It's just incredible to me, the way my professional learning has changed in the past 25 years. I've always gone to conferences and read professional books, but this blog and Twitter have changed the playing field dramatically.
I was in a booktalk this week that was born on Twitter -- a tweet went out from the All Write conference (during Jeff Anderson's keynote, as best I remember) about this book:
Making Learning Whole by David Perkins
Jossey-Bass, 2001
Maria (@mariacaplin and
Teaching in the 21st Century) was "attending" All Write long-distance by following the tweets, and she suggested that we get together and discuss this book. I dropped it into my Amazon cart using the Amazon app I downloaded (I think this was also during Jeff's keynote -- Jeff, I PROMISE I was listening!!), we read the book, invited others, and wound up spending a delightful morning with Cathy (@CathyMere and
Reflect & Refine) chatting about the book, teaching, workshop model, and technology tools.
Here are a few of my take-aways:
1. Perkins frames his thinking around the game of baseball and these seven principles:
• Play the whole game.
• Make the game worth playing.
• Work on the hard parts.
• Play out of town.
• Uncover the hidden game,
• Learn from the team...and the other team.
• Learn the game of learning.
2. Our booktalk fit his principles exactly:
• We
played the whole game, from the conference, to the tweets, to the reading, to the meeting, to the discussing, and now, to the blogging.
• We
made the game worth playing by playing together. It's worth playing because we will use our new thinking and learning in our classrooms in the coming year.
•
We played out of town. We met at Maria's house (and if you know where Maria lives, you are laughing out loud right now -- she takes
out of town to a new level), hoping to sit on the dock of her pond to chat. It was too hot and humid, so we enjoyed the comfort of her kitchen table.
• As I write this post, I'm uncovering bits and pieces of
the hidden game of our booktalk. Part of the hidden game was that we were doing what the book suggests without having to think hard about it. Our own learning is whole. We just need to make sure we figure out lots of ways to do this for our 1st, 4th, and 5th graders. I'll share more of what I saw as the hidden game in a minute. On to the next principle.
•
Learn from the team. We did that by meeting -- three people from two districts and three different buildings and levels. We'll
learn from other teams as we take our learning back to our grade levels, and from the comments here and on Twitter.
• The last point --
learn the game of learning -- wraps back around, for me, to the one about the hidden game. Read on...
3. Here's what I learned about the game of learning:
• We didn't get started right away talking about the book. We needed time to socialize (and enjoy the fabulous cranberry coffee cake).
THE SOCIAL PIECE IS HUGE.
• Our conversation was not sequential and organized.
AN EXACT AGENDA IS NOT NECESSARY.
• Almost as important as our conversation about the book was our talk and play with Evernote, and our sharing about how we keep track of anecdotal information about our students (conference notes, reading status, artifacts, etc).
UNEXPECTED LEARNING IS AS VALUABLE AS WHAT'S IN THE LESSON PLAN.
It's a great book and I highly recommend it, but as you can see, the journey of the booktalk is a large part of what made the book so valuable for me...and it will likely stay anchored in my thinking more than other books that I've read on my own and that have no bigger story attached. (Yet another example of the hidden game/the learning about learning!)