Sunday, June 16, 2013

The Twitter Final

I spent this past year un-schooling my sophomore European Literature class. The process began with my having the students use the ShowMe app to display what they had learned about Gothic literature and their summer reading books, The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafon and The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde.

The Frisch Africa Encounter


The next big thing that completely deconstructed the classroom was my Africa project, a month-long interdisciplinary unit that culminated in a night when students presented what they had learned to their parents and the Frisch community. You can read about that project here, where I discuss the overall program and launching it; here, which is a blog post about the evening; here, where I discuss my sister Smadar Goldstein's presentation on the integration of Ethiopian Jewry into Israeli society; and here, which is a reflection post about what my students got out of the unit.

It was really after the Africa program that the students and I realized we couldn't go back into the box of a normal English classroom. As loose as that box can already be, given the fact that English is based on discussion and a healthy amount of student opinion and discourse, even a normal English classroom is not the messy, sometimes chaotic, and exhilarating experience that we had had completing something like The Frisch Africa Encounter. I had to look for more ways to un-school school.


The Sophomore Renaissance Project


For Shakespeare and the Renaissance, I came up with the Sophomore Renaissance Project [full disclosure: we didn't get to the ShowMe part of the assignment; maybe next year!].

Here's a presentation, where you can see the background students learned about the Renaissance and Shakespeare's plays as well as the vocabulary words the students studied and the neologisms they created. Notice also that the students chose a target audience for their presentations and so had to gear their wording and information to that audience:





Shifting From Teacher-Produced Work to Student-Produced Work


By this time in the year, the students had worked primarily on a wiki, where I had posted information they sifted through. By the time the Renaissance presentations were ready, we needed a platform on which to post student work. But first we paused for an awesome party on April 23 in honor of what might possibly be Shakespeare's birthday.


The Sophomore Blog


The rest of the year we balanced work on a sonnet term paper, a traditionally academically rigorous assignment, with the more project-based learning we were doing in class. You can see the results of our work on the 10H blog:

10H Explorations

Here's a blog post I particularly like by a student who used art to reflect on what she had learned about women in the literary works and historical eras we studied throughout the year:

Nonconformist Women


What Kind of Final Would be Appropriate?


The sonnet papers were due on the last week of school, and I was debating what to do for the final. On the one hand, writing an essay or two on a final wouldn't be wrong. Students generally don't get enough essay writing practice. On the other hand, the class had been so liberated from a normal structure that I found the thought of giving a traditional essay final somewhat boring. It also didn't seem appropriate: here we had done all this non-traditional schooling; were we now going to go back in the box? I didn't even know if my students would agree to do so. After all, when we were reflecting on the year, the kids were making comments along the lines of "We want the classroom to be a place we learn in, not a place they [teachers] teach in." (How awesome is that comment, by the way?!)

When I posed the question of what to do for the final, the kids quickly revealed they felt as I thought they would: they didn't want to write an essay because they wanted something more out of the box. In fact, they outright said, "You took us out of the box; now you can't put us back in it."

Okay. Okay!

We spent two days of class debating what to do for the final. This decision-making process, of which the kids were a part, was very important to me, since it became part of the student-centered learning that I had been encouraging all year.

We still hadn't come up with anything when a chance comment in the hallway made me think -- don't ask me how; serendipity by design is sometimes, like a good joke, not worth explaining -- that a Twitter chat would be perfect as a way of culminating our year.

I pitched the idea to the class. Some were onboard right away; others were more skeptical, not sure of the technology and what exactly it would entail. After I explained to the kids what a Twitter chat was, we talked through what I'd require of them:

* participation in a conversation about the works they had read this year, including an outside reading book the kids had been assigned during the last quarter of school

        We came up with abbreviations for the works, so the kids wouldn't have to use up too many characters in a Tweet. Here are our abbreviations:
         CD: Candide
         IE: The Importance of Being Earnest
         CT: The Canterbury Tales
         DH: A Doll's House
         PB: The Poisonwood Bible

Different groups of students had read different Shakespearean comedies. Here are those abbreviations:
         MidSum: A Midsummer Night's Dream
         12Nite: Twelfth Night
         MuchAdo: Much Ado About Nothing
         Shrew: The Taming of the Shrew

* a good number of quality Tweets during the hour-long chat we'd have about literature; the Tweets needed to show their understanding of the works and how the works connected to each other as a whole
          (During the final, the students expressed concern that they weren't responding fast enough. I told them to sacrifice some quantity for quality.)

