Matt Hern 2008 AERO Conference Workshop
November 8, 2009 at 6:54 pm | In AERO, AERO Conference, AERO Online Video Series, Democratic Education | Leave a CommentTags: AERO, AERO Conference, Everywhere All the Time, Matt Hern
Everywhere, All the Time
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Visit www.educationrevolution.org/2008workshop4.html for more information and to order
Matt Hern 2007 AERO Conference Keynote (free video)
November 8, 2009 at 6:47 pm | In AERO, AERO Conference, AERO Online Video Series, Democratic Education | Leave a CommentTags: AERO, AERO Conference, Matt Hern, Watch Yourself
Watch Yourself: Why Safer Isn’t Always Better
Find out more and order at www.educationrevolution.org/2007hern.html
Educating for a Better World (free video)
November 1, 2009 at 10:03 pm | In AERO, AERO Conference, AERO Online Video Series | Leave a CommentTags: AERO, AERO Conference, Humane Education, IHE, Institute for Humane Education, Khalif Williams, Ron Miller, Sally Carless
A workshop featuring Khalif Williams, Ron Miller, and Sally Carless at the 2008 AERO conference.
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You can order this workshop online at:
AERO’s Survival Campaign
November 1, 2009 at 2:19 pm | In AERO | Leave a CommentTags: AERO, Jerry Mintz
Dear Friends & Supporters:
For twenty years, AERO has been a major networker and promoter of learner-centered educational alternatives. It has always been a shoestring operation, with almost everything going toward our mission. But we, too, are now suffering in these bad economic times.
Over the years our deficit has been made up by grants from three foundations and donations from our members. This year we did not receive one of the major grants we were expecting. We have scrambled to find other sources of support but we have fallen quite short. If we can make it a few more months we expect that we will be getting more foundation support and we’ll be okay. In the interim, we need to make up a deficit of about $20,000. When you consider the hundreds of schools around the world that we have helped, or even helped to found, this does not seem like too much. But the reality is that AERO’s support and even our existence is taken too much for granted by many of our members and former members. They think we’ll be here when they need us.
We have not had a major fund raising campaign for several years. We are having one now, and the need is urgent. We need your donations so we can keep our staff working, our bookstore going, continue printing Education Revolution Magazine, continue our online courses, producing our free e-newsletter, updating our website, and so we can organize yet another AERO conference this summer (you’ve probably heard that John Taylor Gatto and Herbert Kohl will be two of the keynoters!).
If you think that AERO has been of some help to you in the past twenty years, or perhaps will be in the future, if you believe in learner-centered and democratic education that really empowers students, if you share our goal of a true Education Revolution, donate to the AERO survival fund so we can be around for a lot longer.
Sincerely,
Jerry Mintz
Executive Director
Make a donation online at www.educationrevolution.org/survivalfund.html
Even if you can’t make a significant donation to AERO now, please forward this message along to any friends, family, and colleagues you may have who believe in learner-centered education.
We know you do not need incentives to support AERO when we are in need, but we will be sending various tokens of appreciation to those who help us. Find out more by following the link above or clicking the image below.
What’s Missing in Friedman’s Op-Ed on Education from Humane Connection
October 26, 2009 at 9:15 pm | In AERO, Education News | Leave a CommentTags: Albove All Be Kind, Humane Connection, Humane Education, IHE, Institute for Humane Education, MOGO, Most Good Least Harm, New York Times, NY Times, Thomas Friedman, Zoe Weil
The following blog post comes from Zoe Weil on the Institute for Humane Education’s blog, Humane Connection:
Thomas Friedman’s recent New York Times op-ed, “The New Untouchables,” brings up an important point: that the failures in our educational system and the current recession are related. He ends his editorial with this:
“Bottom line: We’re not going back to the good old days without fixing our schools as well as our banks.”
The problem, though, is far more nuanced than Friedman suggests. While his essay promotes education that fosters creativity, initiative, and critical thinking — all things I agree with — there is a lack of creativity in Friedman’s own solution. We cannot go back to the good old days. Instead, we must move forward to better new days, and we won’t do that by trying to educate solely for flexible thought and innovation within current systems.
Yes, we have huge problems in our educational system that rewards rote learning over creative and critical thinking, skills now relegated to the heroic efforts of especially imaginative teachers who must figure out how to foster creativity and critical thinking when they are burdened with teaching to multiple choice tests that punish creativity. (Imagine what would happen if you took a creative approach to a multiple choice test – you’d be pretty much doomed).
But more than this, we have an even bigger problem with our educational system. We have the wrong goal. Tom Friedman wants us to return to the good old days by being more competitive in the global marketplace, a refrain that’s become cliché. The problem is that we have grave challenges to solve: global warming, rampant species extinction, desertification, deforestation, overpopulation, escalating slave labor, lack of access to enough food and clean water for a billion people, inequitable access to basic resources, to name a few of the biggies.
Making our kids more competitive won’t solve these problems unless we shift the goal of education to include graduating solutionaries for a better world. The good old days actually set the stage for all the problems we face today. They only appeared good because the problems they were causing took some time to appear. Were we to graduate a generation only with the wherewithal to compete better in the global marketplace and work innovatively in essentially the same systems, but without the knowledge, tools, and motivation to change pervasive, entrenched, and destructive systems into ones that are just, peaceable, and sustainable, we would not necessarily produce good days. We might, instead, cause even greater suffering and destruction.
