LEARNING
To become more
knowledgeable, more understanding, more enlightened is what it means to be a
learned person. That is an accepted
premise, for me, as I begin the school year delivering an educational process designed
to meet these expectations.
George
Washington Carver, the famous American born-into-slavery botanist and inventor,
who Time
magazine in 1941 called the “Black Leonardo da Vinci.” He said: “Education is
the key to unlock the golden door of freedom.” The learning process that we
call education is really a transitory means by which people fulfill their own
expectations of themselves, while providing a pathway to become loving and loveable people
within our society.
The
diversity of students’ abilities to learn, comprehend and articulate is as
widely dispersed as grains of sands on a beach.
To hold students accountable in the classroom to learn is like piling up
buckets of sand with each new disbursement as impactful as the previous one and
at the same time disruptive to final outcomes.
Each new idea, new concept and new resolution to problems leads to
further questions, more changes in mindsets of people and increased intrinsic motivations
to want to know more. Learning is a physiological and psychological disruptive
process.
But it
is learning. It is what we work toward for our children and for our own
well-being. To become learned opens
doors of opportunities and it leaves us with a greater awareness of our measure
in life with respect to all that has been given to us and with respect to the
people that fill our lives.
The
ability to think critically and solve problems is not innate. It takes a certain level of both understanding
and experience, together, to be able to perform when called upon to do so. Education and the learning that takes place in
the classroom lays a foundation for students to develop self-efficacy and move
forward with confidence and with a sense of resoluteness.
Next
generation science standards provide a framework for science teachers to
operate and design curriculum with, but it is not a substitute for measuring real
learning in the classroom. Real learning is a human endeavor as diverse as the
population it serves. Learning reflects
the broad composition of human experiences with its complexities and its
uniqueness.
Twenty-first
century education models in science are doubling-down on standards-based curriculum
as a method of documenting student performance, but it is the diversity of our
student population, driven by social economic factors in our society, that ultimately
determine true outcomes in student performance.
Learning
is a human endeavor that demands continual vigilance and fortitude on the part
of the teacher. The goal is to deliver a
curriculum to students that provide them the means and opportunity to develop and express
understanding and knowledge, to solve problems and to increase their awareness of the
universe that surrounds us all.
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