Most Significant Change

Last year, my PLAY! colleagues and I created, facilitated, and evaluated a two-part professional (PD) workshop for educators of grades 6-12 in the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD).

The first part was The Summer Sandbox. We designed this intensive one-week workshop for participants to collaboratively explore participatory learning. PLAY! hoped that, by experiencing the rewards of a participatory learning environment first-hand, participants would go on to explore PLAY!’s pedagogy more deeply in their own classrooms and schools. We ran this program two times, over back-to-back weeks. Twenty-one educators from 17 schools and a multitude of disciplines, including social studies, physical education, life sciences and special education, completed the program.

In order to sustain The Summer Sandbox graduates’ implementation of participatory learning, PLAY! offered a PD extension called PLAYing Outside the Box (POTB). Its structure was even less prescriptive than that of the relatively malleable five-day immersion. POTB was conceptualized more as a service than a seminar, intended to scaffold and support participants’ self-directed efforts. Approximately half of The Summer Sandbox graduates enrolled in POTB. These 10 educators hailed from 10 different schools, located up to 20 miles apart, that served student populations whose socioeconomic and developmental profiles varied considerably.

At the end of fall semester, POTB participants met for one last session to share classroom experiences, reflect on personal growth, identify challenges, discuss sustainability, and plan for next steps. We utilized a reflection technique called Most Significant Change (MSC; Davies & Dart, 2005). MSC asks participants to describe their personal experiences of program-produced change and articulate “the significance of the story from their point of view” (Davies & Dart, 2005, p. 26).

While each participant’s experience was unique, three key themes emerged across all the stories:

  1. surrendering some classroom control in order to honor students’ self-directed learning and creativity;
  2. embracing technology and digital media even in the absence of personal expertise/mastery; and
  3. valuing process over product – that is, escaping the tyranny of perfection.

Here are the 10 educators’ reflections:

  • Larry

If Larry were to title the story of his experience, it would be “Challenging Mr. Brown.” An urban high school science teacher in a desk-jammed room filled by students, this self-proclaimed “left-brained” thinker strove just to make ends meet and incorporated any extra elements he could. Allowing his students to explore science terms by making extra credit videos was one of the ways Larry adjusted his curriculum. Larry also stated, “Now I can use more social media in my practice” — no small feat for a former technophobe!

  • Katie

“I use technology more in my classroom,” Katie said to describe her most significant change. Although she is a relatively young teacher with less than 10 years of teaching experience under her belt, Katie revealed that this program motivated her to “update [her] teaching techniques.” When Katie’s biology students were dissecting a flower, she decided to let them use their mobile devices as tools for photography, measurement, etc. The Summer Sandbox’s AnimAction presentation, as well as her participation in that PLAY On! Workshop, also inspired Katie to harness animation as a means for learning and sharing about science. Of this program in general, Katie said, “It’ll make me think about how I can use media more in my classroom.”

  • Helen

The erudite Helen entitled her change narrative “Delving Deeper into Technological Research in Secondary Learning.” Opined Helen, “I think that [her students’ differing preferences for Blogger and the PLAY! platform] only tells us that each individual student is their own individual learner, which we must flesh out and understand in order to enhance the best learning experience.” Helen substantively embraced the PLAY! platform, challenging her high school expository writing students to actually conduct research for their essays and gather text, images, and media to enhance their learning, reading, and writing.

  • Frank

Frank admitted to change in profound ways, calling his story “Breaking Down the Wall.” Explained Frank, “When I first started the project I was interested because it said NML and I thought I knew what it meant. I was totally bombarded by things that I didn’t know but I was very intrigued… Being there [in the Summer Sandbox] resonated this feeling within me, Okay, this is what I should be doing in the classroom… Leaving that summer instruction that we did [the Summer Sandbox], I was excited to try out some of those strategies with the students… I let myself go, where I could just give kids tools, [tell them] ‘This is what you have to create but I’m not going to tell you how to create it.’”

