habits
  • 74. ME!
  • 76. Write this Down! Habit#1 I believe in myself, my students, and my school and transform situations by removing barriers and with my positive attitude.
  • 77. Write this Down! Habit#2 “My classroomevolves and ______ with multiple audiences …” People-Related Habits
  • 79.
  • 80. Research Based Cooperative Learning Differentiated Instruction Project Based Learning Best Practice Authentic Assessment Keys to a Flat Classroom
  • 81.
  • 82.
  • 83.
  • 84. Flat Classroom http://flatclassroomproject.wikispaces.com Dhaka, Bangladesh Camilla, GA United States
  • 85.
  • 86. “was its own society itself” “taught us a lesson in life”
  • 88. Write this Down! Habit#2 “My classroom evolves and connects with multiple audiences …” People-Related Habits
  • 91.
  • 92. 21st Century Skills 21st Century CONNECTIONS
  • 93. Audience is Important “Technology creates opportunities for students to do meaningful work that has value outside school, receive feedback on their work, and experience the rewards of publication or exhibition.” Peck & Dorricott, 1994http://caret.iste.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=evidence&answerID=9&words=audience
  • 94. Teams “Working with people across the world has challenged me.” “The majority of my partners wanted to contribute something meaningful to the project.” Horizon Project Studentshttp://horizonproject.wikispaces.com
  • 96. Write this Down! Habit#2 “My classroom evolves and connects with multiple audiences, peers, and cultures using both synchronous and asynchronous communications methods.” People-Related Habits
  • 97.
  • 100. Voice over IP (Skype)
  • 102. Face to Face Interactions
  • 104.
  • 106. Blogs
  • 107. Wikis
  • 110.
  • 111. What are you bringing in?
  • 112. How are you connecting?
  • 113. Write this Down! Habit#2 “My classroom evolves and connects with multiple audiences, peers, and cultures using both synchronous and asynchronous communications methods.” People-Related Habits
  • 114. ME!
  • 115. “Institutional leaders will need to seek out ‘reverse mentors’ among (often younger) individuals who can help them understand and master edge practices.” John Seely Brown et al, The Power of Pull, Kindle loc. 495
  • 116. Write this Down! Habit#3 “In my classroom,students are involved in the evolution of technology integration.” People-Related Habits
  • 117. “If they help build it, they are already THERE.” Build a participatory culture
  • 118. “Flatten piloting and implementation of new technology.”
  • 119. Interoperability “ Rather than dealing with each technology in isolation, we would do better to take an ecological approach, thinking about the interrelationships among different communication technologies, the culture communities… the activities they support.”Confronting the Challenges of Participatory Culture, McArthur Report
  • 120. Think of one thing you learned from your students last year!
  • 121.
  • 122.
  • 123. ME!
  • 124. Write this Down! Habit#4 I promote change by influencingBEHAVIOR… People-Related Habits
  • 125. “We are better at coping than exerting influence.” Kerry Patterson et al, Influencer: The Power to Change Anything, p 8
  • 126.
  • 127.
  • 128.
  • 129.
  • 130.
  • 131. Mirror Neurons: GiacomoRizzolatti et al., “Premotor Cortex and the Recognition of Motor Actions,” Cognitive Behavior Research, 3 (1996) 131-141.
  • 132. We mirror the behaviors of those we are around.
  • 133. Self Control is Contagious University of Georgia Website, Michelle van Dellen, Physorg.com 1/14/2010 9:10 am
  • 134. Write this Down! Habit#4 I promote change by influencingBEHAVIORwhich I do not confuse with outcomes. People-Related Habits
  • 135. ME!
  • 136. Habit#5 I connectmyself to a good personallearningnetwork. Personal Habits
  • 137. Information Tools Push Search strategies Deep web Pull RSS enabled tools Mobile devices CONNECT YOURSELF
  • 138. Push Do you know how to search? Advanced operators "" quotes + add terms - take out terms Where to search Engines Deep web
  • 139. Push Do you know how to search? Advanced operators "" quotes + add terms - take out terms Where to search Engines Deep web CONNECT YOURSELF
  • 140. What is pull? “The Power of Pull" John Seely Brown, John Hagel et. all
  • 142. Serendipity Being in the right place at the right time! You can create an environment that brings learning to you!
