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jeffery heil

Coaching a Surgeon: What Makes Top Performers Better? : The New Yorker - 0 views

  • For my specialized cases, I’ve come to know most of the serious difficulties that could arise, and have worked out solution
  • For the others, I’ve gained confidence in my ability to handle a wide range of situations, and to improvise when necessary.
  • What we think of as coaching was, sports historians say, a distinctly American development
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  • Coaches are not teachers, but they teach.
  • Mainly, they observe, they judge, and they guide.
  • Coaches are like editors, another slippery invention.
  • The coaching model is different from the traditional conception of pedagogy, where there’s a presumption that, after a certain point, the student no longer needs instruction
  • Doctors understand expertise in the same way.
  • We have to keep developing our capabilities and avoid falling behind.
  • Expertise is thought to be not a static condition but one that doctors must build and sustain for themselves.
  • Coaching in pro sports proceeds from a starkly different premise: it considers the teaching model naïve about our human capacity for self-perfection.
  • The professional singers I spoke to describe their coaches in nearly identical terms. “We refer to them as our ‘outside ears,’ ” the great soprano Renée Fleming told me.
  • “My wife always says that I don’t really know how I play,” he told me. “She is an extra ear.”
  • Élite performers, researchers say, must engage in “deliberate practice”—sustained, mindful efforts to develop the full range of abilities that success requires.
  • So outside ears, and eyes, are important for concert-calibre musicians and Olympic-level athletes
  • For decades, research has confirmed that the big factor in determining how much students learn is not class size or the extent of standardized testing but the quality of their teachers.
  • Policymakers have pushed mostly carrot-and-stick remedies: firing underperforming teachers, giving merit pay to high performers, penalizing schools with poor student test scores.
  • alifornia researchers in the early nineteen-eighties conducted a five-year study of teacher-skill development in eighty schools,
  • Workshops led teachers to use new skills in the classroom only ten per cent of the time.
  • But when coaching was introduced—when a colleague watched them try the new skills in their own classroom and provided suggestions—adoption rates passed ninety per cent.
  • Coached teachers were more effective, and their students did better on tests.
  • It holds that, no matter how well prepared people are in their formative years, few can achieve and maintain their best performance on their own.
  • Researchers from the University of Virginia found that many teachers see no need for coaching.
  • Novice teachers often struggle with the basic behavioral issues.
  • Good coaches know how to break down performance into its critical individual components
  • One thing that seems clear, though, is that not all coaches are effective
  • She told me that she had begun to burn out. “I felt really isolated, too,” she said.
  • The coaching has definitely changed how satisfying teaching is,” she said.
  • Yet the stranger thing, it occurred to me, was that no senior colleague had come to observe me in the eight years since I’d established my surgical practice
  • I’d had no outside ears and eyes.
  • Since I have taken on a coach, my complication rate has gone down.
  • Coaching has become a fad in recent years. There are leadership coaches, executive coaches, life coaches, and college-application coaches
  • The sort of coaching that fosters effective innovation and judgment, not merely the replication of technique, may not be so easy to cultivate
  • We care about results in sports, and if we care half as much about results in schools and in hospitals we may reach the same conclusion.
  • “Most surgery is done in your head,”
  • What ultimately makes the difference is how well people use technology.
  • We have devoted disastrously little attention to fostering those abilities.
  • The prospect of coaching forces awkward questions about how we regard failure
  • But I had let Osteen see my judgment fail; I’d let him see that I may not be who I want to be.
  • Your performance is not determined by where you stand or where your elbow goes. It’s determined by where you decide to stand, where you decide to put your elbow.
  • But the capabilities of doctors matter every bit as much as the technology.
  • we may not be ready to accept—or pay for—a cadre of people who identify the flaws in the professionals upon whom we rely
  • Coaching done well may be the most effective intervention designed for human performance
jeffery heil

Investigating instructional strategies for using social media in formal and informal le... - 1 views

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    "Investigating Instructional Strategies for Using Social Media in Formal and Informal Learning"
Christina Andrade