For Frank, the kids in question are middle school students from primarily low-income, Latino backgrounds. Frank confessed, “I forget about the creative side of education. I know that testing’s important for them but at the same time, education should not hinder the creative process. What if I have a future poet in my classroom?” he mused. “The wall [referred to in the title of this change narrative] metaphorically represents the barriers that ironically education builds up for our students because they get categorized.” Frank summed up the job of educators as “enabling the students to break down those walls through different avenues.”

  • Nancy

Nancy, a high school social studies teacher with a special interest in human rights, named her story “Letting Go.” Elaborated Nancy, “I would say that the number one most significant change was the idea of just letting go completely. That I can make mistakes and my students can make mistakes and that that is okay. And that it all is a learning process. And that really was — even though I consider my classroom to be open and constructive — I still found that I was sort of controlling and that I was looking for perfection not just in my students but in myself. And this freely allowed me to open up this idea of letting go.”

In her classroom during the school year, Nancy translated this philosophy into practice by “…allowing those rubrics to be more flexible, allowing students to redo, allowing them to, as part of their grade, [explain] what were they frustrated about, what worked, what didn’t work. And so, making the whole process part of the grade, as opposed to [only] the perfected final work product [determining the grade].”

Students’ responses were not universally warm, confided Nancy. “I would say 80% of the students were beyond thrilled… those students who were atypical students, who feel uncomfortable, they fought it a little bit. But overall I think it was a positive experience.”

  • Jasmine

High school history and government teacher Jasmine dubbed her tale “Giving Voice to the Youth.” Narrated Jasmine, “For me the most significant change was I always liked technology and using it in the classroom. But this year I’ve definitely integrated it more into pretty much every project. In the past I was worried about that I didn’t have all the skills necessary to teach them things or we didn’t have all the equipment or they didn’t have it at home. But I thought, This year, let’s just go for it. And I was open to students participating in whatever way they could.” Jasmine credits this embrace of not only technology but also experimentation and co-learning to the Summer Sandbox. “I think the professional development that we had in the summer was very, very inspiring, because I met so many different teachers and I learned so much about all the things that they were doing in their classroom…”

Subsequently, she modified her curriculum extensively, introducing a project in which students visited the Occupy L.A. encampment and created a PLAY! platform challenge to share out their learning. “Our kids have made songs. They’ve made videos. They’ve done stuff online. And I actually think they’ve learned a lot. This is the first year that, after a unit is over, students come back to it and they’re like, ‘Oh, Miss, did you hear that this happened with Occupy L.A. or on a Facebook page?’ They’ll just post videos and news stories about it and talk about it. And I’m like, ‘Well, that’s cool.’”

Continued Jasmine, “I think that this year my students have definitely gotten more engaged with the world.” A classroom viewing of Chinese documentary Please Vote for Me ignited students’ curiosity. “They said, ‘Can we have our own election?’ I was like, ‘Well, I wasn’t planning on it, but okay, let’s do it…’ And in there I integrated things about campaigning and media, and so we became a class congress, and so they’re learning how bills get passed but by doing it themselves…

“It has involved letting go, and just being very, very experimental. And being okay with it if it’s not perfect. But,” Jasmine smiled, “I think we’re having a really good experience.”

  • Natalie

“Becoming Tech Savvy” is the title of language arts specialist Natalie’s account. “Being able to acquire the skills to use different digital tools… being able to navigate various issues that came up… It empowered me, made me feel more confident as an educator in the 21st century because, while I assume that my students know a lot, on the other hand, they don’t, and yet they are very familiar with a lot of what social media is and how it’s what engages them, and so now I feel more equipped to make my instruction relevant to them.” Natalie introduced a unit, called “Voices for Change,” in which students researched, wrote, filmed, and edited public service announcements (PSA’s) on issues of their choosing.

Natalie found herself reflecting on her passions and values alongside her students. “It inspired me to think about what kind of things do I want to change.” But for Natalie, the demystification of technology was her greatest take-away. “I would encourage as many teachers to just keep an open mind, to be willing to make mistakes, to be willing to have fun, know that not everything’s going to work out perfectly, but that’s okay, it’s going to help you to become more proficient.”

