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Dr. Tae — Building A New Culture Of Teaching And Learning

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    Hi I'm dr Tae and this is a talk similar to the one I recently gave to my last group of students
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    At northwestern university. On the last day of class.
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    A lot of my students wanted me to post the video of the original lecture online.
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    But instead of doing that I'm doing this,
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    I'm re-reccording this presentation.
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    Just for you!
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    So here it is: Building a new culture of teaching and learning
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    But why do we need to build something new?
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    what's wrong with our current current culture of teaching and learning?
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    I can summarize the problem in two words:
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    School Sucks!
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    kids say this all the time and nobody listen, but now I'm saying it.
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    And its an idea that we need to start taking very seriously.
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    Because its true school does sucks, especially when it comes to math and science education,
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    which is going to be the main focus of my talk.
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    So before we get to the part about building a new culture of teaching and learning,
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    we need to take a carefull look at what's wrong with our education now.
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    Let's start at the top with universities:
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    the environnement I've been in for the past sixteen years.
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    Universities are ideal places to teach and learn,
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    and we can certainly turn to them for educationnal leadership.
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    Actually no!
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    "Universities are not doing a good job."
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    And I'm not the only one whose noticed.
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    this quote is actually from Leon Lederman,
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    and he thinks there is a problem we should at least here him out.
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    Dr. Lederman is a former director of Fermilab he won the nobel price in physics,
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    and he also know something about education:
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    he started his own school the "illinois mathematics and science academy".
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    Here is Leon Lederman in an interview with the science network.
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    Right now my biggest anger is with the universities,
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    because universities are not doing a good job.
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    They do not continue the insperation that kids getting out of high schools have about science.
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    there's teachers, and their students that are getting out of high school who say:
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    I'm a science major I love chemistry I love biologie,
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    and then they go to college and 50% of those kids change feels into none science feels.
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    That's the statictical data.
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    Why!
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    Because they go onto a class of 200 kids they see a small professor somewhere down there.
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    You know, or maybe a teaching assistant whose english is not so good.
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    The blame is on the universities, depersonalized.
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    You know, Kids in high school ok at least there is 20 or 40 kids in a class,
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    and these lecture rooms for physics one or chemestry one they are hudge.
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    I think its UCLA, at least at one point had an auditorial with 400 kids.
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    All just sitting there listening to this one professor.
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    You could hardly, you know, see him, or with binoculars.
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    Oh! there he is, he's down there...
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    Doctor Lederman use the word depersonalized,
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    and it captures a lot of what's wrong in our universities.
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    Here is a picture I took of a lecture class at NorthWestern.
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    It's just one of many examples of "depersonalizition 1 0 1".
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    First this snapshoot illustrate a gigantic failure in leadership:
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    people at universitie approve this ridiculous format has an ok way to teach.
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    Second the professor at the podium made no attempt to engage the students
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    that were right in front of him.
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    The final and most disturbing thing
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    is what the students are doing:
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    they're falling asleep, checking facebook or they're email,
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    or paradoxically regestering for next term classes
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    right in the midlle of class they're completely tuning out.
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    Maybe they want to make sure they get a spot in "depersonalization 1 0 2".
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    Just try and put yourself in this room.
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    Would you pay tuitions to sit in this room?
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    Does this environement suit how you learn?
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    Universities are supposed to be places where students and faculty I've a lively exchange of ideas.
