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Latest Updates: 21st century skills RSS

  • avatar

    Why Teach Power2Achieve? "The kids deserve it!"

    posted in Character Blog, Power2Achieve Community at 2:59 pm on August 19, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 21st century skills, , ,

    On Wednesday of this week, my colleagues and I wrapped up our final Power2Achieve training in Iowa. It was an intensive few weeks of training preparation and delivery with our field research schools, each site with its unique student population, needs, and delivery strategies.

    At each training we revisited the core concepts of the program and introduced the NEW Power2Achieve approach which they helped shape through their dedication, hard work and feedback during their first year as pilot schools.

    During our last day of training at Oskaloosa High School, I posed the question to the staff: “Why are we doing this program?” The teachers completed a self study to answer this question. Next, they shared their answers in small groups at their tables, then I asked if they would share some of their comments to the larger group.

    A wonderful women sitting in the center of the room was first to raise her hand and said with 110% certainty, “The kids deserve it!”

    This passionate opening comment led to a flurry of amazing reasons why the Power2Achieve program and the competencies it reaches are so important to teach our young people today. It was a very gratifying moment to hear the many reasons why these dedicated teachers are working so hard to help their students succeed.

    As I said in my opening, it was an intensive and overwhelming few of weeks of coordination and preparation from our team to be ready to deliver the workshops. However, even more overwhelming was the positive response and reception to the evolution of the Power2Achieve program for the upcoming year from all of our schools. We are so proud of our Iowa Educators for their commitment to their students, the teaching profession and the Power2Achieve program. Our Iowa Power2Achieve schools are ready!

    A big thanks to the staff and administrators at Creston, Ogden, Oskaloosa and Urbandale High Schools. I hope you have a great year…You deserve it!

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  • avatar

    "A Metacurriculum of 21st Century Learning"

    posted in Character Blog at 5:29 pm on May 18, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 21st century skills, crossroads, diverse, educational leadership, educational needs, families, high schools, intense, intentional, metacurriculum, ,

    In a recent issue of Educational Leadership (April, 2010), Ed Coughlin at times sounds as if he’s describing IEE’s Power2 programming in his article, “High Schools at a Crossroads.” In the article Mr. Coughlin addresses a variety of issues regarding the educational needs of diverse high school students in the 21st century.

    In a section titled, “A Better Future: A Metacurriculum of 21st Century Learning,” Mr. Coughlin suggests that schools must see traditional academic programs as only one part of a student’s educational experience, describing another essential piece as being a 21st century metacurriculum:

    “Whereas the academic curriculum focuses on the knowledge that students must master within the content areas, the metacurriculum focuses on the learning skills, habits of mind, and life and workplace skills students need to be successful in a competitive, shrinking world.”

    The author then identifies four beliefs that support this approach:

    1)       “Important 21st century skills, such as critical thinking, innovative thinking, and self-directed behavior, can be explicitly taught, applied, and assessed.”

    2)      “21st century skills are not “soft skills” but important qualities that may contribute more directly to student success in future education, life, and careers than many academic skills do.”

    3)      “Students can most effectively develop 21st century skills in the context of rich, authentic academic learning opportunities that closely mirror the type of work done by professionals.

    4)      “Schools and parents share joint responsibility for helping all students attain these skills.”

    Mr. Coughlin’s description of a metacurriculum becomes more powerful when it is united with the concept of intentional and intense character development programming.

    As we work to continue developing Power2Achieve programs, we continue to align with the student outcomes identified by the Partnership for 21st Century Skills (1), lay the groundwork for experiences that apply to students’ lives both in and out of the classroom (2), develop student competencies through authentic experiential activities (3), and find new and innovative ways to strengthen the educational partnership between schools and families (4).

    Mr. Coughlin closes his article with the following challenge:

    “The schools that will be successful will transform themselves from transmitters of knowledge and information to orchestrators of a complex program of learning facilitation and cognitive development.  Will yours be one of them?”

    More than any other program available today, Power2Achieve allows schools to answer “YES.”

    _________

    Reference: Coughlin, E. (2010, April). High schools at crossroads. Educational Leadership, 67(7), 48-53.

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  • avatar

    posted in Power2Achieve Community at 2:19 pm on May 10, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 21st century skills, , , , ,

    In Iowa, we continue to create a strong foundation and partnerships for the continued growth of the Power2Achieve programming across the state. As the first Power2Achieve Regional Center in the nation, we are thrilled to partner with IEE on several innovative projects that has an impact on the culture of excellence and ethics.

    Starting several years ago with our initial training at IEE, we have partnered with the Iowa Department of Education, inviting the DE Learning Supports Consultant to attend an intense and inspiring immersion in the Smart & Good research and the evolving Power2Achieve programming. This collaboration has been invaluable as we all work together to define and refine the P2A program and its authentic alignment with Iowa’s Core Curriculum and 21st Century Skills roll out. Our complimentary work together is best captured in a document that was generated by Director, Judy Jeffrey and her colleagues at the Department of Education which I have posted below.

    We’ve established the foundation and are looking forward to continued opportunities to work with the DE, administrators, faculty and students in Iowa’s schools with the Power2Achieve programming.

    A statement by the Iowa Department of Education on Power2Achieve™ Programming:

    Although significant resources have been invested in improvements to teaching and learning, most schools across the nation have failed to close the achievement gap. Iowans want every student prepared for today’s technology-rich, global economy regardless of ethnicity, income, or geographical location. The Core Curriculum helps Iowa Schools deliver that education through a student-based approach that supports higher expectations for all students. It builds on Iowa’s long history of community leadership in education and relies on partners across the state for implementation in high schools by 2012. The Iowa Core Curriculum bolsters Iowa’s education structure through mandated state content standards and benchmarks aligned to improve student achievement. A continuum of learning supports that remove barriers to learning will increase the capacity of the Iowa Core Curriculum to reach all students.