Twitter used to study happiness patterns - USATODAY.com - 0 views

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    Cornell University researchers analyzed tweets from 2.4 million people to study happiness patterns. Awesome.
jeffery heil

The Missing Link in School Reform (August 16, 2011) | Stanford Social Innovation Review - 1 views

  • In Waiting for Superman
  • Three in 10 public school students fail to finish high school
  • Graduation rates for students in some minority groups are especially dismal, with just over half of Hispanics (55.5 percent) and African Americans (53.7 percent) graduating with their class.1
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  • only 26 percent of US high school students are proficient in math.
  • The accountability models increasingly in fashion find their roots in the discipline of economics rather than education, and they are exemplified in the value-added metrics now gathered by large urban school districts
  • Value-added modeling is one example of a larger approach to improving public schools that is aimed at enhancing what economists label “human capital”—factors such as teacher experience, subject knowledge, and pedagogical skills.
  • enhancing teacher human capital should not be the sole or even primary focus of school reform
  • if students are to show measurable and sustained improvement, schools must also foster what sociologists label “social capital”—the patterns of interactions among teachers.4
  • In addition to targeting teacher human capital, many believe that a key to improving public schools lies in bringing in people outside the school, or even the school district, to solve problems
  • A natural extension of the belief in the power of outsiders is the notion that teacher tenure is the enemy of effective public education.
  • In many reform efforts, the principal is cast as the “instructional leader” who is responsible for developing and managing pedagogical practice.
  • These three beliefs—in the power of teacher human capital, the value of outsiders, and the centrality of the principal in instructional practice—form the implicit or explicit core of many reform efforts today
  • Unfortunately, all three beliefs are rooted more in conventional wisdom and political sloganeering than in strong empirical research.
  • results provide much support for the centrality of social capital—the relationships among teachers—for improving public schools.
  • our findings strongly suggest that in trying to improve public schools we are overselling the role of human capital and innovation from the top, while greatly undervaluing the benefits of social capital and stability at the bottom.
  • teacher tenure can have significant positive effects on student achievement.
  • In the context of schools, human capital is a teacher’s cumulative abilities, knowledge, and skills developed through formal education and on-the-job experience.
  • several studies conducted largely by economists have shown little relationship between a teacher’s accumulation of formal education and actual student learning
  • Social capital, by comparison, is not a characteristic of the individual teacher but instead resides in the relationships among teachers.
  • ideology of school reform
  • When a teacher needs information or advice about how to do her job more effectively, she goes to other teachers.
  • when the relationships among teachers in a school are characterized by high trust and frequent interaction—that is, when social capital is strong—student achievement scores improve.
  • Teachers were almost twice as likely to turn to their peers as to the experts designated by the school district, and four times more likely to seek advice from one another than from the principal.
  • We found that the students of high-ability teachers outperformed those of low-ability teachers, as proponents of human capital approaches to school improvement would predict.
  • Students whose teachers were more able (high human capital) and also had stronger ties with their peers (strong social capital) showed the highest gains in math achievement.
  • Conversely, students of teachers with lower teaching ability (low human capital) and weaker ties with their peers (weak social capital) showed the lowest achievement gains
  • even low-ability teachers can perform as well as teachers of average ability if they have strong social capital
  • According to Ms. Rhee, “cooperation, collaboration, and consensus building are way overrated.”7
  • When teacher turnover resulted in high losses of either human or social capital, student achievement declined. But when turnover resulted in high losses of both human and social capital, students were particularly disadvantaged.
  • A social capital perspective would answer the same question by looking not just at what a teacher knows, but also where she gets that knowledge
  • But it is this latter class of activities—which can be conceived of as building external social capital—that made the difference both for teachers and for students.
  • When principals spent more time building external social capital, the quality of instruction in the school was higher and students’ scores on standardized tests in both reading and math were higher.
  • The more effective principals were those who defined their roles as facilitators of teacher success rather than instructional leaders.
  • the current focus on building teacher human capital—and the paper credentials often associated with it—will not yield the qualified teaching staff so desperately needed in urban districts.
  • olicymakers must also invest in measures that enhance collaboration and information sharing among teachers.
  • there is not enough emphasis on the value of teacher stability
  • We found direct, positive relationships between student achievement gains in mathematics and teacher tenure at grade level and teacher social capital.
  • principals who spent more of their time on collaborating with people and organizations outside the school delivered gains to teachers and students alike.
jeffery heil

