For the first time in 15 years our large district had a convocation for all staff. Our superintendent had been to a conference last year on The Future of Schools and heard
Dr. Jennifer James speak. She is a cultural anthropologist and spoke on "Thinking in the Future Tense".
From her website:
One of the most difficult aspects of adapting to rapid change, particularly when it is accompanied by complex technology and multiplying data sources, is the ability to give up an old construct about the way things ought to be and develop a new one based on the current realities. Accepting a new version of reality, essentially telling a new story, requires cultural intelligence. Cultural intelligence is the ability to observe, learn and understand our own culture as well as the culture of others. It is an essential skill in a diverse community and a global market.
She was a delightful speaker and one of her remarks struck home after a summer of blog and article reading and participating in Classroom 2.0 discussions.
She said "when the peasants learn to read, the king looks stupid." Hopefully none of us kings will look stupid in the classrooms of today and tomorrow---the peasants are certainly gaining on us. Are you ready to start making sense of a new reality?
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