Avoiding Red Herrings

What Gould Wrote About Intelligence

In his 1981 book The Mismeasure of Man, the late biologist Stephen Jay Gould reviewed the history of measuring intelligence. He observed that that intelligence has become reified in our concept of knowledge and learning. He noted that mental capacity is important to humans, that “We therefore give the word ‘intelligence’ to this wondrously complex Read More

Avoiding Red Herrings

Inert Knowledge

Alfred North Whitehead was a British philosopher and mathematician who worked in the early decades of the 20th century. He is best-remembered among educators by an essay entitled “The Aims of Education” in which he introduced the idea of inert learning. He criticized schools that focused on teaching in a manner that developed “’inert ideas’—that Read More

Avoiding Red Herrings

Leadership and the Adoption of Innovative Planning

Reach out @garyackermanphd if you are interested in the entire chapter. ABSTRACT   Schools have become places filled with digital tools. Despite this fact, school leaders find technology planning to be an area of relative weakness. This chapter describes the experience of four school leaders who adopted an unfamiliar strategy for making technology decisions. The leader participated in a Read More

Avoiding Red Herrings

On Training and Change

The need to train and retrain teachers has taken on increased importance as digital computers have arrived in schools. As an undergraduate student enrolled in a course on teaching methods, I made an appointment with the staff at a small media office and had them sign a sheet confirming that I successfully threaded a film Read More

Avoiding Red Herrings

Some Observations of Learning

Learning occurs within brains, but outside of brains too. Scientists have documented changes in how blood flows in the brain after learning has occurred. This is interpreted as previously unused neural pathways becoming activated during the learning. When the knowledge is used subsequently, the same neural pathways are active. The nature of these pathways has Read More

Avoiding Red Herrings

On #edtech Audits

Information technology is an essential aspect of every school. Students and teachers use computers to consume and create digital information. Administrators and staff use cloud-based student information and business systems to manage data and facilitate operations. Librarians manage digital collections and subscriptions to full-text databases, and technology specialists support learning management systems and other infrastructure Read More

Avoiding Red Herrings

Exercise and Authenticity

Here is a version of my “learning to walk at 42” story that seems to capture an important lesson for educators. In my therapy, there were two kinds of activities: exercises and authentic activities. Exercises were just what one expects from the name, actions the therapists directed me to perform to strengthen the neural connections Read More

Avoiding Red Herrings

A Brief History of Computers in Schools

The first school computers were mainframe computers. As with all mainframe installations, the computer was physically located away from the end users, so teachers and students never saw or touched the case containing the processor. These machines were used for instruction in the simplest terms: Students were presented with information, and then they were presented Read More