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    And that isn't happening because the culture is become so depersonalized.
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    And university leaders faculty and students collectivly let that happenned.
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    We should think twice before we refered to a prestigious university has a good school.
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    Sadly universities arn't exempt from school sucks.
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    Now I need to explain why secondary school suck.
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    and I'll start by citing american finest news source: the onion.
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    "Increasing number of educators found to be suffering from teaching disabilities"
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    Here is my favourite part of the article:
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    It's funny cause its true!
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    And here is some comments from Lawrence Krauss that might explain why its true.
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    Dr Krauss is director of the Origins initiative at Arizona state,
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    and he does a lot of work to promote good science education.
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    Here is a scary statistic:
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    So we compared american students to their counterparts in other 20, 25 other industrialization,
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    and there were recent study that came out.
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    So we look at kids in grad three and grade five
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    and then fifteen year old.
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    and what's amazing is grade three and grrade five american students
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    on the whole do better in science and mathematics
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    than their counterparts.
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    but by the time they're fifteen they do subsentially worse
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    So we've be doing something very effective to de-educate them or disinterest them in science
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    and one of the reason is another equally scary fact which is that.
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    over ninety percent of middle school science teachers in this country
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    have never taken a science course outside of highschool.
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    and..
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    what..what percentage was that?
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    over ninety percent.
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    ninety!
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    ninety, yea.
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    not nine!
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    no, ninety ...
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    I had the same reaction than richards dawkings:
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    what! How did this happened? How did we let so many unqualified teachers into our schools?
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    I think one reason is hiring practices.
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    School sucks because the people who run them don't hire great teachers.
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    Once again lets start at the top:
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    At universities professors aren't really hired to teach.
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    they hired and promoted based on the research they do.
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    As a result teaching its rarely a priority for professors and it shows.
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    Last year I was on a faculty pannel for advising graduate students
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    about getting academic jobs and, the other professors on the pannel admited
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    that teaching wasn't that important in getting a faculty position
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    One of the professor on the pannel was a department chair.
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    And she actually reffered to her department school offerings
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    as a teaching burden
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    that the kind of leadership we have at our universities.
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    At the secondary level the problem is hiring teachers
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    who just don't know what they are talking about,
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    especially in the sciences.
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    Here I want to point out the difference between: certification and qualifications.
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    For example: I have a Phd in physics, I've been teaching for fireteen years,
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    but I'd probably have a hard time getting job teaching at a public school.
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    why? Because I never wasted time in a programm to get certified
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    to teach in a public school.
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    That's backwards!
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    If its true that our public schools are already full of certified teachers
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    who don't know what they're doing
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    then that means the certification process we have right now doesn't work!
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    if we want to start getting truly qualified teachers
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    we need to get ride of this fraudulent certification system.
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    And start hiring people based on real competency.
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    The lesson here is that schools have hiring practices that are barriers to getting great teachers.
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    And the immediate consequence is that schools at every level
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    are full of teachers who can't teach or don't want to teach.
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    Now if math and science education
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    is really in shambles,
