(This post contains embedded 'tweets' that may not render properly depending upon your device and browser.)
Ummmm... let's do this. #Tomorrow #Edcamp #CISC2015 #Couldntbemoreexcited #EdcampPalooza pic.twitter.com/r3K6AlFZ8I
— Kristen Swanson (@kristenswanson) February 11, 2015
If Kristen Swanson #couldntbemoreexcited about #EdcampPalooza, then lurking on the #CISC2015 hashtag on Twitter with @Haydeewan seemed like an inviting activity.
Probably irrationally, I was inspired to virtually attend the symposium by following its stream, collecting tweets, and then organizing them into this reflective blog post. By reordering the tweets, I think it's interesting how common themes run across different sessions and activities.
If you were at the symposium, I hope you enjoy my curation and interpretation. If you were not, I'm sure will enjoy attending virtually with me!
Edcamp
The CISC Leadership Symposium included the largest Edcamp ever!
Kristen shared the Edcamp CISC Session Schedule which, in true unconference fashion, represents the authentic interests of the participants. They included the divergent and ambitious inquiries that characterize self determined learning.
Kristen shared the Edcamp CISC Session Schedule which, in true unconference fashion, represents the authentic interests of the participants. They included the divergent and ambitious inquiries that characterize self determined learning.
Great question and conversation #cisc2015 #Edcamp @dgbern @kristenswanson pic.twitter.com/m8rQi5odg7
— SBCEO EdTech (@sbceoedtech) February 11, 2015
How do you make change the norm? @CajonValleyUSD is ahead of the curve #edcamp #cisc2015 pic.twitter.com/d9FLGlQITu
— Carmen Restrepo (@Carmen_Restrepo) February 11, 2015
#cisc2015 just heard a colleague say about principals and innovation-"proceed until apprehended"- a visionary leader!
— Susan Hukkanen (@soozh) February 11, 2015
A great Ed Camp conversation this a.m. w/ed thought leaders from around CA on creating conditions for adult creativity #cisc2015
— RSDSS (@RSDSS7) February 12, 2015
Great question: How do we switch from teaching the “what” to teaching the “how” so that our students can tackle anything? #cisc2015
— David_Bernier (@dgbern) February 11, 2015
At Edcamp Tokyo, we asked participants to share their session notes so that everything would be published via our Edcamp Tokyo Collabornization document, a practice I would like to have seen adopted for this most epic of Edcamps.
I believe that Edcamps and other 'unconferences' and the authentic and engaging conversations that they kindle and sustain are a model for the future of professional development.
Cognitosphere
Education visionary Grant Lichtman introduced the concept of the cognitosphere, a model which provocatively represents the ubiquitous and highly dynamic nature of learning.
'The cognitosphere includes both the body of knowledge as it exists and evolves, and the process of creating, teaching, transferring, managing, and learning that knowledge. Knowledge is based on the human experience and therefore includes both content and skills. It represents the total of all the answers to all the questions that have been asked in the past, as well as the process of asking questions that will create new knowledge in the future.'
Grant Lichtman, Welcome to the Cognitosphere
Welcome to the cognitoshpere #cisc2015 #edjourney @GrantLichtman
— Shelah Feldstein (@FeldsteinShelah) February 12, 2015
We are all educator leaders - are we ready for the cognitosphere? #grantlichtman #cisc2015
— Lynn Lysko Ed.D. (@LlyskoLysko) February 12, 2015
learning is creative - student-owned, knowledge creators, embracing failure @grantlichtman #cisc2015
— Timothy Budz (@TimothyBudz) February 12, 2015
"Schools should be ecosystems not industrial systems" - @GrantLichtman at #CISC2015
— Karen J. Pittman (@KarenPittman) February 12, 2015
Employers need people with the 4Cs, not content mastery. ~ @KarenPittman #cisc2015
— Kristen Swanson (@kristenswanson) February 12, 2015
I think a model based on the '4 Cs of the Cognitosphere' could have serious traction. I see a strong connection to the 21st Century Fluencies of the Global Digital Citizen Foundation, a core resource in my approaches to teaching and learning.
One word
Mr Lichtman also took the opportunity to pose his #OnewordK12 question, 'What one word describes your vision of the highest goals of learning? What do you hope to exude as an educator? Of what do you want your school to “reek”?'