  • 143. Media Diet “A bit literate approach involves creating and maintaining a media diet, a constantly pruned set of publications (digital, print, and other media) that keeps us informed about what matters most to us, professionally and personally.” Mark Hurst, Bit Literacy, Loc 781
  • 144. Connect yourself! PersonalLearningNetwork / Media Diet! RSS Reader - www.igoogle.com eBook Reader - Kindle Diigohttp://groups.diigo.com/groups/educators Listen in – http://www.edtechtalk.com Join Twitter – http://www.twitter.com K12 online – http://k12onlineconference.org Networking Organizations Discovery Educators Flat Classrooms – http://flatclassrooms.ning.com
  • 145. ME!
  • 146. Habit#5 I connectmyself to a good personallearningnetwork. Personal Habits
  • 147.
  • 148. “Exercise boosts brain power.” Brain Rules by John Medina
  • 149.
  • 150. If people mirror you, what will they look like?
  • 151. Habit#6 I connect to myself through exercise, humor, time aloneand time with family. Personal Habits
  • 152. I CAN Care about ME!
  • 153. I CAN Care about ME!
  • 154. I CAN Care about ME!
  • 155. CAN Care about OTHERS
  • 156. E! M W
  • 157. Habit#7 I usevicarious learning and the teachable moment. People-Related Habits
  • 158.
  • 159. Phobias we’re dealing with Ideophobia- Fear of ideas Kainophobia- Fear of anything new• Phronemophobia- Fear of thinking TECHNO phobia
  • 160. How long does it take to overcome a phobia of snakes?
  • 162. How long does it take to overcome a phobia of snakes? Albert Bandura, N. Aclan, J. Beyer “Cognitive Process Mediating BehavioralChange.” Cognitive Theory & Research, 1 (1977): 287-310.
  • 163. 3hours
  • 164. Flat Classroom ConferenceDoha, Qatar 2009 Mumbai India 2010 http://flatclassroomconference.wikispaces.com
  • 165.
  • 166. Habit#7 I usevicarious learning and the teachable moment. People-Related Habits
  • 167. Habit#8 Learning is a habit embedded in my weekly routines. People-Related Habits
  • 169. It should look likethis
  • 170. Embed Learning 15 minutes2-3 times a week
  • 171. Kaizen =Slow, steady improvement
  • 172. “You cannot step in the same river twice.” Heraclitus
  • 173. Habit#8 Learning is a habit embedded in my weekly routines. People-Related Habits
  • 174. Habit#9 I examine assessment carefully because my classroom becomes a product of what I measure. People-Related Habits
  • 175. Examine Data StreamsF - alseE - videnceA - ppearingR - eal
  • 176. Habit#9 I examine assessment carefully because my classroom becomes a product of what I measure. People-Related Habits
  • 177. Habit#10 I model and discuss digital citizenship by holding students accountable and includingthem. People-Related Habits
  • 178.
  • 179. Online behavior has offline consequences.
  • 181. Blockingis not the answer.
  • 182. Habits of Learning Etiquette & Respect Areas of Awareness Literacy and Fluency Safety, Privacy, Copyright & Legal Rays of Understanding Technology Access Enlightened Digital Citizenship © 2011 All Rights Reserved Vicki A Davis and Julie Lindsay
  • 183. Habit#11 I embrace multisensory learning. People-Related Habits
  • 184. If Helen Keller were in your school, would she become Helen Keller?
  • 185. Habit#12 Out of love and respect, I work hard to find and encourage the strengths in every child. People-Related Habits
  • 187.
  • 188. Do you see any numbers?
  • 189. Habit#12 Out of love and respect, I work hard to find and encourage the strengths in every child. People-Related Habits
  • 190. Write this Down! Habit#1 I believe in myself, my students, and my school.
  • 191.
  • 196. The world’s bridge to tomorrow!