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    how did someone like me get into science?
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    Well its not because I was immerse in a nationnal culture dedicated to math and science education:
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    I was just lucky!
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    This is Dean Goldgar the person who got me interested in calculus.
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    His high shcool calculus class was better than all the math classes into college.
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    Mister Goldar have even work with me outside of class
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    so I can study more advanced topic in mathematics.
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    He was a real mentor.
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    This is Kurt Wiesenfeld.
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    My undergraduate mentor.
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    Dr wiesenfeld taught the very first college physic class I took,
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    and he inspired me to major in physics.
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    But that first class was special.
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    It was an honor section that only eight students bother sign up for.
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    How lucky was that!
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    why hundreds of other kids were sitting in lecture halls.
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    Eight of us hit the jackpot and had this professor all to ourselves,
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    five days a week.
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    It was personalized. And it had a huge impact on me.
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    Noticed I'm not telling you stories about shiny new building or computer labs or
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    interactive whiter boards that really had an influence on me.
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    I'm talking about great teachers,
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    and unfortunately great teachers are rare.
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    David Griffiths understand this important point
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    He said:
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    That exactly right,
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    but schools aren't doing enough of that.
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    Now I want to shift years and talk more specifically about sciences classes.
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    Dean Zollman had this great story about giving its eight year old daughter
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    a tour of the physics building at his university.
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    Enventually they came across a lecture hall full of students.
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    His daughter asked:
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    "What do all those people doing?"
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    And Zollmen gave what seems like a reasonable answer:
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    "They're learning physics."
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    And its daughter responded with the exactly the right question:
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    "DO they just sit there?"
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    YEA, they do just sit there!
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    And an eight year old can see right away
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    that there is something horribly wrong with that.
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    A lot of science classes are set up to be completely unscientific.
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    The first problem is that students just sit there.
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    But if you're going to learn science you can just sit there!
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    You have to think, and better yet, you have to do experiments: that's what labs are for.
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    Unfortunately many labs exercices aren't any fun,
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    and sometimes they don't even demonstrate phenomena in a convincing way.
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    But teachers don't have to be convincing: because they have authority on their side.
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    And they can use grades to enforce that authority.
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    Who needs evidence!
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    Science its true because the teacher said so and I have to know it for the test otherwise I'll get a bad grade!
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    That's the message that comes across when science teachers doesn't really understand science.
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    And its the exact opposite of what science is about.
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    Here is an example.
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    Lets assume you've never seen this thing before.
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    Boy it sure does look like sciency!
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    I want you to memorize the content of this slide all of it:
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    the names of the compounds, the sequence of the reactions were are the arrows
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    you even have to learn how to prounonce "phosphorylation".
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    You must reproduce this drawing from memory next week on a test.
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    Lets say you manage to pull this off and get an hundred percent on the test.
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    Congratulations! You haven't learn a damn thing about science.
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    Whay I just describe was my experience in highschool biology.
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    I had to memorize a lot of stuff that wasn't justified with any evidence.
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    I didn't get to do a single expirement to convince myself that anything in that diagram is true.
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    And if I didn't memorize all that stuff. I was gonna get a bad grade.
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    Actually, it was worse than that:
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    if I did a really good job at memorizing the material without thinking or understanding,
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    I'd get a good grade!
