I live in St. Louis. We are not afraid to host a parade, we've done it a lot lately in honor of the St. Louis Cardinals. Here's an image from the 2011 World series parade:
I was listening to the latest edition of the EntreLeadership podcast when Dave Ramsey said something that made perfect sense.
Here's the episode link: https://www.entreleadership.com/podcasts/les-parrotthow-conflict-can-help-you-wi, Dave's interview starts 24 minutes into the podcast.
If you aren't planning to win, you're planning to fail. If you're not planning the celebration, will you set yourself up for a win?
Dave's exact quote:
"You don't schedule a loss, you schedule a win"
I'm working on our school's Comprehensive School Improvement Plan and couldn't help but think about that statement.
Sure we have a goal, a scale for measurement, and action steps to accomplish the goal, but do we have a date for the celebration? How will we celebrate?
Whenever you start a task, a goal, an assignment, a unit, a season, a game, think about this and plan for it: How will we celebrate?
This is a blog about my life, education, challenging discussions and what I learn. The mission and goal of this blog is to promote the sharing of ideas and resources to improve student performance.
Showing posts with label thought leader. Show all posts
Showing posts with label thought leader. Show all posts
Tuesday, October 27, 2015
Tuesday, November 18, 2014
Thinking about Experiential Learning
Great commentary from Grant Wiggins today I wanted to share. It made me think of the conversations we’ve been having in social studies about content.
Grant shares:
"Student members of the Young Americans for Freedom at a school in Rome, Ga., marked the 25th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall and the reunification of Germany with a re-enactment at their school. They knocked down a graffiti-covered, 12-foot-long wall made from wood for the dramatization. "It is great to see them internalizing the lessons of history and exhibiting the power of freedom," said Brad Poston, history department chair.”
This is a great step in the right direction, can you imagine how powerful that experience was, see the image here? Too often we think of history as words on a page and events on a timeline. We can bring those events to life for our kids!
Also this event above is fun, the learning that happens before and after the event makes it closer to “Experiential” Here’s a great resource on Experiential learning: http://grantwiggins.wordpress.com/2013/10/19/experiential-learning/
When you’re planning your next history unit, consider the lessons/activities/conversations kids are having with these questions:
• What are you doing?
• Why are you doing it?
• What does this help you do that’s important?
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