  • 200. The power of Three! Pick three
  • 201. ME!
  • 202. “Every day is a new dayto a wise man.”Dale Carnegie,How to Stop Worrying and Start Living, Kindle location 449
  • 203. What you can do TODAY List your Big 3 Build your Personal Learning Network Find the “X”
  • 204. My Most Essential Skill Write this Down! Determining the focalpoint for myself and my organization at each moment.
  • 205. ME!
  • 206. E! M W
  • 207. Thomas Carlyle “Our job is not to see what lies dimly at a distance, but to do what lies clearly at hand.”
  • 208. Write this Down! Habit#1 I believe in myself, my students, and my school.
  • 209. CAN
  • 210. CAN
  • 211. CAN
  • 212. Who am I? TEACHER
  • 213.
  • 214. E! M W
  • 216. Twelve habits of Top 21st Century Teachers Vicki Davis @coolcatteacher www.flatclassroombook.com
  • 218. Q & A
  • 219. Web 2 Kung Fu

Notas do Editor

  1. Brian Tracy in his book, Focal Point, tells the story of a nuclear power plant that was having trouble. Something was wrong in the control room, but they couldn’t figure out what. So, they called for a consultant. The consultant spent three days observing and scribbling notes on a clipboard. Then, he asked for a step stool and stood up high on the stool, pulled out a piece of chalk, and drew an “x” on one knob. He gets down from the stool and turns to the control room manager and says “replace that knob” and strolls out. The next week, the plant manager received a bill the next week for $10,000. The plant manager called the consultant and questioned the bill, asking for an itemized list of expenses, and this is the bill he got…
  2. For placing x on gague $1.00 – for knowing which gague to place an “x” upon - $9,999.Knowing where to put the “x” in each part of your life is the critical determination. Additionally, according to influence research, you must find the vital behaviors – the few things that you place an “x” upon to work to change.
  3. Who is the one person I can control in my district? ME!
  4. Who is the one person I can control in my district? ME!
  5. Who is the one person I can control in my district? ME!
  6. You can’t spend that money.
  7. You can’t friend your students on Facebook.
  8. You can’t get a raise.
  9. You can’t teach because we have to give another test.
  10. Can’t
  11. Can’t
  12. Can’t
  13. Because there are things I CAN do.
  14. I don’t know about you but I’ve had enough of can’t! Let’s get rid of CAN’T!
  15. Right here and right now!
  16. Who is the one person I can control in my district? ME!
  17. The world is waiting on superman but education
  18. Doesn’t need a superman what education needs is a
  19. Super Can.
  20. You see in the wide world of education if I realize that I can control
  21. Who is the one person I can control in my district? ME!
  22. I can become one person, but if you realize the same thing that – hey, I can control
  23. Who is the one person I can control in my district? ME!
  24. Then we have another person, but then, look at what can happen if a lot of us decide that we can control “me”
  25. Then we have another person, but then, look at what can happen if a lot of us decide that we can control “me”
  26. And if an overwhelming majority of “me’s” decide we do something, then we become a
  27. A super majority. A super majority is a resounding number of me’s who say they can. So really, what education needs is!
  28. Super can. Because you know what,
  29. Who is the one person I can control in my district? ME!
  30. So, to talk about technology change, let’s talk about real change – life or death. Live or die kind of change by talking about the guinea worm. In 1986 there were 3.5 million cases in 20 countries. This parasitic worm can only live in a human host and its larvae are carried in the bellies of fleas in stagnant water. A person drinks the water and after the worm has grown for a year, it emerges through a blister in the skin as it slowly starts to exit the skin. It is horribly painful and the only relief from the pain is to submerge in water. So, as people with this worm immerse in water, the worm lays eggs which are eaten by the fleas and the cycle begins again. So, to get rid of this worm, they have to convince people to not only use special filters but also to completely care for the person who has the worm to keep them away from water –they have to feed them and their families for the one month it takes to get the guinea worm out of a person. By influencing change in this way, in 2009 there were only 3,190 cases in four countries and after smallpox, this looks as if it will be the second eradication of a major human disease in the world. To eradicate the guinea worm they identified the VITAL BEHAVIORS!.