As the audience responses poured out from Twitter, I recognized this as an exercise in Collaborative Sensemaking and tasked myself with tabulating and organizing the results. This was a truly tedious task which I wouldn't repeat under the same circumstances, but due to an unwavering combination of curiosity and stubborness, I completed the list below which includes the results, organized by number of entries, alphabetized, with a link to every 'one word' tweet at the symposium.
It turns out that the educators at CISC this year describe their vision as, most wish to exude, and most want their schools to reek of 'passion'!
As the audience responses poured out from Twitter, I recognized this as an exercise in Collaborative Sensemaking and tasked myself with tabulating and organizing the results. This was a truly tedious task which I wouldn't repeat under the same circumstances, but due to an unwavering combination of curiosity and stubborness, I completed the list below which includes the results, organized by number of entries, alphabetized, with a link to every 'one word' tweet at the symposium.
It turns out that the educators at CISC this year describe their vision as, most wish to exude, and most want their schools to reek of 'passion'!
agency 1,2,3; commitment 1,2,3; community 1,2,3; confidence 1,2,3; empowerment 1,2,3; energy 1,2,3; excellence 1,2,3; hope 1,2,3; imagination 1,2,3; love 1,2,3; perseverance 1,2,3; possibility 1,2,3,4; transformative 1,2,3
acceptance 1,2; amazing 1,2; authentic 1,2; connection 1,2; courageous 1,2; dynamic 1,2; exuberance 1,2; leadership 1,2; learning(culture) 1,2; meaningful 1,2; mindfulness 1,2; ownership 1,2; positive 1,2; relevance 1,2; risk 1,2; understanding 1,2
achievement 1; active 1; affirmation 1; believe 1; big 1; brave 1; buy in 1; challenging 1; compassionate 1; competence 1; delight 1; democracy 1; determined 1; different 1; discovery 1; discussion 1; empathy 1; equity 1; everyone 1; exhilarated 1; expectation 1; exploration 1; fearless 1; flow 1; focus 1; gamification 1; give 1; google 1; growing 1; happy 1; honesty 1; imperative 1; inquiry 1; inquisitiveness 1; intriguing 1; inviting 1; kindness 1; motivating 1; opportunities 1; optimism 1; options 1; oral discourse 1; preparation 1; progress 1; purposeful 1; relationships 1; rigor 1; sky 1; sparkle 1; spirit 1; stickwithitness 1; systemic 1; team 1; urgency 1; value 1; voice 1
I'm sure it would amuse Mr Lichtman that the word 'grit' appears exactly zero times.
Maker Education
Perhaps the most exciting event at the symposium for me was Dale Dougherty's Maker Movement workshop.
Packed out Maker Movement at an Admin dominated conference is a good sign! #cisc2015 http://t.co/hVR9NnwWyb
— jcorippo (@jcorippo) February 12, 2015
Learning shift in #makered. Do you want collaboration or competition? Intrinsic or extrinsic rewards? #cisc2015 pic.twitter.com/gFDTOC78PZ
— Tonya Ward Singer (@TonyaWardSinger) February 12, 2015
Culture shift: skills over money, building over information, collaboration over competition, intrinsic over extrinsic reward #cisc2015
— Stephy Verners (@Stephyverners) February 12, 2015
What if we already have what we need to recreate education every day, every lesson, with the hands of our students. #cisc2015
— Stephanie (@slw0424) February 12, 2015
Making is about the freedom to fail, engagement, and collaboration. #cisc2015 #MakerEd
— David_Bernier (@dgbern) February 12, 2015
When projects don't work is when kids often learn the most. @nirvan #cisc2015
— Tonya Ward Singer (@TonyaWardSinger) February 13, 2015
Give kids space and then get Out of the way. #cisc2015
— Rkolset (@Rkolset) February 13, 2015
Give kids space and get out of the way @nirvan @CainesArcade @imagination #cisc2015
— Hilary Haugen Dito (@hilarydito) February 13, 2015
Making encourages kids to play - and there is not enough of that in their lives... #cisc2015 #makered
— brianrsimmons (@brianrsimmons) February 12, 2015
Making is a way if thinking that things aren't done for us, we do them! @dalepd #makered #cisc2015
— Aaron Vanderwerff (@aVndrwrff) February 12, 2015
Making squishy circuits while integrating #NGSS and #makerspace @CajonValleyUSD #cisc2015 pic.twitter.com/IoQThaRh2K
— Carmen Restrepo (@Carmen_Restrepo) February 13, 2015
Just as we shape what we make, what we make shapes us. #cisc2015
— Kami Thordarson (@kamithor) February 12, 2015
Love it! @POUSDSupt: "Making is like dance. Sometimes you follow the steps and sometimes you improvise." #cisc2015 #makered”
— Jacie Maslyk (@DrJacieMaslyk) February 12, 2015
Dale Dougherty @dalepd was awesome! The Maker Movement is exciting and has HUGE potential to supercharge learning. #cisc2015
— Daniel J. Sosa (@djsosa77) February 12, 2015
Reading these educator leaders find excitement in the Maker Movement gives me tremendous hope and encouragement for the future of formal learning. In my blog post, Maker Club year 1, I reflected on my experiences with the young makers in my school and I am thrilled to see growing awareness and enthusiasm for making.