  • Ziyi

Social studies teacher Ziyi disclosed the philosophical and pedagogical shift this program facilitated, expressed in the title, “It’s Okay to Use Technology In Your Classroom. It’s Good For The Kids. It’s Good For Us. It’s Good For Them. It’s Good For Me.” Said Ziyi, “I think the change that’s occurred for me is really personal. In the beginning I had really felt like technology was great and I did not quite see how it would fit into the classroom. In fact, a lot of times I felt like I was sort of like cheating the kids, because we’re having fun instead of really learning… And thank goodness I’ve been involved in this and thank goodness we’re encouraged to allow the students to play with technology and explore and learn different skills.” Subsequently, Ziyi asked her students to modify a Powerpoint by pasting various historical images pertaining to the Industrial Revolution. This assignment allowed her students to practice several NMLs, including judgment, transmedia navigation, and visualization.

The degree to which experiences should be structured (for example, by using templates like the aforementioned Powerpoint) is open for debate and experimentation. More important is Ziyi’s takeaway that play and fun do not prohibit learning. In fact, some research suggests that they are actually prerequisites.

  • Ken

Ken titled his most significant change “Ken Has an Epiphany about How Broader Co-Learning Can Exist Inside My Classroom and Across My Classrooms.” This realization struck during a mandatory, videotaped reflection on the PLAY-rich lesson that he developed and implemented in his classroom (and also videotaped). Per POTB requirements, Ken posted both videos to Vimeo for his peers’ viewing and feedback. He confided in his MSC interview, “…The actual most significant change that I experienced did not take place in my classroom with my students, but it was more of a change in my attitude and expanding my thinking about what can occur with my students in the future. And that is to give them more of an opportunity to have co-learning experiences, not only with other students in their classrooms, but with students in different classrooms as well as even perhaps with students in different schools… [It’s] more of my attitude and my willingness to go beyond what I’ve normally done and kept things in my classroom and move to more co-learning in a broader sense.”

This “co-learning in a broader sense” is what embracing the learning ecosystem is all about. Meaningful learning has always moved beyond classroom silos and harnessed the expertise, inspiration, and on-the-ground reports of those who care – either because their job depends on it, or their curiosity demands it. Allowing, welcoming, even facilitating learners’ access to a broader learning ecosystem is imperative for their acquisition of rich information and lifelong learning skills.

Like so many of his colleagues, Ken also mentioned letting go. Rather than control issues, though, Ken identified fear as his barrier—or former barrier. “I’m willing to be much more brave in using activities such as VoiceThreads in my classrooms whereas before I was much more timid about those types of new technology and their uses and applications in my classroom.” This technological self-efficacy is an important predictor for using various technology in the future.

  • Nanette

Attired in a red and white Santa cap, Nanette (perhaps playfully) entitled her change narrative “An Early Christmas Present for Someone.” Because her students have extreme special abilities, Nanette extensively tailors her teaching of academics and functional self-help skills to each student’s cognitive and physical capacities. Certain technologies, Nanette found, can facilitate learning in both domains. For example, she introduced the iPad and “more technological devices” in the classroom due to their relationship with students’ motivation and engagement – “this is what the students are more interested in” – and their practicality. Stated Nanette, touch screens are “more accessible for our students.”

99 Ways to Tell a Story

http://jaypgreene.com/2012/03/15/ed-week-on-distorted-special-ed-counts/


Inspired by Matt Madden’s exercises in style and tickled by my latest attempt(s) to explain who I am, how I got here, and what it is I do exactly. It’s not distortion so much as perspective… although I suppose one’s perspective determines the magnitude of distortion…

Oy. Academia.

From networking email #4982:

I came to this work via my experiences as an early childhood educator, cross-cultural researcher, improvisational comedian, storyteller, and deep thinker about how to make the world a better place. I’ve concluded that it’s most moral and most efficient to nurture individuals from the beginning of their lives, support their development of wonderfully versatile and inexpressibly important social and emotional skills, and use play as the mode for doing so.