  31. So, in order to influence change, Researcher Kerry Patterson says, “discover a few vital behaviors, change those, and problems –no matter their size- topple like a house of cards.” Today, we are talking about the vital behaviors to move our schools into the 21st century.
  32. We are working to determine the vital behaviors that will move us towards effective twenty first century classrooms. We’ll call this Flat Classroom. But I want you to remember as we look as the vital behaviors that there is one thing you can completely influence. What is the one thing you have complete and total control over in your district?
  33. Who is the one person I can control in my district? ME!
  34. We are working to determine the vital behaviors that will move us towards effective twenty first century classrooms. We’ll call this Flat Classroom. But I want you to remember as we look as the vital behaviors that there is one thing you can completely influence. What is the one thing you have complete and total control over in your district?
  35. Who is the one person I can control in my district? ME!
  36. We are working to determine the vital behaviors that will move us towards effective twenty first century classrooms. We’ll call this Flat Classroom. But I want you to remember as we look as the vital behaviors that there is one thing you can completely influence. What is the one thing you have complete and total control over in your district?
  37. The first thing to understand is that technology integration and improvement EVOLVES! The globally connected twenty first century classroom does not happen overnight! So, let’s look at my story a moment…
  38. In his book Pymalion in the classroom, Dr. Robert Rosenthal of Harvard University shared his experiment from the late 1960s. Beginning of school year three teachers were called into the office and told that “because of their teaching styles you are the three best teachers in the school as a special reward we are going to give each of you one classroom of the brightest childre in the school selected based on IQ tests – we expect them to jump 20-30% in academic achievement. Keep this confidential, we don’t want anyone to know.”Teachers were psyched. They were enthusiastic. At the end of the year.
  39. In Dale Carnegie’s book How to Stop Worrying and Start Living, he interviewed a woman with cancer who said “My doctors later told me there are two kinds of people when it comes to cancer: transmitters and transformers. Transmitters take the negative experience and transmit the negativity to everyone around them.
  40. Transformers turn the negativity into something positive.”
  41. You, see, Jody understands something – that in my district the only thing I can control is
  42. Me – so I have to be careful who I surround myself with. So the first VITAL behavior for positive technology change has to do with ME.
  43. When you look at your policies realize this – if you want to get technology into the classroom, you need the teacher on board. But if the teacher wants to get out to the world - -they need YOU!
  44. You don’t have to influence veryone at once –the formal leaders are easy to find – the opinion leaders are a little tougher, but if you ask around, you know who they are. Work on them when you are promoting acceptance of technology. And here is one thing about influencing them.
  45. You don’t have to influence veryone at once –the formal leaders are easy to find – the opinion leaders are a little tougher, but if you ask around, you know who they are. Work on them when you are promoting acceptance of technology. And here is one thing about influencing them.
  46. You don’t have to influence veryone at once –the formal leaders are easy to find – the opinion leaders are a little tougher, but if you ask around, you know who they are. Work on them when you are promoting acceptance of technology. And here is one thing about influencing them.
  47. This is our bridge to the next few vital behaviors. People-related vital behaviors. Because the only thing I can transform in my school is
  48. Me but we have to change me into
  49. And you’ll be surprised at how quickly me turns into We!
  50. The first thing to understand is that technology integration and improvement EVOLVES! The globally connected twenty first century classroom does not happen overnight! So, let’s look at my story a moment…
  51. The first thing to understand is that technology integration and improvement EVOLVES! The globally connected twenty first century classroom does not happen overnight! So, let’s look at my story a moment…
  52. During that time, in December 2005, I began blogging at the Cool Cat Teacher blog and used my experience from the business world as a general manager as well as my teaching, professional development teaching I’ve done for adults in technology at the college level, and my experience as IT director for my school to this blog. But you see, I still view myself as the
  53. Georgia Educators Technology Conference in Atlanta with a commission from my curriculum director to bring technologies back to my classroom that would enable me to better facilitiate
  54. Understand that flat classrooms are based upon things you already understand – Research Based Best Practices such as differentiated instruction, authentic assessment, cooperative learning, and project based learning. The only difference is that your classroom is merged with other classrooms and your student’s partners are in other time zones and locations.
