Wednesday, December 17, 2014

Wonder Wednesdays!

What is another name for thesaurus? (I asked Google, and the 7th entry down gave me “wordhoard.”)

How do people go up to heaven if we bury them in the underground? (compliments of my 6 year old daughter)

What if C-A-T really spelled dog? (Compliments of Ogre in Revenge of the Nerds part II: Nerds in Pardise) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JT0zjorR68A

What happens when you think the gas warning light on your car is merely a suggestion? (compliments of my wife on a road trip last year)

We ask questions in our head all the time. The cool thing is we often have the technology to answer a lot of these questions sitting in the palm of our hands. Even cooler, the classroom gives us the opportunity to discuss the “UNgoogleable” ones with 25+ at once. There is a push for student inquiry these days, and letting students direct their own learning more often. Leaving some time for open discussion on what students are wondering about can yield some great results and lead to better connections.

If you do not get a good discussion after asking the students for their wonders, at least you will get some good stories. Trust me. Ask me about running out of gas on I-35… in January… in Minnesota some time; you will love it!

Happy Holidays everyone. I hope you have a safe and happy Winter Break.

Credits:
Special thanks to the ladies at @literacyspark http://goo.gl/upSTuR, The Lambda-Lambda-Lambdas along w/ 20th Century Fox, and my beautiful wife.


Monday, December 8, 2014

Hi Yah!

As I work together with my teams, and I see the passion of the teachers I work with, I am reminded of a TAPs story we used to tell at the summer camp that I worked at during my high school and college years. It is an intriguing story, similar to one of Aesop’s Fables.
Bundle of Sticks…
Long ago, on the shores of the Wapsipinicon River, there was an Indian tribe whose chief was in failing health. Having no clear heir to the chief, the council of elders developed a test to find one. The first tribe member to pass the test would become the tribe’s new chief. The test aimed to establish someone that would handle the power and prestige of the position with grace and dignity, and use their mind to lead the tribe successfully into the future.
The day of the test came and there was a long line of tribesmen outside the chief’s teepee, each with hopes of becoming the next chief. The tribe’s best warrior, and most would say the strongest, had waited outside since the night before to be first in line for his chance. The young warrior stepped into the teepee, while the others in line resigned themselves to him passing the test and being the next chief. Nonetheless, they continued to wait in line just in case. The young warrior stepped up and one elder handed him a bundle of twelve sticks tied together with two pieces of rope. The chief gave him the simple instructions, “Break all twelve sticks, and you will be the new chief.”
The strong warrior chuckled to himself, thinking that this was such a simple task of strength that he was a shoe-in to be the next chief. With all his might, he bent the bundle of sticks, and a few broke, but not all. He left the teepee, defeated.
The next man in line was given the same task. He was a very bright member of the tribe. He had been responsible for inventing the “everlasting torch” at the entrance to the village. He thought for a moment, raised the bundle of sticks in the air, and slammed it down over his knee. This time, more sticks broke, but not all. He too left the teepee defeated. All day long, one by one, the tribesmen failed the test. It was getting dark now and the council became skeptical that they would be establishing a new chief that day.
A teenage boy had returned from a hunting trip, and when he dropped the food off for his family he was surprised to learn that no one had passed the test. With his family’s encouragement, he went to the chief’s teepee. The boy was given the same task that so many before him had failed. He took the bundle of sticks from the council and looked it over very carefully. Different strategies ran through his head, but he quickly dismissed most, thinking these had been tried by the others. Then, he calmly set the bundle of sticks on the ground and knelt down next to it. He untied the two ropes holding the bundle together, and removed each stick individually, breaking one at a time until he had broken all twelve. The council walked out of the teepee with the boy and announced that he would be the next chief.

There are many parallels we can draw between this story and our lives in education. I will let you draw most of those comparisons on your own. There is one, however, that applies to all facets of our educational system (students, teachers, parents, administration, etc.). If we are of one mind, and unite to assist each other, we will be like this bundle, unbroken by the forces working against us. If we are divided among ourselves, we will be broken as easily as these sticks. The students’ success, just like the tribe, depends on it.