Improvisation
I have always found value in improvisation, particularly due to being a jazz musician, as an abstract conversation and exploration of shared models, ideas, and feelings.Unfortunately, my experiences in formal education, other than my New School years, have emphasized predictability and repetition over spontaneity and iteration.
Truthfully, I was shocked to see educator leaders waxing on improvisation, valuing creativity and divergent connections.
YES! Don't Prepare, Just Show UP with @patryanmadson http://t.co/xcW4nftYzA #cisc2015 #improv
— Alyssa Gallagher (@am_gallagher) February 12, 2015
Attention, acceptance, appreciation- the foundations of improv. #cisc2015
— Jessica Mautner (@MautnerJessica) February 12, 2015
#cisc2015 @patryanmadson improvisors find value in the offering. "What is here today and how can I make value of it?"
— Catharine Reznicek (@cathyreznicek) February 12, 2015
Content is ubiquitous; Connections are available; Creativity- what we learned can be easily shared. Kristen Swanson #cisc2015
— Daniel Mosunich (@dmosunich) February 12, 2015
Improvisation - ideas are valued not judged #cisc2015
— Kim (@NoodleKimw) February 13, 2015
What if the professors in my teacher preparation program thought similarly?...
Change
"We are schizophrenic about change." - Chip Heath #cisc2015
— Michael W. Niehoff (@mwniehoff) February 12, 2015
Chip Heath's observation is one of my favorite tweets from the symposium. I have often experienced the conundrum of being encouraged to innovate and redefine how learning occurs in my classroom, only to be asked later for traditional reports aligned to standards with quantitative summative assessment data.
"We cannot tweak the industrial model of education to create fundamental change." via @GrantLichtman #cisc2015
— Matt O'Donnell (@21cMatt) February 12, 2015
"The world is changing too fast to wait for longitudinal studies"@GrantLichtman #cisc2015
— Kelly Matteri (@KMatteri) February 12, 2015
What inhibits change? fear and inertia! #grantlichtman #CISC2015
— Michelle Hunter (@HunterMichell) February 12, 2015
Don't make every change at school "world peace". Successful systems start with small, actionable change. Horacio Sanchez #cisc2015
— Stephanie (@slw0424) February 12, 2015
The change in education ahas nothing to do with the technology, it has to do wit the change in relationships @kristenswanson #cisc2015
— Will Kimbley, M.S. (@willkimbley) February 12, 2015
Changing schools is uncomfortable not hard #cisc2015
— Roxane Liu (@jliu_rox) February 12, 2015
MT @chuck_wade: How to make change happen? Not analyze , think, change, but: See, feel, change #cisc2015 pic.twitter.com/4FQRjbIviH
— Tracy Watanabe (@tracywatanabe) February 12, 2015
What if we could change the metrics of what good looks like in education? It's not graduation, it's competencies! @karenpittman #cisc2015
— Tonya Ward Singer (@TonyaWardSinger) February 12, 2015
"Get the jargon out of the way." @KarenPittman #CISC2015
— Laura Voshall (@voshall_laura) February 12, 2015
Love complex vs complicated @KarenPittman #cisc2015
— Mickey Porter (@mporterSCOE) February 12, 2015
The symposium's conciousness of change seemed to center around decomplication. In fact, the metaphor of farming, often regarded as a 'simple' way of life, was used to change perspective on the act of teaching. Farming is complex, but farmers tend not to be complicated. I find this analogy to be very comforting somehow.
The word 'cultivate' has probably appeared in every one of my classroom blog posts in various contexts, although this is my first time thinking of education in terms of farming. It aligns perfectly with my ideas of LX Design and metateaching and I appreciate the organic and visceral imagery.
