Recently
a colleague shared a thoughtful blog about inquiry-based teaching/learning by
psychologist and educator Thom Markham.
He asks readers if we have the personality traits that help teachers
effectively coach students to build their own educational understandings. Citing scientific studies of
teaching-and-learning relationships, he reports, “If
an inquiry-based system is to succeed, we’ll need human beings in the classroom
who know their field, but who also radiate the kind of positive, non-judgmental
love that helps students open their minds and hearts.”
Markham
asks if we have these qualities:
1.
Are
you optimistic?
2.
Are
you open?
3.
Are
you appreciative?
4.
Are
you flexible?
5.
Are
you purposeful?
No
surprise that I love this article. It expresses succinctly many
experiences in teaching/learning that I conveyed in my book, Think, Care,
Act: Teaching for a Peaceful Future (2011). I describe heart-felt student debates of
whether we should be reading Mildred D. Taylor’s Roll of Thunder, Hear my Cry in sixth grade. (Yes, resoundingly, they say, but with
reservations about language and violence).
I recount discussions of small groups of students as they design utopian
communities of the future, answering my prodding questions with thoughtful
replies. (“No, we won’t have money. It just makes people jealous and creates
inequality.”)
I
well remember the experiences in my own childhood in which I created my own
understandings with the coaching and appreciation of compassionate adults.
In my school career, unfortunately, I recall having these experiences in only
a handful of my classes.
Perhaps
that is why I try to create such experiences of heart-felt learning for my own students
daily.
Parker
Palmer agrees with this approach, writing in The Courage to Teach
(2007): "The connections made by good teachers are held not in their
methods but in their hearts—meaning heart in its ancient sense, as the place
where intellect and emotion and spirit and will converge in the human
self."
Nel
Noddings articulates the idea of knowing our students deeply, and (with
apologies to my math-teaching friends) she expresses the pressing questions in
contrast with our perceived “need” to push the curriculum forward at all costs:
"For
adolescents these are among the most pressing questions: Who am I? What
kind of person will I be? Who will love me? How do others see me?
Yet schools spend more time on the quadratic formula than on any of these
existential questions" (The Challenge to Care in Schools, 2005).
Paulo
Freire, Tom Lickona, and Bill Damon write about this interactive,
character-building, and purpose-filled teaching/learning compellingly. They and I don't see curriculum, love, and purpose as
exclusive of each other. As we explore challenging understandings
together—not with banking education formats but with Freirean-style student/teacher
collaborative formats as discussed in Markham’s article—we build deep
relationships with our students of all ages—and those relationships make for
better learning.
I am reminded of an interaction with sixth graders participating in a group research project in my history class. Students were engaged in long-term research of a country in the Americas. After weeks of research, we history teachers “hired” the student research groups as tourism companies charged with designing five-day tours to explore the geography, history, and cultures of the particular countries they were researching.
Together
we explored these enduring understandings:
- The diverse cultures of the Americas (North, Central, and South America and the Caribbean) are the result of the interactions among Native American, European, and African cultures that began in the 1400s and continue today.
- Research requires cooperation, determination, and creativity and is even more meaningful when student researchers have a real-world task and present their work to an audience.
- Travel helps us learn about cultures’ similarities and differences…. experientially!
In
our individual classes, we teachers offered mini-lessons on reading reputable
sources, note-taking, and citations, while students constructed the bulk of the
knowledge in cooperative groups. As the
teacher-coach, I circulated, encouraged, asked “why” questions, and prodded researchers
to dig deeper to understand the cultural interactions that formed and continue
to form their country’s unique culture.
“How can you help tourists to your country gain a deep, rather than a
superficial, understanding of your country?”
Towards
the end of the weeks-long project, some diligent students were stuck. “We can’t decide on the cost of lunch for one
day of our tour. We’ve been looking for twenty
minutes.” We history teachers had
partnered with the math teachers who had assigned student “tour guides” the
task of figuring out the costs of their itineraries.
“Listen,”
I replied. “You’ve been working
hard. I’ve seen you search your websites. You’ve got your airfare, bus costs, and hotel
fees. You’re almost good to go. Lunch will be pricey if it’s a hotel buffet instead
of a restaurant in one of the neighborhoods.
Choose the one that will be best for teaching visitors about your
country. Remember, you’ve done lots of
heavy lifting on this project. Tourists
will learn about Native American, African, and European contributions to your
country’s culture. Now move on and have
some fun with it.”
Simple
words. But their look of relief was
palpable. They saw themselves as
diligent workers who could also give themselves permission to be efficient and have
fun with their learning! Further, they
knew that I appreciated them as students and as people with valuable time
constraints. They had other tasks to do
and they would not “get in trouble” if they didn’t sweat the small stuff. But my coaching had also reminded them of the
purpose of their “tours.” Returning to
the Lonely Planet website, they chose
a neighborhood cafe serving the typical lunch of their country. Tourists would get off the beaten path and
appreciate local cuisine rather than hotel fare.
I
want to travel with these student tour guides.
Their tours are thoroughly researched, fun, and exemplary of student
cooperation on a meaningful project. The
cultural tourism project will be memorable to them, because the students
constructed their knowledge themselves—with me (and my fellow teachers) as
loving coaches.
When
we teach with heart, students learn the most—about the curriculum, themselves, their
teachers, and their shared purpose.
--Susan Gelber Cannon
--Susan Gelber Cannon
Links
for further reading:
- Thom Markham’s blog: “Do You Have the Personality to be an Inquiry-Based Teacher?”
- Sue Cannon’s book (at IAP): Think, Care, Act: Teaching for a Peaceful Future http://www.infoagepub.com/products/Think-Care-Act
- Sue Cannon’s book (at Amazon): Think, Care, Act: Teaching for a Peaceful Future http://www.amazon.com/Think-Care-Act-Teaching-Education/dp/1617354260/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1386714757&sr=1-1&keywords=think%2C+care%2C+act
- Nel Noddings’s book: The Challenge to Care in Schools http://www.amazon.com/Challenge-Care-Schools-Alternative-Contemporary/dp/0807746096/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1386714689&sr=1-1&keywords=The+Challenge+to+Care+in+Schools
- Parker Palmer’s book: The Courage to Teach http://www.amazon.com/The-Courage-Teach-Exploring-Landscape/dp/0470580704
- Paulo Freire’s book: Pedagogy of the Oppressed http://www.amazon.com/Pedagogy-Oppressed-Anniversary-Paulo-Freire/dp/0826412769/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1386718204&sr=1-1&keywords=pedagogy+of+the+oppressed
- William Damon’s book: The Path to Purpose http://www.amazon.com/The-Path-Purpose-People-Calling/dp/1416537244
- Thomas Lickona and Matthew Davidson’s book: Smart
& Good High Schools
http://www.amazon.com/Smart-Good-High-Schools-Integrating/dp/B000JRF28O/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1386718256&sr=1-1&keywords=smart+and+good+high+schools