I don't know what is more exciting: that 3 grade 6 boys invited me to join their team to design a mod for Minecraft or that I understood what they were asking!!!
Welcome. This blog is documenting my insights as I become a gamer alongside my students. Yes, it has been renamed thanks to Melanie McBride who launched me on this journey!
Friday, May 27, 2011
Friday, May 20, 2011
Grade 6 Girls Talk About Minecraft
Today I had the pleasure of sitting down with five grade 6 girls in our Minecraft club during Nutrition Break to discuss why they game. I was stunned by the level of maturity in their discussion as well as their insights. I will blog in detail about what I learned, but I promised them I would post the interview today. It lasts about 20 minutes and is well worth a full listen, particularly near the end when the girls discuss self-image. They blew me away!
Friday, May 6, 2011
Voices of Gamers
There were over 20 students, male and female, in the lab at Nutrition Break today playing Minecraft. For those who think that gaming is an isolating activity, you're wrong. Gaming is intensely social. Players remain focused, on task and in constant conversation as they work to help each other achieve goals. New learning spreads rapidly and calls for help are immediately answered. There are frequent moments of success and satisfaction as players continuously work to solve problems.
Ian Chia suggested I put a mic in our lab so everyone can hear what I am privileged to hear. I used audacity to record bits and pieces of our conversation and then uploaded the podcast to www.archive.org to get an embed code in order to post it in blogger. We are noisy, learning and having fun! 0
Ian Chia suggested I put a mic in our lab so everyone can hear what I am privileged to hear. I used audacity to record bits and pieces of our conversation and then uploaded the podcast to www.archive.org to get an embed code in order to post it in blogger. We are noisy, learning and having fun! 0
Wednesday, May 4, 2011
If You Could Hear What I Hear
I truly wish that all educators could be in our lab at Dundas Central listening to students discuss Minecraft. It saddens me because I realize that in my 20 years of teaching, I haven't spent enough time just listening to my students.
YOU!!!!! Play Minecraft?
Still the most common reaction I get from students. Minecraft is spreading into homes. Siblings are beginning to play. We're in the cloud.
Tuesday, May 3, 2011
I Have Spawned Minecrafters
Today, in the lab at nutrition break there are suddenly 7 new minecrafters excited about the game. The longtime group is teaching the new group. Students working on other subjects are whispering and asking questions. Interesting. The best thing of all is that I get to observe how gamers teach each other.
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
Two Kinds of Teachers
Now that I am a student, I realize that I have two kinds of teachers and both are necessary. One group of my teachers are the excited visionaries. They see my future and are eager to show me all that world of Minecraft can become. They enthusiastically race ahead into the realm of possibilities. I frequently am unable to follow where they are going but I sense that their ideas are worth pursuing and am willing to persist because they know something that I want to know.
Then there are the logicians. They are the calmer, sequential thinkers. They can shift down to my level and clearly explain my exact next step. I rely on them to guide me and turn to them when I have questions.
I need both.
This leads me to consider just what a misguided effort it is to attempt to standardize the delivery of education. The idea that one size fits all or that if we just develop the right program we can finally put an effective education system into place is a waste of time. Just as students require differentiated instruction, teachers require recognition that different teaching styles exist and that one is not more valid than the other. I would not want my own students to have a teacher like me every year. I know my weaknesses and am grateful that there are other teachers in the school who compensate for what I am unable to do. And I know that the way I engage with my students compensates for the weaknesses in their systems. Each teacher has something unique to offer. It's time that the world of education recognized this.
Then there are the logicians. They are the calmer, sequential thinkers. They can shift down to my level and clearly explain my exact next step. I rely on them to guide me and turn to them when I have questions.
I need both.
This leads me to consider just what a misguided effort it is to attempt to standardize the delivery of education. The idea that one size fits all or that if we just develop the right program we can finally put an effective education system into place is a waste of time. Just as students require differentiated instruction, teachers require recognition that different teaching styles exist and that one is not more valid than the other. I would not want my own students to have a teacher like me every year. I know my weaknesses and am grateful that there are other teachers in the school who compensate for what I am unable to do. And I know that the way I engage with my students compensates for the weaknesses in their systems. Each teacher has something unique to offer. It's time that the world of education recognized this.
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