Ellin Keene and Bruce Wellman – Presents
January 22, 2013
It wasn’t the excitement of Sports Authority Field. It was the excitement of synapses firing, connections being created, and educators embracing each other in discourse, thinking, and learning, and, deepening discourse, thinking, and learning. If “brainpower is the new currency of today” as proposed by the media, then participants garnered an abundance of wealth.
At the Learning Forward Colorado Annual Conference, Ellin Keene and Bruce Wellman presented research, structures, and strategies concerning deepening discourse among adults and between adults and students. The evaluation data elevates this professional learning experience into the successful, perhaps wildly successful, category. Does that mean, however, that the conference provided transformational professional learning? How do we know that the learning will find application in the workplace?
One answer could be gleaned from participant evaluations:
Several measures indicate the long-term applicability of the conference learning, especially the conversation which occurred in medias res through the use of Edmodo as a back channel. Personally, as a retired, long-time educator, advancing technology is frightening to me; it makes me feel incompetent. Much as a struggling second grader, however, I was made to feel comfortable via the scaffolding created by the Professional Learning Coordinators from Douglas County. The best tech professional development folks function as the best professional developers: understanding adult learning and learners, incorporating the Learning Forward Standards for Professional Learning, and adjusting to the learning needs of their audience.
The exchanges among conference participants via Edmodo underscore, highlight, and celebrate the power of immediate feedback, sharing of thinking, synthesizing ideas, and incorporating others’ ideas in the moment. Further, a myriad of resources which could enhance and deepen the topics of discourse were immediately shared. What a wealth of information!
Ellin and Bruce suggested the following premises for the day:
After establishing that participants would be expected to abide by the “Seven Norms of Collaboration” (Adaptive Schools), Bruce’s initial questions centered on
The strategy used to process the exchange was “Reflect, Regroup, Return.”
Think about it! What would your honest responses reveal to you? Our participants found that the more truthful the responses, the more personal they were, and often the more instructive.
Here is some of the Edmodo discourse:
Productive Talk
Non-Productive Talk
To learn more from the Edmodo discourse, go to www.edmodo.com and establish a free account. Use this code to access the conference conversation: D6DB0l (final character is a lower case L).
Throughout the day, Judi Herms of Thinking Maps was mapping and posting representations of the conversation. Participants were grateful for her skill in using the mapping technique to organize, clarify, and synthesize the groups’ contributions. Judi’s maps can be accessed in Edmodo.
The next “chunk” of learning for the day was presented by Ellin as she asked participants to consider “the power of silence in the classroom and in the meeting room.” Participants engaged in reading and strategies designed to move their thinking. The following comments were shared in Edmodo.
Again, to read more of the “live interchange” during the presentation, check out Edmodo with the access code: D6DB0l (final character is a lower case L).
For closure, Bruce asked original table teams to do the following: “Create a one word summary of today. What is your word? Why did you choose it? Who will share it?” Beyond the responses in the room, these words were recorded in Edmodo:
What a day of discourse, thinking, learning, and connecting. I don’t think I’m stretching the truth to say that Ellin and Bruce and everyone in the room benefited from this time together. The design of the day plus the sharing through Edmodo was a gift. As the deepsea divers on our table centerpieces found gems in their endeavors, we all have new knowledge and skills to treasure and use to educate ourselves, each other, and every student we serve.
Watch for further opportunities to network with conference participants and other thought partners to share how folks are using their new learning.