Why Do Some People Learn Faster? | Wired Science | Wired.com - 0 views

  • The physicist Niels Bohr once defined an expert as “a person who has made all the mistakes that can be made in a very narrow field.”
  • Education isn’t magic. Education is the wisdom wrung from failure.
  • Why are some people so much more effective at learning from their mistakes?
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  • Moser experiment is premised on the fact that there are two distinct reactions to mistake
  • The first reaction is called error-related negativity (ERN). It appears about 50 milliseconds after a screw-up and is believed to originate in the anterior cingulate cortex, a chunk of tissue that helps monitor behavior, anticipate rewards and regulate attention
  • second signal, which is known as error positivity (Pe), arrives anywhere between 100-500 milliseconds after the mistake and is associated with awareness.
  • subjects learn more effectively when their brains demonstrate two properties: 1) a larger ERN signal, suggesting a bigger initial response to the mistake and 2) a more consistent Pe signal, which means that they are probably paying attention to the error, and thus trying to learn from it.
  • new paper, Moser et al. extends this research by looking at how beliefs about learning shape these mostly involuntary error-related signals in the brain,
  • scientists applied a dichotomy first proposed by Carol Dweck
  • Dweck distinguishes between people with a fixed mindset
  • and those with a growth mindset,
  • subjects with a growth mindset were significantly better at learning from their mistakes
  • those with a growth mindset generated a much larger Pe signal, indicating increased attention to their mistakes.
  • increased Pe signal was nicely correlated with improvement after error, implying that the extra awareness was paying dividends in performance.
  • When kids were praised for their effort, nearly 90 percent chose the harder set of puzzles.
  • when kids were praised for their intelligence, most of them went for the easier test.
  • According to Dweck, praising kids for intelligence encourages them to “look” smart, which means that they shouldn’t risk making a mistake.
  • Students praised for their intelligence almost always chose to bolster their self-esteem by comparing themselves with students who had performed worse on the test. In contrast, kids praised for their hard work were more interested in the higher-scoring exams. They wanted to understand their mistakes, to learn from their errors, to figure out how to do better.
  • The experience of failure had been so discouraging for the “smart” kids that they actually regressed.
  • The problem with praising kids for their innate intelligence — the “smart” compliment — is that it misrepresents the psychological reality of education
jeffery heil

The rise of K-12 blended learning | Innosight Institute - 0 views

  • In the year 2000, roughly 45,000 K–12 students took an online course. In 2009, more than 3 million K–12 students did.
  • In Disrupting Class,* the authors project that by 2019, 50 percent of all high school courses will be delivered online
Sherilyn Crawford

Emotional Literacy - 0 views

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    Another website on emotional literacy
Sherilyn Crawford

5 Traits of the 21st Century Teacher - 0 views

  • Driven to Learn
  • A Media Creation Expert
  • A Digital Navigator
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  • An Empathetic Mentor
  • A Technology Harmonizer
  • It is no longer acceptable to teach only from a textbook, to rely on the same worksheets an methods year after year without at least questioning them and researching why they are the best resource available.  
  •  Powerpoint and Word are becoming antiquated as newer and more powerful presentation and editing suites become available to teachers.
  • This means having social media accounts and understanding how they are used, even if you don’t use them specifically for learning.
  • This student-centered focus also creates learning opportunities for the teacher to learn with students, developing their teaching and collaborative skills
  • One of the keys here is that we work at making the technology work (in the best way we can) so the lesson becomes about the learning instead of the management of machines.
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