  55. This is how I felt!
  56. event for my classroom and I when I wrote a blog post in October 2006 called “My students weigh in on Friedman’s Flat World.”
  57. Julie Lindsay, now one of my dearest friends responded with a simple request:“It would be great if we could interact with your students! Would you be willing/ have the time to participate in an online debate or discussion? My students are Bangladeshi and Indian nationals and have a perspective from the ‘other side of the flat world.’”
  58. She was at the International School Dhaka, Bangladesh. Her students were primarily Indian and Bangladeshi nationals who practiced the Muslim, mine, primarily Anglo Christian background.
  59. In addition to the wiki, the students also created videos about their topic where that to outsource, or receive video from their partner on the other side of the world and this is the type of video that emerged.
  60. Connecting with others – audiences are important as per the research.
  61. First you must connect yourself! Learn to pull resources to you that will help you learn.
  62. Peck and Dorricott 1994 demonstrated that audience gives meaning to the student work and improves student performance. Peers and cultures.
  63. So, literally, you can see my student Casey here who graduated from Westwood being able to say that she served as project manager for a group of students from China, Australia, and Qatar in a global collaborative team experience. This is where we need to go in all of our schools… but how do we get there.
  64. It depends upon selecting two types of communications: sychronous and asychronous. You can’t always link up simultaneously because of time zones especially if you want to collaborate outside the United states, so let’s take a look at these technologies.
  65. Synchronous means doing things at the same time and in the same place such as these synchronized swimmers. The classroom is a synchronous environment – we are synchronized and all inhabiting that classroom in the same time and space. We are together. Schools are already good at enriching our synchronous classroom environment using tools like video conferencing, webinars, and live broadcasts from around the world. However, synchronous is no longer enough.
  66. Asynchronous means NOT at the same time – for example this famous statue by Rodin was created by him over 100 years a go and we enjoy it now. We did not get to enjoy it or interact with him while he worked.
  67. We are working to determine the vital behaviors that will move us towards effective twenty first century classrooms. We’ll call this Flat Classroom. But I want you to remember as we look as the vital behaviors that there is one thing you can completely influence. What is the one thing you have complete and total control over in your district?
  68. We are working to determine the vital behaviors that will move us towards effective twenty first century classrooms. We’ll call this Flat Classroom. But I want you to remember as we look as the vital behaviors that there is one thing you can completely influence. What is the one thing you have complete and total control over in your district?
  69. We are working to determine the vital behaviors that will move us towards effective twenty first century classrooms. We’ll call this Flat Classroom. But I want you to remember as we look as the vital behaviors that there is one thing you can completely influence. What is the one thing you have complete and total control over in your district?
  70. It depends upon selecting two types of communications: sychronous and asychronous. You can’t always link up simultaneously because of time zones especially if you want to collaborate outside the United states, so let’s take a look at these technologies.
  71. So, the question is that are you evolving and connecting with multiple audiences, peers, and cultures using sychronous and asychronous communications methods. So, how do you decide what technologies to use as you integrate technologies? Where do you start?
  72. Wonderful book called the “power of pull” by John Seely Brown et. Al, talks about empowering innovation and change - he says “institutional leaders will need to seek out ‘reverse mentors’ among (often younger) individuals who can help them understand and master edge practices.” Well, who are the reverse mentors we should empower?
  73. Our students! Some schools have tech angels programs at our school this year, when I took a group of students to our Flat Classroom conference in India, the rest of the school immersed in everything India and the students we left behind in the 10th grade worked with the technology integration! Empower your students and make the part of technology integration. But again, even if your school does not – there is only one thing in your district that you can control – what is it?