We practiced chatting a little in class and worked out the kinks with the technology. I made sure all students had a device from which they could Tweet comfortably.

To deepen the experience of the final and give it more authentic purpose, I posted on JedLab, a Facebook group of over 700 Jewish educators [full disclosure: I am one of the group's facilitators], that I would be doing a Twitter chat as a final and asked anyone who was interested to join in our conversation. I particularly reached out to Ken Gordon, PEJE's social media manager and a bibliophile, since I thought he would be perfect for the "convo."


The Final


The Twitter chat was a perfect forum in which to showcase our work for the year. It was unusual and continued in the vein of being an un-schooled experience. There was no tension in the room as the kids "took their final"; there was just the excitement of seeing their thoughts show up in the chat and responding to each other. The students were laughing and chatting animatedly throughout the hour we tweeted, with my encouraging them and answering questions as they came up. How different this experience was from a tense and anxiety-producing exam!


Michael wielding as many devices as he can in order to see and respond to Tweets!

A stack of books and a computer: we're ready for a 21st-century final!

Solomon tweeted this insightful comment: "If you aim for a perfect life, you'll get a full one."



The addition of my educator colleagues to the conversation made the experience all the more meaningful for the students. Ken Gordon tweeted consistently throughout the hour, making the kids laugh with his insouciant comments but challenging them to support and develop their ideas. Yechiel Hoffman also joined our conversation, making the kids feel special about what they were doing by pointing out the uniqueness of the experiment. A few of my students at one point began shouting out that they were engaged in a debate with Adrian Durlester, another of my JedLab colleagues who joined the chat and got the kids thinking more deeply about their ideas.


I liked seeing smiles on my students' faces during finals
and not looks of panic and anxiety



Want to See the Final?


I archived the final on TweetArchivist, and you can see the chat there. You can also view the interesting analytics and data I got from the final, such as who tweeted the most and which hashtags, other than our #10final, were used most frequently. Interestingly #satire showed up as a popular hashtag and that was because when I asked what genre had taught the kids the most about the world, satire or realistic fiction, satire won hands-down. Interesting! 



Some Additional Observations


One day before the final, on her way out of class, I asked a student what she thought of the test. She said, "I get it. We're creating our final together," referring not to the way we had chosen the "exam" but to the fact that our final product would reflect the unique insights of each member of the class, woven together in the tapestry of a hashtag. The student understood one of the ethos of the class and of my teaching, one that I share with JedLab, which is that I want my students and all people to see themselves as creators. This student's response showed me she understood the larger, meta- goals I had been trying to accomplish in the course.

I think my student's insight also answers why I didn't have a discussion as a final, a question some colleagues asked me when I told them what I was planning. There is something concrete we created with the chat, not only because you can actually now read it, but also as it was going on. Anyone who has participated in a Twitter chat can tell you it's something different from a discussion, which is obviously still an important part of literature class and life. I've created a Professional Learning Network (PLN) on Twitter that has now, with JedLab, crossed over to Facebook; that network has formed because of chats I've had with a group of people who have the same concerns as I do. I've now met in person and have had phone and Google hangout conversations because of the connections I've made on Twitter.

When I spoke with Ken Gordon after the chat, he pointed out that now the students would know how to do the same kind of networking and relationship building, when the time was right.

Another thing that the Twitter chat could accomplish that a discussion could not is that it allowed there to be multiple conversations going on at once. I know, you're saying, "Welcome to my class on any given day," but in a chat that multiplicity is welcome and desired, while in a classroom it can cause chaos and a need for the teacher to do meditative breathing exercises after school. The different conversational threads occurring were another outcome I'd hoped would happen, and I was glad the kids became comfortable enough in the venue to engage in.