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    That is NOT the lesson we want to teach in our science classes.
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    There has to be a better way.
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    Where can we fing a good role model for science classes?
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    How about these guys?
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    "Myth Busters" is the most scientific show on television.
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    Because as they say:
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    "They don't just tell the myths they put them to the test!"
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    The idea at the core of Myth Busters is the same as the core of science.
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    If you want to figure out if something is true, you have to do the experiment.
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    So in Myth Busters if the claims of a myth agree with experiments the myth is confirmed.
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    If the claims of the myth disagree with the experiments its busted.
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    That's just how science work.
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    And that's the lessons that kids need to learn.
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    Science classes should be Myth Busters projects that kids can do.
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    But there is one itch.
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    Addam and Jammy always give this warning at the beginning of every show:
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    Please don't try anything that you are about to see us do at home.
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    Ever!
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    Maybe lawers are getting in the way of science education.
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    Of course we don't want kids injuring themselves by filling their lunchboxes with thermite.
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    But we do want kids to copy the spirit of Myth Busters.
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    We should encourage kids to try experiments at home, and try to figure things out for themselves.
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    That's way more scientific than just telling kids to memorize stuff in science books.
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    Our last stop in school sucks, has to do with learning.
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    If schools and school reforms are going to be effective.
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    They have to be design to help people learn.
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    Here's how school are typically structured:
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    there's a school year divided into terms, and in each term there is specific courses avalaible and a fixed amount of time to learn the material in each course and the instructor evaluates the students somehow and gives our grades...
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    NONE of these features are necessary for learning.
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    And I think they actually interfere with the learning process.
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    Why would I say that?
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    Because I have a better model of learning.
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    Skatboarding!
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    So what can skatboarding tell us about the learning process?
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    Lets find out.
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    This next section also happens to be the motivation from my physics of skateboarding project.
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    Which you can check out at: physicsofskateboarding.com
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    What I'm going to show you is a video of me trying to learn a new skateboarding trick.
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    This is a trick I had never even tried before:
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    a pop shove it nose manual shove it out.
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    I want you to focus on this video, really watch it carefully.
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    Because its a vivid example of what the learning process is really like.
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    So here the ingredients of the trick.
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    A pop shove it were I pop the board up and it turns an hundred and eighty degrees.
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    A nose manual were I balance over the front wheels.
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    And, a little shove it off the nose another hundred and eighty degrees.
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    But now I have to learn how to put those tricks together into something new.
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    Shiiit !
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    Woua. Why am I almost dying every time I try this?!
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    Doing the trick is impossible!
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    Holly shit!
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    Noticed that I didn't get it first try or second try.
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    I didn't show you all of the attemps, but I had to try this trick fifty eight times!
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    That means in the process of learning this trick:
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    I failed fifty seven times!
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    Interesting...
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    Skatboarding had helped us discover the secret to learning.
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    Here it is:
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    Work your ass off until you figure it out.
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    If that seems overly simplistic to you, let me some more examples.
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    Learning how to walk.
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    That's a picture of me and my sister.
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    We don't need to send toddlers to walking schools
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    so that can get bad grades if they don't learn how to walk in exactly one semester.
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    We just let toddlers keep trying to walk untill they do.
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    Learning an instrument.
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    There was a time when I was actually pretty good at playing the guitarre