  74. Build a participatory culture – if they help build it, they are already there.
  75. Include admin, teachers, it and students when you implement new programs.
  76. There is too much information and you need to rely on your friends as your filter. Additionally, this isn’t just about lifelong learning but about lifelong renewal – we have to keep relearning or we FORGET!! As Socrates said, “we lose the remembrance of them.” Additionally,
  77. Are you finding “reverse mentors” are you asking and involving students in the decisions you make? The last day of school I always do a survey and ask my students to give me feedback on the course – what did they learn, what did they like, what did they hate? LISTEN. But, we’re talking about change here – and it is more than just me that determines change – so we’ve got to
  78. Influence Behavior! But here is the problem, we are
  79. We are better with coping with problems than exerting influence to change them. Last January, I was the heaviest I’ve ever been in my life and decided to change. In July, I took up running, now I’m almost 20 pounds lighter. It was a struggle, but what I was doing before was just buying larger clothes, moving my seat back in the car – I was coping – but when I started exerting influence and self control that was when positive change happened.
  80. We’re too busy having a pity party to exert the influence to have a victory party.
  81. The tools of influence are value neutral. The same methods of influence that took
  82. Belting pants below the waist in one inner city to a nationwide trend and problem can be used to influence positive change because we
  83. Mirror those we are around.GiacomoRizoolatti and LeanoardoFogassi were studying a monkey’s brain when an accident happened. Fogassi reached for a banana and the neuron’s in the monkey’s brain fired not as expected – the neurons that fired were those that fire as if the monkey was reaching for the banana himself. They called these MIRROR neurons. Our brains fire and imitate those we see and who is around us!
  84. Researcher Kerry Patterson says, “discover a few vital behaviors, change those, and problems –no matter their size- topple like a house of cards.”
  85. Researchers from the University of Georgia had people list friends and family in 2 lists: those with self control and those without. Then, they had the subjects take a computerized test to measure self control. The name of a person flashed on the screen in 10 milliseconds – this was enough time to go into their subliminal mind but not slow enough to be read. What they found is that Those who saw the name of a person in their subconscious mind who had self control showed more self control and those who saw the name of one without had less. They found self control is contagious – that is why many overweight people report losing weight after watching things like the biggest loser.But how does this relate to technology and change – it relates heavily. Remember, the only thing I can change is --
  86. Influence Behavior! But here is the problem, we are
  87. Me – so I have to be careful who I surround myself with. So the first VITAL behavior for positive technology change has to do with ME.
  88. Connect to yourself through exercise, humor and time alone.
  89. Flattening your classroom is connecting yourself. And the first step is to connect yourselves to others. Your teachers should also connect themselves. Have an RSS reader, join the diigo educators group, listen to the current conversations at edtechtalk – join Twitter and follow at least 50 educators before you make your call on it – watch videos at the free k12 online conference and encourage networking in organizations like the Google teacher Academy, Discovery Educators, Flat Classrooms Ning.
  90. Me – so I have to be careful who I surround myself with. So the first VITAL behavior for positive technology change has to do with ME.
  91. Connect to yourself through exercise, humor and time alone.
  92. Let me ask you this? How many of you would like to reduce your chances of getting alzheimers?
  93. You see, exercise boosts brain power. Some of you get this.
  94. This is my method – started using couch to 5K and now I run about 6 miles a week. It is tough – but I had to stop just. Aerobic exercise twice a week halves your risk of general dementia and cuts your risk of Alzeheimers by sixty per cent. But you have to run your own race. So, let me ask you.
  95. If people mirror you what will they look like? Lazy, crabby and unmotivated – we’ve proven that these things spread from person to person. So, it is vital that you.
  96. Connect to yourself through exercise, humor and time alone.
  97. And you’ll be surprised at how quickly me turns into We!
  98. So you should be a transformer of others – turn the negativity into something positive. You can do that! But now, we want to talk about influencing – I know that the only person I can completely control is…
  99. Let’s go back to my irrational fear of sharks. I live in Camilla, Georgia – and let me tell you, we don’t have sharks in Camilla!
  100. But we’re dealing with different phobias here, perhaps, which the biggest of which is Techno-phobia. You’ve got a lot of teachers to lead, how do we apply current research on promoting change AND what needs to happen with 21st century skills in your classrooms to help move your schools forward.
