The Kids are Alright (so give 'em the stage)
Unless you are 15 years old in 2010, you have no idea what it's like to be 15 years old in 2010.
One of the most frustrating things about the education profession is the scant amount of time we spend listening to the ideas and reflections of the students we teach when it comes to the realities of what it feels like to be taught and to learn. We can talk amongst ourselves all we like about 'leadership' and 'educational tools' and 'best practices', but over and over again it's the voice of the students themselves -- the ones with the biggest stake in the debate -- that goes missing from the discussion.
So let's do something different with this keynote: Let's hear from the kids. Let's hear from the real experts: the students. Let's hear from kids who have no nostalgia for an analogue past. Let's hear from the idealists. Let's hear from the ones whose career and profession don't depend on scoring a keynote.
The kids are alright. Let's give 'em the stage.
1 comment
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Stephen Lissenden commented
I've just through an exercise where I had nine of my kids (I'm a teaching Assistant/Learning Mentor) reflect upon and then video there thoughts on how they learn now, what hey like /dislike and and how they would like to learn in the future. We played it back to their classes and one of their teachers today with no prior vetting. Interesting responses :)