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    But its not something I learned in school.
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    I just practiced as much as I could because I wanted to play better.
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    And I don't know of many people who take guitarre lessons
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    that's involve hundreds of students in a lecture hall.
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    Music instruction is almost always personalized.
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    Learning Mathematics.
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    Not that he needs one but I have to give Malcolm Gladwell applaud here.
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    Because he has new book out called "Outliers".
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    And there is a great story in there, from Allan Schoenfeld,
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    a professor at Berkeley who studies how people learn mathematics.
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    Shoenfeld tells us the story of a nurse named Renee,
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    who is using computer program to understand the slope of a vertical line.
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    Here is the important passage:
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    "Twenty-two minutes pass from the moment Renee begins playing with the computer program to the moment she says:
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    'Ahhhh, that means something to me now.' That's a long time."
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    Renee had to wrestle with a mathematical concept for a long time,
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    before it started making any sense.
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    That's what learning mathematics and science is really like!
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    Our schools arn't set up to handle that.
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    Scientific Research.
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    This is an entry of one of my notbooks from grade school,
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    when I finally figured out how to solve a problem I've been working on for months.
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    But before that day I had already filled a bunch of other note books with tons with other ideas
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    that didn't work at all.
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    I had lots and lots of failures before I finally figured it out.
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    Sound familiar?
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    So here is the head to head comparison:
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    Schools vs Skateboarding.
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    and when I say skatboarding I really mean the process of learning anything properly.
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    I can't go into details with all of these points,
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    but just look how different these two cultures are.
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    Schools have rigid time-tables, fixed amount of time for learning material.
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    That's incredibly stupid!
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    All that does is stop us from develloping the kind of persistents we need,
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    for real learning and real understanding.
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    If you're learning something new, it doesn't make the least bit of sense to decide ahead of time
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    exactly how long its supposed to take you to learn it.
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    That's like saying I'm gonna get an 'F' if I don't land my skateboarding trick in ten tries,
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    or I'm never going to understand the fundamental theorem of calculus if I can't do it in a week.
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    No.
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    If there's something you really have to learn,
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    you keep working your ass off untill you figured it out.
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    And that crucial for math and science education.
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    Just like skateboarders struggling with new tricks,
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    students need to learn how to struggle with new ideas without getting cut off.
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    Next its surprising how many schools plays authority and coercion at the fundation of the learning environment.
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    Instead of giving good reasons for learning teachers give threats in the form of bad grades.
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    That just pits teacher and students against each other,
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    and most experienced teachers know that you can't really force someone to learn something,
  • 20:17 - 20:18
    if they don't want to learn it.
  • 20:18 - 20:21
    But that's exactly what our schools try to do.
  • 20:21 - 20:24
    Real learning is largely self motivated.
  • 20:24 - 20:28
    If students have good reasons to learn they'll want to learn,
  • 20:28 - 20:34
    and a self-motivated student, paired with the right mentor can learn a lot.
  • 20:34 - 20:39
    In schools grades gives also students a sense of false certification.
  • 20:39 - 20:43
    It's disturbing how many students think they mastered something,
  • 20:43 - 20:46
    just because a teacher gave them an A in a class.
  • 20:46 - 20:51
    In real learning student have to be honest and evaluating themselves.
  • 20:51 - 20:53
    They can't kid about themselves about they learned.
  • 20:53 - 20:56
    For example the skateboarding trick I did in the video.
  • 20:56 - 21:03
    Here is an honnest assesment: "I only landed that trick once, and I can pretend I mastered it".
  • 21:03 - 21:08
    With skateboarding and calculus and physics, nobody ever gets it at first try,
  • 21:08 - 21:12
    and we can let students think they mastered something just because they've seen it once.
  • 21:12 - 21:14
    Mastery takes practice.
  • 21:15 - 21:21
    Schools also have to worry about preventing cheating and other forms of academic dishonnesty.
  • 21:21 - 21:27
    It would be way easier to have a culture that just didn't give incentives to cheat: like grades!
  • 21:27 - 21:32
    If you're goal is to learn something properly there isn't much point in faking it.
  • 21:32 - 21:36
    And in skatboarding I'm not even sure what it means to cheat.
  • 21:36 - 21:42
    I don't know how to cheat in skateboarding it doesn't really exists, it's not applicable.