  101. Let’s look at the research on phobias as discussed with Kerry Patterson’s book Influencer: the Power to Change Anything. On your pencil or piece of paper, I want you to jott down, how long do you think it took researchers to help someone overcome a fear of snakes?
  102. Well, what the researchers have found is that lectures don’t work. You can talk to someone all day, however, it will not change them. Additionally, when someone has a phobia, you CANNOT, I repeat CANNOT just force them to do it. They respond with such fear that they become dysfunctional. The only way to help a person overcome a phobia is through Vicarious experience. A vicarious experience is when someone watches another person do the thing in which they fear. So,
  103. Back to our question. How long does it take to overcome a phobia of snakes? The researcher Albert Bandura proved that this only took
  104. An average of 3 hours! Three hours!!! First the person watched someone through the glass and then were allowed to get closer and closer, until finally, they were sitting in a chair with a snake across their lap, petting the snake! We can do the same with technology! We must empower key teachers to pilot programs and experience technology transformation in schools and allow other teachers who may be techno-phobic to learn vicariously.
  105. when I take students to the Flat Classroom Conference in Qatar last year and in Mumbai, India in two weeks, grades 2-8 will travel with us virtual and connect with those who are going via skype, voicethreads, and our blogs to learn about and immerse in India.
  106. This is also the transformation that allowed this picture to happen last year – with these five students from four different continents including one from my school, one from the Middle East, another from Africa, and a fourth from Australia.
  107. So you should be a transformer of others – turn the negativity into something positive. You can do that! But now, we want to talk about influencing – I know that the only person I can completely control is…
  108. Our professional development looks like this – we put so much into 10 hours that they cannot digest it all. It is too much and overloads them.
  109. Instead your professional development should be in small succulent bites – on a weekly basis through these global connections – reading our RSS reader. In fact,
  110. So, I embed my learning and take 15 minutes 2-3 times a week to learn and explore new technologies and this, has been the thing that has led to the complete transformation of my classroom! But you don’t have time – you say.
  111. If you look at change – Kaizen as advocated by the japanese is the best method of change – slow and steady
  112. In today’s society everything changes except the law of change…As Heraclitus said, “you cannot step in the same river twice.” Once you’ve stepped in the river, your simple stirring of the mud at the bottom has changed the nature of the river itself. WE must realize we all have our own story and must keep learning so we must adapt – the river has changed since someone else stepped in a river before us.
  113. Our professional development looks like this – we put so much into 10 hours that they cannot digest it all. It is too much and overloads them.
  114. Use your brain – Hurst’s law – An unbounded data stream becomes irrelevant.
  115. I’d like to ask you if Helen Keller were in your school today, would she become Helen Keller? It took one of the greatest teacherpreneurs of all time, Anne Sullivan, to reach and unlock this student!
  116. The first thing to understand is that technology integration and improvement EVOLVES! The globally connected twenty first century classroom does not happen overnight! So, let’s look at my story a moment…
  117. How do you eat a watermelon?
  118. If you eat it whole, you’ll choke.
  119. No, the way you eat a watermelon is one bit at a time.
  120. And that is what I suggest for you to do today. Your assignment for this webinar today is to come up with your “Big Three” at the end of the webinar. Pick three things – start there!
  121. Me but we have to change me into
  122. “Every day is a new day to a wise man.” Start now.
  123. We don’t teach blogging, wikis, podcasting for their sake, but for what they let us do.
  124. Me but we have to change me into
  125. And you’ll be surprised at how quickly me turns into We!
  126. Do the things that sit at hand like Thomas Carlyle said. “Our job is not to see what lies dimly at a distance, but to do what lies clearly at hand.” Investigate your next three things.
  127. The first thing to understand is that technology integration and improvement EVOLVES! The globally connected twenty first century classroom does not happen overnight! So, let’s look at my story a moment…
  128. I can do something. I
  129. Can. I can.
  130. I CAN. So, angela, what can we do in our schools and classrooms today that will make a difference?
  131. And you’ll be surprised at how quickly me turns into We!