According to the Collaborative for Academic, Social, and Emotional Learning, social and emotional core competencies include self-awareness, self-regulation, social awareness, relationship skills, and responsible decision-making. Self-regulation, which might be called emotional regulation or even executive functioning, is the core competency that is taught LEAST of all these too-little-taught social and emotional skills. This indicates a gap, clearly, and might indicate an incredibly distressing gap, even an emergency, if one considers self-regulation to be THE most important skill of them all… My research and applied work seeks to redress that.

To learn more about me, I invite you to peruse laurelfelt.org. In prose, here is a short(ish) bio:

“Laurel Felt, a fourth-year doctoral candidate at USC’s Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism, is guided by her desire to support children’s healthy development. Accordingly, Laurel has designed numerous research protocols, pedagogical interventions, and professional development experiences to nurture youths’ social and emotional competence, critical thinking, and meaningful communication.

Laurel conceptualizes play as the primary vehicle for this human-centered, learning-oriented work. She is a research assistant with the USC Annenberg Innovation Lab’s PLAY! (Participatory Learning And You!) Project, co-chair of interdisciplinary working group USC Impact Games, and a consultant with play-oriented non-profits Laughter for a Change and GameDesk. In Fall 2012, she will join the USC Joint Education Project, one of the nation’s oldest service-learning organizations, as a curriculum developer and technology consultant.

Laurel’s dissertation will examine Dojo, an impact game created by GameDesk that uses biofeedback to train users (intended for urban adolescent males) in emotional regulation. The project will use a mixed method, experimental + participatory research design to explore intended effects and unexpected outcomes from respectively playing Dojo, engaging with Laurel’s complementary Dojo curriculum, doing both, or doing neither (control group).

Laurel received her B.S. in Education & Social Policy from Northwestern University and M.A. in Child Development from Tufts University. Some organizations that Laurel has worked with include: Nickelodeon; PBSKids Ready to Learn; Hollywood, Health & Society; the BBC World Service Trust; Sénégal’s Réseau African d’Education pour la Santé; India’s Expanding Minds Program; and the U.S. Department of Education. Her research also looks at community development, assessment validity, childhood obesity, and bullying.”

Pecha Kuchas at USC Annenberg Dean’s Forum

On October 14, 2010, USC Annenberg Innovation Lab‘s Project New Media Literacies and other USC entities/individuals presented a series of “blue sky” propositions at the USC Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism Dean’s Forum: Fostering Community for Robert F. Kennedy’s Legacy in Action. Attending representatives from the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD), Robert F. Kennedy Community Schools, and non-profit RFK-Legacy in Action — including LAUSD School Board president Monica Garcia, several RFK Community Schools principals, and Robert F. Kennedy’s son and daughter-in law — pondered how we might spark new forms of teaching and learning while honoring the social justice philosophy that inspired these RFK institutions.

I speak Pecha Kucha-style from 1:04:30-1:08:30. That means that my 12 graphically-oriented slides advance every 20 seconds, whether I’m ready or not, for precisely four minutes. You can see me in the flesh at the beginning and the end — in the middle, you just see my slides. This is the event that paved the way for the next year and a half of PLAY! research. And the rest, as they say, is history…

MIT Tech TV

About

The world is complicated.

While I AM willing to state the obvious, I refuse to back down from a challenge — and this complicated world presents quite a challenge. Too often, we peek out at it, catch a glimpse of the various social problems beleaguering folks near and far, and we shut down, numb out, close our eyes, disavow responsibility — that is, if we even stop to consider others. Now, that “we” I alluded to was a sincere “you and me” — I’m definitely including myself in this bunch of overwhelmed onlookers. We’re overwhelmed by so much; for, not only is the world complicated (as I so insightfully pointed out), but our own little lives are complicated, jampacked with sundry obligations and constantly buffeted by eddies of social/political/natural/technological change. I’m not sure that life was ever “easy” (and I’m not sure that that’s ever been the point), but life certainly isn’t easy in the 21st century.