Finally, some logistics: I didn't need a proctor for my final, since I had to moderate it. And no one needed extra time. Let that one sink in.


"Final" Thoughts


As you can see from the archive, the kids tweeted things such as "so excited for English final" and "BEST FINAL" and created hashtags such as #likethisfinal. When the final was over, the students clapped and remained to discuss it. There was a palpable excitement in the room while the chat was going on and after, and we were all so happy --  to have taken a final! 

I can't wait to see what my students will come up with next year as we continue our learning adventures and find new ways to challenge each other to think and explore. 

Thank you to my PLN for making me see the power of Twitter and SM relationships and for enabling this final to be born and hatch. 

3 comments:

  1. Tikvah:

    I taken finals. I have given finals. I never liked them, and often hated them. The #10final made me see that the future of classroom evaluation can be (and I think should be) a truly collaborative process. How can this NOT be the most fun and engaging final in the history of JDS pedagogy? Teachers, listen up: TW is onto something, and you should follow he lead. In fact, I think her class should feature weekly chats--chats that can be open to any other student (class, teacher, etc.) online.

    This experience was great fun for me, but I think it might have been amazing for the students. They now know how to hold a focused, honest, and intelligent Twitter disucssion about books.

    Where else in the world will a bunch of high school students learn such as skill?

    (Parenthetical note to any funder who has somehow stumbled onto this post. Contact Tikvah--right now--and give her some money so she can make build this Twitter chat idea into a national program. What's happening here is vital. She's teaching students to create smart and respectful online dialogue. This is an essentail skill for tomorrow's leaders, Jewish or otherwise, and I don't know that anyone else out there is providing it.)

    Tikvah, you and your RealSchool students have long protested the idea of reducing kids to their test scores. I think your experiment offers something more than protest. It suggests an alternative--one that is practical, worthwhile, and a helluva lot of fun.

    #10final is clearly just the begninng.

    --Ken Gordon

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  2. Ken, thanks for your comments and insights -- and most importantly for taking the time to join our chat, which you made so much more fun and exciting than if it had been just me moderating. I particularly agree with your point about the kids learning how to create respectful and smart online dialogue. I loved that they were using social media for something positive and intellectual and not to see what Justin Bieber was up to.

    As for your suggestion that these Twitter chats be a regular part of the class curriculum: the students made the same suggestion at the final, a point I left out in my post. The kids said I should have chats after we've all read the same book. They said it would be great to have a chat only about one book, though they loved the wide open discussion about the year.

    Thanks again for all you have done to make my first Twitter final so much fun and so much more of a richer experience for my students.

    -- Tikvah

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  3. Tikvah,

    I was struck by so many things as I read about your latest innovative teaching initiative.

    First of all, I love how you refer to the messiness of your un-schooled classroom. Brene Brown addresses the notion of messiness.

    Brown says we need to reexamine the idea of engagement in education and she says that in order to reignite creativity, innovation and learning in schools that education needs to be rehumanized. We need to learn how to engage in vulnerability, and recognizing and combating shame. She refers to the unfortunate condition of not doing that as “disruptive engagement”.Brown says that rehumanizing education requires courageous leadership because this will demand honest conversations about vulnerability, which is disruptive and messy.

    Brown says the reason we don’t currently have this type of conversation is because speaking openly like this shines light in the dark corners, which creates much discomfort. But she says once the language exists for this kind of conversation, a new awareness and understanding will be created and that will lead to a new vision, one that can’t be taken away.

    As Ken says, you are on to something here. Your student's comment clearly proves that! But equally important, you are working to not only break down the walls of "disruptive engagement", but you are simultaneously staying current with the advancements in technology and all they have to offer us, as you foster a classroom of engagement.

    In Brown's words, your leadership is courageous and you are truly leading the way!

    You methods prove that you are "shining light into the dark corners" to not only re-evaluate our current mode of teaching, but you are also giving us the methodology for change.

    Coupling the "hard" skills of using technology in the classroom with the "soft" skills of keeping it human is a huge feat, my friend! Sir Ken would be quite proud. So would Frank Moss! This is the beginning of that quest to become the beacon of inspiration for the field of education! Kol hacovod!

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