Sunday, January 16, 2011

Not issue by issue but understanding 'Education'..

Recently, with my CAPSC hat on, I blogged that, " a follow up to Inspiring Education, where we heard from guest speakers such as Dan Pink and Mark Milliron who clearly warned us that preparing our students for success includes more than math and science and in class learning. We must also encourage critical thinking, global citizenship, community awareness and volunteerism. How does the new Education Act framework encourage and foster this? He affirmed that Minister Hancock also felt this was important. However, I am still not clear on HOW this is reflected in the new framework. This should be part of the large vision and I believe the new Education Act is the place that this can be introduced and shared as a common value for Albertans."

There are some great opportunities right now for all of us interested in and concerned about our public education system to address some of its fundamental premises. The government, as we know, is set to revamp the Education Act. RIGHT NOW there is a window of opportunity to let our elected representatives know what we want and expect around the issues of HOW we formally educate our children and WHAT we want our public education system to look like in Alberta.

These overarching questions require our thought and energy to address. This is where the public conversation should be focused just now. Of course there are specific issues and operational concerns, there always will be; however, the opportunity of influencing legislative reform only comes about once a generation (if even that). Dollars and cents do matter. We all understand that public institutions have budgets and that the efficient and fair allocation of those scarce resources is an important part of the work of our elected officials. But the chance to offer-up our collective thinking on higher-order concerns should, FOR JUST NOW, trump preoccupation with one particular fiscal issue.

Some people are encouraging a third party investigation into the cost and processes that went into Calgary's Education building. That's fine...but there is a significant part of the conversation being missed and people are getting riled up without first discussing the bigger issues. For instance, what environment do we believe our public school board trustees and administration should work in? Because that is part of the conversation.

I also agree that whatever the process is for making decisions such as building new infrastructure needs to be transparent; the public should know WHY the decision was made to build a new site and what the costs are, up-front. They should have an opportunity, before the final decision is made, to provide feedback. And the deliberations/debate over this type of massive fiscal decision should be clearly stated in the minutes of trustees meetings which should be easily accessible to the public.

Now, having said that: my passion and focus just now is about expressing our concerns and suggestions over the proposed Education Act and to take the conversation where it really needs to go in our communities. We started this conversation after watching 'A Race to Nowhere'. This goes further than classroom size, IPP's and PAT's ( and Education building costs). Although these things are all of importance we cannot address any of them wisely without an understanding of WHY these things matter. What are we trying to protect or create?

I believe we should be working toward an education system that fosters and encourages our children to keep their sense of wonder (thank you Rachel Carson). I believe we need to rethink how we have separated 'curriculum' in our public schools into distinct disciplines like math and english, usually disconnected from one another when there is such an interconnectivity between them all. Do we understand what it means to 'learn' and to use science in our day to day lives rather than just as a class in school? I ask most kids what science is and they tell me it's dissecting things, doing experiments in labs and learning chemistry. It is all of those things but those are all processes and in the end just products. The science bit that we really need to foster in every discipline is the process that we go through to understand all things; it is a search for truth. I am just learning and appreciating the need to understand science now, at 35 years old! As I try to understand what happened in Arizona and how a society begins to deal with the things that contributed to this I am using science. I am searching for truth.

I see many of us focusing on the small details rather than the big picture (what education do we most need; to do what needs doing in this world). I think that we can make more significant changes if we focus on what we need as we move forward rather than focusing on individual pieces of a much larger puzzle.

4 comments:

  1. Well said Eryn! We cannot let this opportunity pass us by - it is way too important...

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  2. Thank you for this post! I am a third year BEd. student at the UofA... I'm looking to gain more insight into Education in Alberta beyond my curriculum classes- I think I've found a good starting place :) Look forward to reading more posts.

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    1. Hi MakeupandMeg,

      Luck us to have educators like yourself, intent on understanding the larger frames:) I have some fabulous friends who graduated from the BEd program at UofA.

      If I may suggest, here are some blogs/sights that have been very helpful in my understanding and framing of formal education in Alberta and North America.

      http://www.alfiekohn.org/index.php
      http://www.joebower.org/p/quick-bio.html
      http://johntaylorgatto.com/

      I look forward to hearing about your experiences in the classroom!

      Cheers,
      Eryn

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  3. Thanks you so much, I really appreciate your response! I look forward to reading these blogs, and your future posts! Before I can work in the system, I need to understand it, and believe in my role in it.

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