Still. Just as bridging the local and the global has introduced complication, so too does it present possibility. We have the extraordinary opportunity to engage with one another, foreign and domestic, mediated and face-to-face, to try to make things better. In my opinion, the best way to fix a problem is to prevent its manifestation in the first place. That means ensuring communities’ and individuals’ access to the developmental assets they need to thrive. The second best way to fix a problem is to support locals as they endeavor to fix it. That means fostering communities’ and individuals’ mastery of the primary skills they need for lifelong learning.

Scholarship for Social Change is about working to bring about that rising tide that lifts all boats. There are several ways to get at it –conversation, rumination, theory-building, fieldwork. Luck. Love. Lots of good food… I hope you’ll join this team effort by commenting and, more importantly, getting out there and dirtying your hands in this messy business of making the world a better place.

Thanks. :)

_____________________________________________________________

“The greatest truth must be recognition that in every man, in every child is the potential for greatness.”

-Robert F. Kennedy

Scholarship for social change demands prowling the borders between cultural difference and universality, bridging diverse fields in order to identify and implement fundamental skills for rich learning. It requires using multi-disciplinary theory and real world data to craft curricula that better engages students intellectually, socially, emotionally, and ethically. If we can strike the right balance, respecting the old, the new, the unexpected, and the unstructured, then we will have discovered something truly extraordinary – not only the mechanisms of meaningful learning, but the means for better realizing our individual and collective potential.


How do we facilitate meaningful learning? Do certain skills function as a universal point of departure, enabling all learners’ future exploration and growth? How best can we share these primary skills with every individual who aspires to learn?

Most would agree, contemporary education requires retooling. Domestically, issues pertaining to students’ physical wellness (e.g., reproductive health, obesity) and social functioning (e.g., bullying, self-esteem) follow them to school, impacting both classroom climate and academic achievement. Internationally, education has been recognized as an imperative for development (Roudi-Fahimi & Moghadam, 2003), yet its efficacy is often blunted by lack of resources and community support[1]. Meanwhile, contemporary emphases on standardized testing and digital opportunity[2] call into question what to teach and how to teach it, often engendering controversy and highlighting the disparity between the world’s “have’s” and “have not’s.”

A Primary Skills Set

To respond to these challenges, as well as take on twenty-first century learning benchmarks (Trilling & Fadel, 2009) and millennium development goals (United Nations, 2010), educators must support the basics. But the basics do not refer to classic “reading, writing, and ‘rithmetic”; the basics are even more fundamental, constituting the skills that enable learning of “the R’s” in the first place. These primary skills pertain to new media literacies (NMLs), social and emotional learning (SEL), asset appreciation, and narrative.

New media literacies.

Seminal publication Confronting the challenges of participatory culture: Media education for the 21st century (Jenkins, Purushotma, Clinton, Weigel, & Robinson, 2006), defined NMLs as “a set of cultural competencies and social skills that young people need in the new media landscape” (p. 4). This bears repeating for the skills’ name is somewhat of a misnomer. While NMLs have become increasingly vital due to the demands of new technology, neither are the NMLs new nor are they technology-dependent (Felt, 2010c). The 12 NML skills are: play; performance; simulation; appropriation; multitasking; distributed cognition; collective intelligence; judgment; transmedia navigation; networking; negotiation; and visualization. Mastery of these useful, versatile skills both taps and fosters the development of dynamic processes, such as critically thinking, collaborating, and problem-solving. Because these processes are indispensable to learning (Gee, 2007; Lankshears & Knobel, 2003; Lyman, Ito, Thorne, & Carter, 2009), NMLs can be understood as elements of a “primary skills set.”

Social and emotional learning.

