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3 Inspirations for Designing Time

Coming off the back of my research on the world of timetabling, I find this lingering question of what should be part of each and every day. I suppose when I ask this, I’m mostly asking about a school day, because those are the bulk of my days. More to the point, as a teacher in an elementary classroom, I design the framework of the day for my students. So this question is partially about what I would like to have as part of my days, and certainly also about what I think should be part of theirs.

I just went on a mini TED talk binge and watched three in a row.

First, Adora Svitak on What Adults Can Learn From Kids. My takeaways were many, but among them was the idea that our aspirations as teachers, as adults, should be to raise children who are way better than we are. No doubt. As she puts it, this is why we’re no longer in the dark ages. It’s an interesting point to make, when you consider resistance against developments in curriculum… The old “If it was good enough for me, it’s good enough for my kid” mentality. We don’t want coming generations to be as good as us. We need them to be better.

 

I followed up Adora’s amazing talk by watching Paul Nicklen telling tales of his explorations in the polar regions, and the real meaning of the recurring news-bite about the disappearance of polar ice. Listening to him describe his evolving relationship with a frightening, thousand-pound leopard seal, who spent four days trying to feed, nurture and protect him, and the plight of these ecosystems, was the perfect case study for Adora’s point about generational evolution being so critical.

 

Finally, Elif suggested I watch Neil Gershenfeld on the rise of FabLabs, and the evolution of the digital revolution. The thing which stuck with me in the end was how this phenomenon of tinkering, which I’ve written about before, was creating a next generation of ground-up innovation, much of the examples being the innovation of children. Kids working at scaled-down, budget variations of multi-million dollar MIT facilities who find ways of doing things that are then emulated back at MIT itself. This is a case study of generational evolution. And what’s more, the global potential reach of these laboratories defies the thought that some western, wealthy educational background is a prerequisite to notable innovation and success in high tech fields.

So, I’m back to the question… What should be part of a day in school?

I look at the many takeaways from these three videos and begin to get a feeling of what some ingredients might be. More on this in my next post…


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