    Power2Achieve™ programming is designed to develop the culture and competencies of excellence and ethics needed for teaching and learning in Iowa’s high schools. Implemented together the programs boost teaching and learning in all classrooms (1) by identifying the competencies needed for learning and developing them through everyday teaching and learning, and (2) by reinforcing academic achievement and pro-social development through the whole-school culture of excellence and ethics. The Power2Achieve programming is designed to impact essential elements of the Iowa Core Curriculum and newly required 21st Century Skills. The combination of a highly relevant and rigorous Core Curriculum within a school-wide culture dedicated to the development of excellence and ethics is a recipe for success.

    Through collaboration with the Institute for Character Development and the Institute for Excellence & Ethics the Iowa Department of Education will connect the culture and competencies of excellence and ethics with the Core Curriculum (21st Century Skills) and Learning Supports Initiatives. Power2Achieve™ programming is based on the ground breaking research of Dr. Thomas Lickona and Dr. Matt Davidson outlined in the Smart & Good High Schools Report. To support data-driven school improvement, the Power2Achieve programming utilizes the Collective Responsibility for Excellence and Ethics (CREE) Assessment Tools and Processes to benchmark and continuously assess the culture and competencies of excellence and ethics.

    Four field research schools in Iowa are implementing Power2Achieve programming (Power2Learn and Power2Teach) during the 2009-2010 school year (along with approximately 20 high schools around the country). The Power2Achieve™ programs are supported by including leadership development, staff and faculty coaching, ongoing professional development and user-friendly multimedia learning support resources.

    The innovative Power2Achieve™ programs provide powerful tools for realizing the goals of the Core Curriculum and the 21st Century Skills across the state of Iowa including decreasing dropouts, boosting academic achievement, improving workforce preparation, and preparing youth to become productive citizens and lead fulfilling lives.

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  • avatar

    Reflections on Marilee Sprenger's "Focusing the Digital Brain"

    posted in Character Blog at 10:58 am on September 23, 2009 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 21st century skills, adolescent development, technology

    It seems as educators, curriculum developers, stakeholders, parents, or anyone concerned for the future of the upcoming generation we continue to desire a better understanding of how to 1.) keep up with the fast paced technology world teens exist in today and 2.) to compete (or maybe compliment) it in the classroom.  With that said, it is always critical to ask ourselves the bigger questions.  Why are our students inseperable from their cell phone, twitter, facebook, etc., what is it doing to their cognitive and emotional development, and should we be buying in or balancing out?

    In an article published in September’s Educational Leadership journal (Vol 67:1) Marilee Sprenger repeats the beat down mantra regarding teens’ use of technology today.  However, Sprenger does not stop there–rather she brings to the surface a thought provoking angle regarding the countless hours spent impulsively jumping between any and all technology based communication mediums available today.

    Sprenger begins by referencing a study where “of 2,000 students between the ages of 8 and 18, on average students spend six hours a day connected to some digital communcation device, often to several simultaneously” (Small & Vorgan, 2008).  But, she distinguishes her article by not stopping at what we already know.  She references Linda Stone, a former Microsoft executive, who has called the attempts to flop back and forth haphazardly between homework, texting, listening to an i-pod, twitter, and other devices, “continuous partial attention.”  Still, even more interestingly (than a coined phrase for a phenomenon we may simply name: distracted) Sprenger pushes the why?

    She argues that while, “digital natives are motivated by a desire to be busy and in demand” that is not their main objective.  Although it may surprise some she points out that, “the main goal behind their multitasking is not so much to be productive as to be connected to someone.”  In the field of character education where we have argued the need for students to be cared for and connected, it is ironic that what we may have been tempted to think we were fighting against is actually somewhat in line with the research.  Students, even those seemingly disconnected and disengaged because of their dependency on cell phones and laptops–are seeeking the same things we know that they need and can offer in our classrooms: to be connected and needed by someone.

    With the why out of the way Sprenger suggests seven strategies for how to ”keep up with your students from a technology point of view” while not ignoring that the motivating factor behind this technology craze points in many ways to a desire to be connected:

    1. Provide reflection time: “to reflect a person must use different areas of the brain and give overworked areas of the brain much-needed rest”

    2. Disarm them: “encourage students to practice listening to one person at a time”

    3. Let them teach: “our students’ digita expertise is an important part of their world…encourage students to teach one another about digital skills”

    4. Use interactive white boards: “students can move physically and communicate with one another as they interact with technology”

    5. Build emotional literacy: “communicating digitally is an efficient way to exchange data, but when dealing with fellow humans everyone needs to be able to recognize other people’s emtions..to make decisions, cooperate, and even understand themselves…”students who had received training in social-emotional learning, compared with those who hadn’t earned higher grades, scored 14 percent higher on achievement tests, and were less impulsive and better at calming themselves” (Lantieri, 2008).

    6. Teach Mindfulness: “provide techniques that encourage mindfulness, a deliberate inner awareness of what one is thinking, feeling, and experiencing”

    7. Encourage Storytelling: “storytelling enhances people’s emotional connectedness and understanding of concepts.  As we struggle to keep students’ digitally conditioned brains attentive in the classroom, storytelling may be one of our best strategies.”

    The overall message seems to be three-fold. Namely, that an it is of prime importance to have an understanding of the extent to which our students are inundating themselves with technology, why it is that they seek this constant connectedness, and how we can find a balance of that in our classrooms that emphasizes the positive aspects and works the skills that become underdeveloped as a result of this cultural craze.

    She concludes by saying, “we must recognize that relationships and focused attention are key to learning in this century…if we can help students balance the gifts technology brings with thse human gifts they will have” a complete package.

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