Self-awareness, self-regulation, social awareness, relationship skills, and responsible decision-making constitute SEL’s five core groups of competencies (Collaborative for Academic, Social, and Emotional Learning, 2009). Empirical research has found that recipients of SEL training tend to utilize more daily behaviors related to getting along with and cooperating with others, and report “more positive attitudes toward self and others (e.g., self-concept, self-esteem, prosocial attitudes toward aggression, and liking and feeling connected to school)” than peers in a control group. SEL programming has also been linked to an average gain on achievement test scores of 11 to 17 percentile points (Payton, Weissberg, Durlak, Dymnicki, Taylor, Schellinger, & Pachan, 2008, pp. 6-7). Moreover, SEL programs provide an impressive return on investment in terms of dollars and cents and sustained behavior change (Botvin, 1998, 2002; Hawkins, Kosterman, Catalano, Hill & Abbott, 2008; Schaps, Battistich, & Solomon, 2004). This sense of intrapersonal integration and social connectedness prepares individuals for meaningful learning (Durlak & Weissberg, 2007; Goleman, 1996, 2006; Hoffman, 2000; Zins & Elias, 2006) by freeing them from preoccupations and hang-ups and enabling richer engagement. Bulwarked by social and emotional health, learners are ready – ready to learn across their ecologies, participate fully, experiment courageously, collaborate productively, fail spectacularly, and keep on going.

Asset appreciation.

Immersion in diverse bodies of literature inspired the theoretical bricolage[3] that is the “asset appreciation” construct. Asset appreciation unifies academically separate yet philosophically complementary theory from research on resilience (Luthar, Cichetti, & Becker, 2000; Yates, Egeland, & Sroufe, 2003), possible selves (Markus & Nurius, 1986; Clark, Miller, Nagy, Avery, Roth, Liddon, & Mukherjee, 2005), positive deviance (Pascale, Sternin, & Sternin, 2010; Singhal, Sternin, & Dura, 2009), asset-based community development (Kretzmann & McKnight, 1997; Kretzmann, McKnight, Dobrowolski, & Puntenney, 2005), intrinsic motivation (Deci & Flaste, 1996) and appreciative inquiry (Bushe & Kassam, 2005; Cooperrider & Whitney, 2005). Asset appreciation aims to capture the extent to which an individual and/or community recognizes the availability of internal and external resources and exploits them to their fullest potential. Simply knowing about resources can help people to get their needs met with greater ease and comprehensiveness, particularly in times of stress. Appreciating resources as assets can boost people’s quality of life perceptions and sense of self and/or collective efficacy (Bandura, 1994; 1997) because it frames the environment as rich and oneself as embedded in a support network. Behaving resourcefully and framing situations productively facilitates meaningful learning because such acts, like NMLs, tap and foster processes of critical thinking, collaborating and problem-solving. Implicit in these acts are the SEL skills of self-awareness and social awareness; as such, asset appreciation similarly enables learners’ engagement and seeds unfettered exploration and growth.

Narrative.

The fourth pillar of this paradigm is narrative. Stories are hailed by various constituencies as a universal attribute of humankind (Campbell, 1949/2008), the most natural mode of thought (Schank & Abelson, 1995; Sarbin, 1986), a tool for establishing identity (Siegel & Hartzell, 2003), a frame for constructing reality (Berger & Luckmann, 1966), a means to gratify needs (Katz, Blumler, & Gurevitch, 1974), a commodity of enormous value (see Hollywood), or simply a good ol’ way to pass the time. Lately, health communication scholars have documented (Bandura, 1977, 2004a; Green & Brock, 2002; Singhal, Cody, Rogers, & Sabido, 2004) what Aesop’s and de la Fontaine’s fables long ago established: stories can teach. Moreover, stories can assess (Carr, 2001; Davies & Dart, 2005). Thus narrative skills – the capacities to comprehend and weave stories – can be understood as learning prerequisites.


[1] Sadly, the same can be said of education in the United States.

[2] which does not mean universal access and/or preparation, as access (“the digital divide”) pertains to equipment while preparation (“the participation gap”) pertains to literacy (Jenkins, Purushotma, Clinton, Weigel, & Robinson, 2006)

[3] A French term, bricolage is used by many American academics to refer to “a construction made of whatever materials are at hand; something created from a variety of available things” (Random House, Inc., 2010).

Light

I burned the midnight oil revising our (Arvind Singhal’s, Lucia Dura’s, and my) article on cultural scorecards, which I’ve (audaciously) renamed cultural beacons. We’ll see if the appellation sticks. I know I’m proud of the work I contributed. As the sun rises outside, I hope my productivity represents the dawn of a new, fruitful, industrious chapter in my academic career.

Let there be light!