Yes, we need to fix our schools as well as our banks. We need to educate a generation that understands the challenges we face and which has the skills and desire to face them and create a healthy, restored, and humane world. And when we do this, we will create new economic and production systems that bring both prosperity and peace.
~ Zoe Weil
Author of Most Good, Least Harm and Above All, Be Kind
2007 John Taylor Gatto Keynote Talk (free video!)
October 26, 2009 at 6:18 am | In AERO, AERO Conference, AERO Online Video Series | Leave a CommentTags: AERO, AERO Conference, John Gatto, John Taylor Gatto, Open Source Learning, Spinoza, Spinoza Model, Spinoza Model Schooling, Walkabout London
“Walkabout London: Open Source Learning”
done‘Race to the Top’s’ 10 false assumptions
October 24, 2009 at 9:56 pm | In AERO | Leave a CommentTags: AERO, Marian Brady, Race to the Top
By Marion Brady
“Race to the Top? National standards for math, science, and other school subjects? The high-powered push to put them in place makes it clear that the politicians, business leaders, and wealthy philanthropists who’ve run America’s education show for the last two decades are as clueless about educating as they’ve always been.
If they weren’t, they’d know that adopting national standards will be counterproductive, and that the “Race to the Top” will fail for the same reason “No Child Left Behind” failed—because it’s based on false assumptions.
False Assumption 1:
America’s teachers deserve most of the blame for decades of flat school performance. Other factors affecting learning—language problems, hunger, stress, mass media exposure, transience, cultural differences, a sense of hopelessness, and so on and on—are minor and can be overcome by well-qualified teachers. To teacher protests that they’re scapegoats taking the blame for broader social ills, the proper response is, “No excuses!” While it’s true teachers can’t choose their students, textbooks, working conditions, curricula, tests, or the bureaucracies that circumscribe and limit their autonomy, they should be held fully accountable for poor student test scores.
False Assumption 2:
Professional educators are responsible for bringing education to crisis, so they can’t be trusted. School systems should instead be headed by business CEOs, mayors, ex-military officers, and others accustomed to running a “tight ship.” Their managerial expertise more than compensates for how little they know about educating.
False Assumption 3:
“Rigor”—doing longer and harder what we’ve always done—will cure education’s ills. If the young can’t clear arbitrary statistical bars put in place by politicians, it makes good sense to raise those bars. Because learning is neither natural nor a source of joy, externally imposed discipline and “tough love” are necessary.
False Assumption 4:
Teaching is just a matter of distributing information. Indeed, the process is so simple that recent college graduates, fresh from “covering” that information, should be encouraged to join “Teach For America” for a couple of years before moving on to more intellectually demanding professions. Experienced teachers may argue that, as Socrates demonstrated, nothing is more intellectually demanding than figuring out what’s going on in another person’s head, then getting that person herself or himself to examine and change it, but they’re just blowing smoke.
False Assumption 5:
Notwithstanding the failure of vast experiments such as those conducted in eastern Europe under Communism, and the evidence from ordinary experience, history proves that top-down reforms such as No Child Left Behind work well. Centralized control doesn’t stifle creativity, imply teacher incompetence, limit strategy options, discourage innovation, or block the flow of information and insight to policymakers from those actually doing the work.
Read more at http://voices.washingtonpost.com/answer-sheet/guest-bloggers/educator-race-to-the-top-is-be.html
Outspoken public schools advocate Bracey dies at 69
October 24, 2009 at 9:54 pm | In AERO, Education News | Leave a CommentTags: AERO, Gerald Bracey, USA TODAY
A native of Williamsburg, Va., Bracey had recently moved to Port Townsend, Wash., with his wife.
A longtime fellow of the Educational Policy Research Unit at Arizona State University and its recent partner, the Education and the Public Interest Center at the University of Colorado at Boulder, Bracey was for decades one of the foremost defenders of American public schools, tirelessly arguing that their performance wasn’t as bad as reformers of both political parties contended. He often used long-term international comparisons to make his point.
A graduate of the College of William and Mary, he held a Ph.D. in psychology from Stanford University and was testing director for both the Virginia Department of Education and the Cherry Creek, Colo., school district.
Bracey was mostly known as a pugnacious, sometimes abrasive critic of D.C. education policymakers, lawmakers and the press, decrying what he saw as their historical ignorance, intellectual laziness and chronic lack of skepticism about the latest education reform.
Charter schools, teacher merit pay, standards-based reform, high-stakes testing — whatever it was, it seemed, he was against it, often for the same reason: None of it, he said, showed replicable results.
An indefatigable contrarian, Bracey in 1991 founded the Education Disinformation Detection and Reporting Agency or EDDRA, dedicated to analyzing reports, dispelling rumors and “rebutting lies” about U.S. public education.
Read more at USAToday.
Education News
October 24, 2009 at 9:52 pm | In AERO, Education News | Leave a CommentA Call to Teaching: Secretary Arne Duncan’s Remarks at The Rotunda at the University of Virginia
The future of college may be virtual
Decentralizing Educational Authority
Astra Taylor: ‘Unschool’ was cool in her youth
The Late Gerard Bracey’s Blog Posts
One in three children feel some distress most of the time
Michelle Obama: Teachers Are Key to a Successful Economy
Ted Sizer and Jerry Bracey by Alfie Kohn
Nearly half of Dallas 5th-graders not ready for middle school
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