  • 21:42 - 21:43
    So there you have it:
  • 21:43 - 21:48
    if we want to improve education especially math and science education.
  • 21:48 - 21:51
    We should make it more like skateboarding.
  • 21:51 - 21:54
    But if you ever want to ruin anything...
  • 21:54 - 21:57
    Make it more like school!
  • 21:57 - 22:01
    Now we can get back to the original optimistic purpose of this talk:
  • 22:01 - 22:04
    Building a new culture of teaching and learning.
  • 22:04 - 22:05
    Were do we start?
  • 22:05 - 22:08
    Well we need to fix our schools,
  • 22:08 - 22:14
    But when I say that, it means that we have to change the fundamental culture in schools,
  • 22:14 - 22:17
    to support how people actually learn.
  • 22:17 - 22:21
    On top of that, we need to get leaders, who hire great teachers.
  • 22:21 - 22:27
    I want to emphasize that changing the cultures is the priority.
  • 22:27 - 22:32
    If get better teachers, they need to teach the right things, in the right environment.
  • 22:32 - 22:35
    If all they do is re-enforce the existing culture,
  • 22:35 - 22:38
    and just do better job of teaching to the test,
  • 22:38 - 22:41
    well, I don't think that's progress.
  • 22:41 - 22:45
    That's why I'm weary of teacher recruiment programs like "Teach For America".
  • 22:45 - 22:51
    Because changing the structure of schools isn't an explicit goal in those kind of programs.
  • 22:51 - 22:56
    Anyway, making all of these changes might seem like trying to polish a turd.
  • 22:56 - 23:02
    But here is the case for optimism, and if you've seen that episode of Myth Busters,
  • 23:02 - 23:03
    you know what's coming up...
  • 23:03 - 23:07
    as it turns out: you CAN polish a turd!
  • 23:07 - 23:13
    Here is how I polished a turd called physics 330-2: advanced classical mechanics.
  • 23:13 - 23:17
    The typical way to teach classes like this is to get a professor to lecture,
  • 23:17 - 23:21
    and have the students sit there, screw that! I did something different.
  • 23:21 - 23:28
    First of all I didn't give a single lecture. I didn't want my students just sitting there,
  • 23:28 - 23:30
    I turn the classes into workshops.
  • 23:30 - 23:36
    My students came to class, worked together and really wrestle with difficult physics problems.
  • 23:36 - 23:39
    And of course they got a lot of stuff wrong.
  • 23:39 - 23:45
    And I would help them through that. But in that process the big advantage from me,
  • 23:45 - 23:48
    was that I could see how my students were thinking into real time,
  • 23:48 - 23:52
    and I could give them meaningfull feedback on the spot.
  • 23:52 - 23:56
    You know the students and the professor were actually having a:
  • 23:56 - 23:59
    "Lively exchange of ideas".
  • 23:59 - 24:02
    The whole point at being at the university!
  • 24:02 - 24:07
    So it really is possible to change the culture in the classroom.
  • 24:07 - 24:11
    We just need teachers who are willing to take a chance on making those changes.
  • 24:11 - 24:15
    But we also need to work outside the world of our classroom.
  • 24:15 - 24:19
    And this where I think the biggest changes in our culture of teaching and learning can happen.
  • 24:19 - 24:23
    I thought I invented the term distributed teaching.
  • 24:23 - 24:26
    There doesn't seems to be a Wikipedia page for it,
  • 24:26 - 24:29
    but, google says that other peolpe have used the phrase.
  • 24:29 - 24:32
    So I should probably explain my version.
  • 24:32 - 24:37
    The name distributing teaching was inspired by distributing computing.
  • 24:37 - 24:39
    If you're not familiar with distributed computing,
  • 24:39 - 24:43
    you should look out the SETI@home project as an example.
  • 24:43 - 24:49
    But the basic idea is that using a lot of relatively slow computers part time,
  • 24:49 - 24:54
    might be just as usefull as a single super-computer running full throttle.
  • 24:54 - 24:56
    So what I mean by distributing teaching,
  • 24:56 - 25:00
    is that, if everybody did some kind of teaching in they spare time,
  • 25:00 - 25:06
    that might be just as effective as having a group of full time teachers.
  • 25:06 - 25:10
    So how do we start doing distributing teaching?
  • 25:10 - 25:12
    Well, we're already doing it.
  • 25:12 - 25:17
    The main tool using for distrubuting computing, is also usefull for distributing teaching:
  • 25:17 - 25:19
    The Internet.
  • 25:19 - 25:23
    I'm putting this talk online, that's one form of distributed teaching.
  • 25:23 - 25:26
    Wikipidea is another kind of distributed teaching.
  • 25:26 - 25:30
    Lots of people can share what they know in varying amounts,
  • 25:30 - 25:32
    and contribute when they can.
  • 25:32 - 25:36
    And it works just as well as traditionnaly encyclopedia
  • 25:36 - 25:39
    offer by a limited number of people.
  • 25:39 - 25:41
    Of course the idea of distributed teaching
  • 25:41 - 25:45
    isn't just for the Internet, you can also do it in person.
  • 25:45 - 25:50
    This summer I'm going to film a documentary about a group of scientist and engineers,
  • 25:50 - 25:53
    who are going to be teaching at a space camp in south Korea.
  • 25:53 - 25:56
    None of these people are professional teachers.
  • 25:56 - 26:01
    They're just spending a little of their time, to share what they know with some kids.
  • 26:01 - 26:06
    If all of us started things like this it would start adding up pretty quickly.
  • 26:06 - 26:12
    But distributed teaching is only going to work, if you start contributed.
  • 26:12 - 26:16
    But, why should you bother spending time sharing what you know?
  • 26:16 - 26:20
    Well because if you don't, you're being unreasonably selfish!
  • 26:20 - 26:24
    "Knowledge isn't like a cheesburger."
  • 26:24 - 26:28
    I wish I could remember where I got this, its great really simple point:
  • 26:28 - 26:32
    if I have a cheesburger, and I want to share it with someone.
  • 26:32 - 26:35
    That means I going to end up with less for myself.
  • 26:35 - 26:37
    Knowledge doesn't work that way.
  • 26:37 - 26:42
    You can share what you know as much as you want and you won't lose any of it.
  • 26:42 - 26:45
    There is no reason to be selfish with knowledge.
  • 26:45 - 26:50
    And that's exactly why everybody should be teaching in some capacity.
  • 26:51 - 26:54
    Maybe the most usefull thing distributed teaching can do,
  • 26:54 - 27:00
    is drag people away from this weird notion that teaching and learning only happens in schools.
  • 27:00 - 27:05
    Building a new educationnal culture isn't just about fixing schools.
  • 27:05 - 27:09
    It's really about making teaching and learning cultural habit.
  • 27:09 - 27:12
    Things that all of us do all the time.
  • 27:12 - 27:15
    And building that new culture isn't hard.
  • 27:15 - 27:18
    We just have to follow just one simple rule:
  • 27:18 - 27:21
    Share What You Know.
  • 27:21 - 27:23
    Thank you very much for listening.
  • 27:23 - 27:25
    If you want to keep track of my projects:
  • 27:25 - 27:31
    please visit: drtae.org physicsofskateboarding.com and universitae.com
  • 27:31 - 27:34
    Thanks again.
  • 27:42 - 27:45
    Nobody is gonna watch this!
Title:
Dr. Tae — Building A New Culture Of Teaching And Learning
Description:

