Sep
01

There’s a snake in the grass – look out Research project

Filed Under (Future Directions, Social Networking, Web 2.0) by pruwoldt on 01-09-2009 and tagged , , , , ,

I live in the largest centre outside of the capital of South Australia. Adelaide is about 450km away.  That’s a 4.5 hour drive if you don’t stop. I’ve been teaching in rural and regional areas for my 30 year career and a consistent statement I heard and often felt during that period of time is that the decision makers worked as if South Australia’s border with Victoria was at the Toll Gate. The past five years has seen PD for me that would easily defeat the sum total of all PD prior to that time in both quantity and quality. I could possibly stick in a multiplier to quantify it and its all been free.  I’ve not needed to travel and that’s significant for rural folk. I’ve been independent of the capital city. If you are reading this, then the method is probably no surprise to you and may in fact be old news.

I’ve immersed myself into blogging, Delicious, Diigo, Linkin, email lists, RSS, Twitter, Ning, Edna, Facebook, Orkut, forums, ….. I get my information in smallish chunks which makes it easy to digest and has put me in touch and in conversation with experts in the fields I am interested in locally, nationally and globally.  I’m an expert to others in return. It’s flexible. It is not a problem to vary the degree of immersion and even work in fits and starts. It’s been great for professional networking, hobbies and links with industry.  In many ways it has replaced what a professional organisation used to offer me.

Is it any wonder that I’m over the moon about the new SACE Research project then?  What a great subject and in view of the way the world is heading as a consequence of the ICT led Information Revolution it is also very timely. Having such a subject points strongly to a notion that is gaining more traction in the education world and that is that the “pipe is more important than the contents”. (Almost as good an argument starter in a group of teachers as “God doesn’t exist”) It is how we access, process and use information that makes the difference and equips students for life long learning. Use being the operative word. I am thinking that it possibly should be the only subject that we have at school.

BUT there is a snake in the grass and its poised to strike. Filter is its name and Information Nazi is its game. It is Kerries recent posts that have drawn me into this filtering fracas once again after making at least one comment about it over the past years? ;)   I suspect that these broken, primitive, clunky, chunky filters will be one of the main obstacles to making the Research Project a success.  The filter obstructs access to most, if not all, of the things, that I listed above that have been so good for me, that can really make the Research project tick and because students will be doing different things, even the newly acquired teacher filter override will be too clumsy to use effectively with a larger group of students.  Where will that leave things?  Running to Web1.0 and books and a huge opportunity lost. In the past some people have reacted to my criticism of the filter indicating that it is not such a problem and that all I have to do is be more proactive in unblocking things…..that will be the answer they say.  I guess that is fine if all the kids are doing the same thing and it is important for some obscure reason that they access the same information.  Ha….now they will, by the very nature of the Research Project subject, be doing different things.  Now what?  Mr Filterer…..are you listening?  If you must be here then do your protection thing properly and stop being such a stupid obstruction.

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One Response to “There’s a snake in the grass – look out Research project”

  1.   Pam Thompson Says:

    I can understand your frustration Peter. On the one hand you have a wonderful opportunity to encourage your students to think outside of their own world and to access expertise from anywhere globally,whilst on the other they can only do a lot of that from home due to filtering in schools.

    Even at primary school level we experience some of this frustration. Only last week I encouraged my Year 6/7 students to join a blogging challenge set up by Sue Wyatt, a teacher in Tasmania. She runs this challenge with Sue Waters, aka the edublogger. Registration was on Sue’s blog via a Google spreadsheet. Of course, my students couldn’t register at school as it was blocked. I duly unblocked the registration form only to find that submitting it lead to another blocked page. Needless to say my students were also frustrated by this. hats off to them for not losing their motivation but registering for the challenge from home.

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