HI All...

I watched Negroponte on the Colbert show last night.  Nice.  He seems to have 
toned down his former "we don't need teachers... kids will do it all" line a 
bit, but it is still implied.  


Sugata Mitra implies the same in his TED talk:


http://www.ted.com/talks/sugata_mitra_shows_how_kids_teach_themselves.html


But, I argue that  teachers are still very much needed as orchestrators and 
conductors of this learning.  In Mitra's project he served as the master 
orchestrator by providing the content and asking the children questions that 
will lead to learning by discovery.  The "grannie cloud" in his project was the 
conductor, encouraging and cheering on the students as they worked their way 
through the learning experience.


On Saturday I  followed a bit of the irc chat from Room 555 on Saturday which 
discussed children  being chosen as "experts" to help the others learn. Irc was 
not being friendly so I had to give up, but again, the teacher was the 
orchestrator... and conductor. Planning the lesson with the right questions and 
choosing the players and conducting the learning experience.


Of course, many excellent teachers already know and practice this approach to 
teaching.  They are most often found in "hands on" type classes like  the arts, 
lab sciences and production classes. Now we need to ask, how do we (and should 
we) prepare all teachers to teach in this untraditional manner, which really 
good teachers have always done?


Should OLPC or Sugar Labs consider developing and disseminating, this teaching 
style, and a curriculum for training teachers?


How would we disseminate it? Evaluate it? Advertise it? Etc?


Let's have a discussion!


Caryl (aka "GrannieB" and Carolina)





                                          
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