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Education
EDgility
Educational Agility for Schools
Paul Magnuson
,
Bill Tihen
,
Nicola Cosgrove
,
Dan Patton
Peak Challenges
Educational Agility Training
Paul Magnuson
,
Bill Tihen
,
Elliott Hebert
ARC for Schools
Agile Research Consortium for Schools
Paul Magnuson
,
Bill Tihen
,
Elliot Hebert
EDgility - Encouraging Agency and Collaboration
As part of the ECIS Leadership Conference - April 2020, Guide and Lead Managing Partner, Tim Logan gives an overview of the importance of agility in building schools as life-affirming 21st century organizations.
Bill Tihen
,
Paul Magnuson
Last updated on Sun, 06 Nov 2022
Education
,
EDgility
,
Agile
Slides
Source Document
EDgility - Enouraging Agency and Collaboration
As part of the ECIS Leadership Conference - April 2020, Guide and Lead Managing Partner, Tim Logan gives an overview of the importance of agility in building schools as life-affirming 21st century organisations.
Bill Tihen
,
Paul Magnuson
Slides
Video
Source Document
The Hero's Journey
Generally people remember stories and much of children’s play involves taking on a persona. Conveniently, many courses involve multiple units, thus allowing multiple rounds of “play” and “identity” for students. The stories they make need to be thoughtful and challenging enough that students successfully complete the “Hero’s Journey,” with a healthy sense of being uplifted by the challenges encountered on the way. This is quite doable with a thoughtful implementation of an Agile Kickoff process. One of my favorite books on this subject is in the resources below.
Bill Tihen
Last updated on Sun, 06 Nov 2022
Education
,
EDgility
,
Agile
Feedback: It's Not what You Think
Helpful feedback has little to do with what the teacher thinks, for example the pre-supposition the teacher makes about the outcomes of student projects, and is much more about developing an openness to what actually works and what others like, without an absolute truth either stated or implied by the curriculum. Let the students decide what to do by emphasizing these two types of feedback: - Natural feedback - Collaborative feedback
Bill Tihen
Last updated on Sun, 06 Nov 2022
Education
,
EDgility
,
Agile
Reflection: The Key to Adaptability
Frequent, even daily, mini-reflections lead to adaptable students and curriculums. Ideally, guide the students to where they are comfortable to self-reflect with you. This of course means guiding the kids to where they have the confidence and insight to self-reflect and self-correct instead of relying (or even fearing) external assessment and correction.
Bill Tihen
Last updated on Sun, 06 Nov 2022
Education
,
EDgility
,
Agile
Value: Motivation and Knowledge with a Context
Value is quite straightforward in my mind. It has several parts: a) students see value or a reason to learn the material without being told they must learn or get punished with poor grades; b) students learn to think about the what they learn and know in the context of how it affects others (or fits into a bigger picture), c) what students learn is challenging and engaging enough that it doesn’t feel like a dumb exercise to the student (e.g. a lab that can be looked up on Google that thousands of people have already done won’t fit this definition of valuable); and d) the process of learning creates confidence in the student and the process cultivates lifeworthy skills. Not all learning will involve all 4 aspects of value, but the more the better!
Bill Tihen
Last updated on Sun, 06 Nov 2022
Education
,
Agile
,
EDgility
Smallify to Learn Effectively
Get the big picture: students set goals (outcomes), deconstruct (find the most important (3-5) aspects / skills related to the goal), and then smallify (learn to find the next small step that builds on what’s already done), and finally, learn through deliberate practice (self-correcting as they progress).
Bill Tihen
Last updated on Sun, 05 May 2024
Education
,
EDgility
,
Agile
»
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