[YouTube is allowing videos longer than 15 minutes now which is why I'm uploading this video again, but it's in one piece this time.]

Are schools designed to help people learn? Are colleges and universities really institutions of higher education? Do students actually learn any science in science classes? Can skateboarding give us a better model for teaching and learning? Watch this video to find out.

My website
http://DrTae.org

For more details about this video, read my blog entry about "Building A New Culture Of Teaching And Learning"
http://drtae.org/building-a-new-culture-of-teaching-and-learning/

0:37
"School Sucks"
If you've never seen Sir Ken Robinson's TED Talk "Do Schools Kill Creativity?" you should watch it here:
http://ted.com/​talks/ken_robinson_says_schools_kill_creativity.html

1:22
"Universities are not doing a good job."
Watch the entire interview with Dr. Leon Lederman on The Science Network.
Education, Politics, Einstein, and Charm: a conversation with Nobel Laureate Leon Lederman.
http://thesciencenetwork.org/programs/​the-science-studio/​robert

3:02
Depersonalization 101: "They're...checking Facebook or their email..."
Is the digital revolution turning us into delusional multitaskers who can't focus?
Watch "Digital Nation" from Frontline on PBS
http://pbs.org/​wgbh/​pages/​frontline/​digitalnation/​view/​

4:37
"Increasing number of educators found to be suffering from teaching disabilities"
The Onion
http://theonion.com/​content/​news/​report_increasing_number_of

5:45
"Over 90% of middle school science teachers in this country have never taken a science course outside of high school."
Watch the entire discussion between Dr. Lawrence Krauss and Dr. Richard Dawkins:
http://richarddawkins.net/​article,2472,Richard-Dawkins-and-Lawrence-Krauss,RichardDawkinsnet

7:05
"...the difference between certifications and qualifications."
Malcolm Gladwell has argued that if we don't have a good way of predicting who will become great teachers, we must drastically change hiring practices in schools.
"Most Likely To Succeed: How do we hire when we can't tell who's right for the job?"
http://newyorker.com/​reporting/​2008/​12/​15/​081215fa_fact_gladwell

9:30
"...the most effective thing we can do to improve the quality of physics instruction...is to hire, honor, and promote good teachers."
Dr. David J. Griffiths ( academic.reed.edu/​physics/​faculty/​griffiths.html )
"Is There A Text In This Class?"
http://ajp.aapt.org/​resource/​1/​ajpias/​v65/​i12/​p1141_s1

10:00
"Do they just sit there?"
Dr. Dean Zollman ( phys.ksu.edu/​personal/​dzollman/​ )
"Do They Just Sit There? Reflections on helping students learn physics"
http://web.phys.ksu.edu/​papers/​millikan.html

11:41
"Congratulations! You haven't learned a damn thing about science."
Watch Richard Feynman for a more insightful view of science.
"The Pleasure of Finding Things Out"
http://video.google.com/​videoplay?docid=7136440703094429927

13:23
"Maybe lawyers are getting in the way of science education."
Watch Geyver Tulley's TED Talks about
"Five Dangerous Things You Should Let Your Kids Do"
http://ted.com/​talks/​gever_tulley_on_5_dangerous_things_for_kids.html
"Life Lessons Through Tinkering"
http://ted.com/​talks/​gever_tulley_s_tinkering_school_in_action.html

16:40
"Work your ass off until you figure it out."
Dr. Carol Dweck might call this having a "growth mindset."
"How Not To Talk To Your Kids"
http://nymag.com/​news/​features/​27840/​
Mindset by Dweck
http://mindsetonline.com/​
Branford Marsalis thinks some students don't understand the idea of hard work.
http://youtube.com/​watch?v=5rz2jRHA9fo
"Making The Grade: Many students wheedle for a degree as if it were a freebie T shirt"
http://users.ece.gatech.edu/​~mleach/​myturn/​makingthegrade.html

17:32
"That's a long time"
Outliers
by Malcolm Gladwell
http://gladwell.com/​outliers/​index.html
Dr. Alan Schoenfeld
http://gse.berkeley.edu/​faculty/​ahschoenfeld/​ahschoenfeld.html

22:40
"Teach For America Chews Up, Spits Out Another Ethnic-Studies Major"
The Onion
http://theonion.com/​content/​node/​30911

23:03
"You can polish a turd."
MythBusters: Polishing A Turd
http://dsc.discovery.com/​videos/​mythbusters-polishing-a-turd.html

24:35
Distributed Computing on Wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/​wiki/​Distributed_computing
SETI@home
http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Duration:
27:50

English subtitles

Revisions