Creating space for more authentic and inquiry learning in the classroom
I sometimes feel the exact way about our educational system. When I walk into a classroom, more often than not, students are lined up in rows, being directed by the teacher to complete tasks as a whole, and shooed should they try and break away from the pack. The teachers expect students to be compliant, do the tasks set out for them, and produce what is expected of them. They are in essence, following a routine. Of course, by doing this we are teaching kids to be sheep.
Here is the most difficult part about trying to teach sheep; there are really only two methods that work. The first is you hire a sheepherder who has this stick. He watches carefully to make sure no sheep is getting out of line of deviating from the other sheep. If one does, he pokes her with his shepherd’s crook to make sure she goes back to doing what he wants her to do. The second way is you have a herding dog whose job it is to run around corralling these sheep, nipping at their hind legs and barking at them in order to make sure they are being compliant. It certainly feels like these methods are easier for teachers to keep kids in line but they do not produce llamas.
But then this person comes in and she looks at things differently. She does not always do what she is asked, but what she does is unique and innovative. Businesses have been continually grumbling that there are not enough llamas coming into the workforce, most everyone is a sheep. And if most everyone is a sheep, they are just going to be produce more sheep. Apple, Google, Amazon, and other innovative companies are not going to move the needle with sheep. They need llamas to produce their innovative ideas.
The issue that llamas face is that because they are not as compliant as other students, the teacher does not view them as someone who is trying to think of things in another way, but as a troublemaker. These llamas, especially the really inquisitive ones, might have a difficult time being identified as gifted because the teachers want the sheep, not the llama. They are easier to handle. In many schools the gifted identification process is first based on a teacher recommendation. How many gifted llamas are not being identified and provided the services that will allow them to continue to be llamas.
It used to be in schools that when a person started to indicate that they might feel more natural writing with their left hand, teachers forced them to write with their right hand because that was the way most everyone else wrote. We did not want kids to stand out or be different than all the other kids. In today’s schools, are doing the same thing by forcing kids who think differently or are innately curious to be like everyone else. Instead, we need to nurture these children and allow their curiosity to run rampant. We need to let them be llamas.
Author
Todd Stanley is the author of several education books including Project-Based Learning for Gifted Students and Performance-Based Assessment for 21st-Century Skills, both for Prufrock Press.
Additionally, he wrote a series of workbooks for them entitled 10 Performance-Based Projects for the ELA/Math/Science Classroom. He wrote Creating Life-Long Learners with Corwin Press and is a regular contributor of blogs to Corwin Connect which can be accessed at https://corwin-connect.com/author/toddstanley/.
You can find out more about Todd at MyEdExpert.com and you can follow him on Twitter.
Further Reading
- edCircuit – Todd Stanley Columns
- Education Week – A year ago SCOTUS raised the Special Ed Bar. What’s happened since?
- HuffPost – This ‘Forgotten’ Part Of Special Ed Could Lead To Better Outcomes For Students