"#teachers are not a guide on the side or sage on the stage...instead a FARMER" cultivating learning @GrantLichtman #cisc2015
— JM Villarreal, Ed.D. (@jmvdoc) February 12, 2015
Considering plants and animals, why not address the elephant in the room?
How to facilitate change #cisc2015 pic.twitter.com/qg4RFD4mxY
— Mark Archon (@MarkArchon) February 12, 2015
"How do we move the elephant? Simplify by getting the jargon out of the way--a quest for clarity." #cisc2015 pic.twitter.com/1DAQmDvgXc
— Amye Billings Scott (@amye_bee) February 12, 2015
Recipe for Change: Direct the rider (analytic), motivate the elephant (emotion), shape the path. #cisc2015
— Rhonda (@rhondacorippo) February 12, 2015
What is your elephant voice saying to you? #cisc2015
— Sammie Cervantez (@principalnheels) February 12, 2015
While there are undeniably elephants being ignored at any educational conference, this elephant is another metaphor which seeks to provide a model for change.
I appreciate that only emotion can move the elephant, and I believe that that emotion comes from, and should come from, the children.
When we focus on the children and their stories, the elephant is unstoppable.
How do we motivate the elephant? Focus on the children we serve. #cisc2015
— MarkLuque (@MarkALuque) February 12, 2015
"What if you already have what you need? What if it's sitting right in front of you?" Patricia Ryan Madson #cisc2015
— Jacqueline Kearns (@Jacqueline_Kear) February 12, 2015
Amazing story-amazing video! Caine's Arcade is inspiring! #cisc2015 http://t.co/v4tKP7CtjQ
— Jonathan Blackmore (@jblackmore65) February 13, 2015
Incredibly inspired by Caine's story. Caine's arcade exemplifies creativity, imagination, perseverance. A strong argument for PBL #cisc2015
— Cindy Bak (@cindyyuribak) February 13, 2015
"Education as a deeply personal exercise". #cisc2015 @chrisemdin pic.twitter.com/AhrKYuWqgN
— Patricia Law, Ed.D. (@patriciamlaw) February 13, 2015
Education is a deeply personal experience. It should rock you to your core. Have the courage to act, not just imagine. #HipHopEd #cisc2015
— Elizabeth MacClain (@MacClainy) February 13, 2015
The power of authentic student voice is essential! #CISC2015
— Tim Ward (@tkward16) February 11, 2015
What if every educator-leader saw students' language, culture and background as an asset? #cisc2015 #ELL
— Tonya Ward Singer (@TonyaWardSinger) February 12, 2015
What do you do as an educator to inspire students? #cisc2015 @DrRussQ pic.twitter.com/DPoS4pVbaP
— Monique Corridori (@MoniCorridori) February 13, 2015
If listening to children is 'innovative', then we have a lot of catching up to do.
While listening to children in education may be historically new, it is gratefully older than history in terms of relationships and mentoring. It was great to see the Educator Leaders at the symposium focusing on positive developments.
Bright spots
Fortunately, incredible learning is happening all around us, all the time.
Let's focus on the bright spots in your district. #CISC2015
— Lori Gonzalez (@DirEdSvsLori) February 12, 2015
Our role as leaders is to find the bright spots and shine a light on them. #cisc2015
— MarkLuque (@MarkALuque) February 12, 2015
Chip Heath: look for the bright spots. That's where the answers are. #cisc2015
— Debra Boggs (@boggsliteracy) February 12, 2015
Bright spots will always look simple but trust them anyway #cisc2015
— jean madden (@JeanJeancazares) February 12, 2015
What can we learn from "the bright spots"? #cisc2015
— Jennie Snyder, Ed.D. (@POUSDSupt) February 12, 2015
What if Trust and Transparency can empower 'bright spots' everywhere?
What if...?
What if...? We want to imagine. Connect what we want with what we are doing. #cisc2015 @GrantLichtman pic.twitter.com/4zb45hXkKA
— Tracy Watanabe (@tracywatanabe) February 12, 2015
What if? List generated through educator dreaming with Grant Lichtman #CISC2015 pic.twitter.com/UKvwSgR6Gy
— Mary Anne James (@majcoe) February 12, 2015
What if school afforded students the opportunity to ask "what if" over and over again? #cisc2015 pic.twitter.com/TFE8B74Tw4
— Stephanie (@slw0424) February 12, 2015
My 'What if...?'s
What if we took Grant Lichtman's suggestions literally?
