This standard is one of the new Common Core State Standards adapted by the Kentucky Department of Education, now in training for implementation in the fall. It makes succinct what our students already know: that writing for most purposes involves collaboration and connection. And the way in which students connect, collaborate – even write – is online.Writing Standards K-5 - Grade 5 Students: Standard 6.With some guidance and support from adults, use technology, including the Internet, to produce and publish writing as well as to interact and collaborate with others..
It’s in the Standards, so will it be in instruction? The process of “deconstructing” the standards in preparation for designing lessons is fully underway, and this standard (as of April 1, 2011) has yet even get that far (see KDE's list). But does it need to be? Is the fact that it’s a separate standard mean that, in fact, it needs separate “air time?” In an ideal world, no, if, in fact, it was already uniformly distributed throughout the other standards, and a teacher's practice. That is as it should be. In the world of higher education and professional work, most writing is connected. Nearly all readers are interactively connected to the writing they consume. Even further, a lot of writings (from textbooks to encyclopedias) are now produced collaboratively online, with many authors, and constantly negotiated content changes and additions. The implication is, in the post-secondary world, writing without interactive connection is rare, and so addressing it separately would be like addressing auto repair without electronic diagnostics.
That’s the world our students already live in, and
is most certainly the one they’ll join when they leave us. Although my
“research” is anecdotal and incomplete, I’m thinking it
isn’t the world most of our teachers live in. That means, if left
to their own devices, chances are that most teachers won’t view this standard as
that important. Many may not even know what it means. With that knowledge, the
standard probably needs to be specifically addressed, and that is the intent of
the Common Core Standards as written. But when, and
by whom?
As a tech integration specialist, I’m pretty used to being invited
to the party late. A professional development class is being designed, or a unit
is being built, and someone has the idea that, maybe, it should have a
technology component. (After all, a lot of folks are talking about technology,
so we probably ought to include something!) So I'm
called. But when that happens, inevitably, I walk into a room in which the big
decisions about content and pedagogy have already been made. The results are a
lot of clever graphs and images.
In the digital age, is it really possible to
start a discussion about pedagogy without technology?
For this argument, I’m setting aside the revolution implied by a lot of
technology tool use – knowledge construction, project-based instruction,
student-driven learning, the trifecta generally associated with online and
connected learning. Let’s just stick with Standard 6 above.
We’ll take something really easy – a personal narrative about some incident in a
student's life. Traditionally, a teacher would establish a rubric, pass out
instructions, collect the results of the assignment, and grade them. If the
lesson needs more "real life" connections, that might change the assigned
writing topic. And the impact of my coming into the party late might be that the
students are asked to read the instructions online, type them up in Word with
some nice added clipart, and upload the results into a learning management
system. Good, we’ve got technology in.
Did we cover the standard? Did the student “publish?” Did
they “interact with others?” Did they “collaborate?” Obviously not. To truly
reflect the standard, we could redesign the lesson,
and have students publish their writings as blog entries, providing for online
peer comments and suggestions, and then have that feed a collaborative rewriting
process through a wiki. This approach (very different from my “upload Word
document” example) actually addresses the intent of
the standard. But the changes have a profound impact on the original lesson
performance expectation, the rubric, work completion, and grading, so adding
this standard would require major changes to the original lesson design. The
point, of course, is that it is not possible to
begin the lesson planning process without having
already selected the technologies, and incorporated their implications into how
students write, learn, and are graded.
It’s a standard, but the standard simply asks the same question the
students themselves are asking their teachers: If not you, who? If not now,
when?
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