Grant Lichtman says get rid of teacher as label but teacher-leader. #cisc2015
— STEM (@LacoeQuan) February 12, 2015
"No more titles like principal, teacher, supt - we're all educator-leaders" @GrantLichtman #cisc2015
— Laura Bradley (@LAMBRADLEY) February 12, 2015
Let go of anchors and silos - @GrantLichtman #cisc2015 pic.twitter.com/TiSirwJKDs
— Gina Silveira (@GSilveira007) February 12, 2015
How do we break down anchors and silos that interrupt creativity and innovation #cisc2015
— Brian Curwick (@bcurwick) February 12, 2015
What if we discard 'anchors and silos' by closing county and district offices of education, convert them to community centers, and move all educators into school sites?
What if educators observed a five year moratorium on conferences? Instead, apply 100% of our energy, resources, attention, and passion to finding and cultivating the bright spots within our own learning communities. Then we get back together to share.
"All change for the better happened because someone called out the status quo as wrong." - Chip Heath #cisc2015 pic.twitter.com/TCFEl3AJAw
— Michael W. Niehoff (@mwniehoff) February 12, 2015
How do we lead from where we are? We are all educator leaders - flatten the hierarchy for real change #cisc2015
— Alyssa Gallagher (@am_gallagher) February 12, 2015
#cisc2015 pic.twitter.com/pOm57ADzEz
— Rita Nutsch (@rnutsch) February 12, 2015
What if our county, district leaders all modeled "what if" by taking risks and empowering their educators to do the same? #CISC2015
— Grant Lichtman (@GrantLichtman) February 12, 2015
Empower teachers to make change! Allow risk taking and freedom to design instructional practices and blend resources. #cisc2015
— Kami Thordarson (@kamithor) February 12, 2015
#CISC2015 "Not taking a risk is a risk we cannot afford."great quote from Grant Lichtman. Great session. It's doable.
— Beverly Eidmann (@thebevtoy) February 13, 2015
How would you use this with your team? #cisc2015 pic.twitter.com/FEd26N5GA1
— Dr. Stella M. Kemp (@stellakemp) February 13, 2015
"And the day came when the risk to remain tight in a bud was more painful than the risk to blossom" -Anais Nin @chrisemdin #cisc2015
— Cindy Bak (@cindyyuribak) February 13, 2015
What if 'the day when the risk to remain tight in a bud was more painful than the risk to blossom' is today?
"Be able to take a leap, and let it go. It's an experiment. If it doesn't work, stop. If it works, do it again." #cisc2015 #hiphopEd
— Roxane Fuentes (@ERUSDFuentes) February 13, 2015
#hiphoped is more about listening to the students, and acting on what they "say." 4 @chrisemdin that was music, rhythm and rhyme. #cisc2015
— John Patten (@jpatten) February 13, 2015
"When you have imagination, and you deny yourself the possibility of acting on it, it kills the spirit" #cisc2015 @chrisemdin
— Chuck Wade (@chuck_wade) February 13, 2015
Gr8 suggestion by Heath: "Just try something new for 10 min tomorrow". It works in schools; I have seen it! #CISC2015
— Grant Lichtman (@GrantLichtman) February 12, 2015
The CISC 2015 Leadership Symposium was a test. A test of authenticity and courage.
Courage
Without courage, nothing else worth doing is possible. So much of what I gleaned from the tweets from CISC 2015 is that educator leaders are trying to muster their courage to reform education, how we learn, into a totally new model.Looking for 'bright spots', adopting a design mentality, motivating the elephant, etc, it's all meaningless if it doesn't lead to action.
Have the courage to experiment, if it doesn't work, stop. If it does, keep doing it until it stops working. @chrisemdin #hiphopEd #cisc2015
— Christine Roberts (@tcoechristine) February 13, 2015
When you have courage you don't have to know every thing that is going to happen! #cisc2015
— Mark Archon (@MarkArchon) February 13, 2015
What will I do tomorrow that will combine imagination and courage? #cisc2015
— Marie Williams (@FSUSD2ndaryEd) February 13, 2015
Change a moment into a movement. #cisc2015
— Mathew Barnett (@mabarn) February 13, 2015
Stop talking just do it!!!! #cisc2015
— Joilyn Campitiello (@joilyncampi) February 12, 2015
With so many outstanding, inspiring, and impassioned ideas in such a short time, I hope this post has helped to synthesize some of them and provide opportunities to reflect and act.
'Fruition' is my #onewordK12 hope, dream, and goal for education and learning. @GrantLichtman
— Bart Miller (@BarMill) February 19, 2015
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