Archive for the ‘Global Cooling Project’ tag
Project Global Cooling Update: Hawaii, Seoul, Kazakhstan - Week 3 and Growing
The only thing worth quitting is smoking. (I’m on day 4, by the way.) This project is not worth quitting. It’s growing in a really fun, easy, fascinating way.
Here’s an update about developments on the planning Ning (the “Global Cooling Collective,” which is again now open for easy membership or lurking), in our school in Seoul, and - thanks to two other people on this planet - oh, but I explain all that in this update from the Ning:
Just a quick update: one educator at an international school in Kazakhstan is getting active, and working his network in Bangladesh and Qatar to get active and make things happen as well. So we’ll see how that evolves. His name is Gary. Gary and I have emailed a good bit over the last week, and he’s serious about doing fun stuff for real-world change. Chris in Honolulu and I skyped this morning, and he’s presenting the project on the community level at his private school, and as an activity club. He’s also got an IB Economics class interested in producing work for publication on the website. That class might be able to do some interesting collaboration with Mr. Ski’s AP Econ class here in Seoul, since Ski likes the idea of real-world project-based learning for his classrooms too. So keep the faith, Seoul. There are a few movers and shakers out there starting to come to life like you haveOther news (local): we got the okay for the pro-level video camera for our documentary about this project (and about the psychology of schools). We’re sort of competing to see who can get a response first from Al Gore. We’re working on building the PCG website and blog (it’s on WordPress, with a static page as the home page, and the blog on a navbar link). 30 students contributing to the blog would be too unfocused. We’re working on a way to blog our progress in a more orderly way, but still inclusive of everyone. There are now 35 students in our high school (total population: 235 or so) participating in two separate club blocks - one on Tuesday, one on Wednesday. Each block only meets once a week, for forty minutes, but we’re talking about voluntary weekend or after school meetings as well. Despite our school’s “No Cell Phones” policy, in our club, we use them to call corporations, music club owners, and other contacts to request appointments and propose ideas. We’ve started filming the documentary. It’s already interesting. Finally, OUR NATURAL NETWORK IN SEOUL IS AMAZING. We have parents in the film industry, in the major corporations, in television, in universities, and more. Ideas are exploding about how to tap these community members to help us make this movement grow and spread. And we’re only two weeks into the school year. We have about 30 weeks left before the Earth Day PGC Concert in April ‘08. We will do it this year. Several bands are already saying they want to perform. And we will do it better next year. And our futures will be better for it. Seoul members, so many of you are already inspiring. You’re outside of the school “box” and connecting to the real world for a real good cause. You make life worth living. Thanks for that. Clay
Unbreaking Things: All Systems Go (incl. Project Global Cooling Website)
After my semi-literate support technician nuked my entire VPS server - Moodle and Wordpress MU, including a year of student blogs from last year - I managed to restore a backup after several scares.
So the blogs are saved. Moodle is back.
And so is a prototype of the Project Global Cooling website.
We’ll give the site its own url, independent of my school’s blogging site. I just want that to be done by a student who wants to learn the whole process of buying a URL, hosting it on a server, installing the software, and managing the website.
That’s part of what PGC is about: letting them learn to do what I’ve learned to do for my school. When they hit the real world, these skills should come in handy.
Student Council: Creating Tomorrow’s Followers (or, "Smells Like School Spirit")
Prison Exercise Yard: Photo by Jon’s pics
Student: “Ms. Stucco says I have to quit Project Global Cooling to go to the Class Council Representative meetings every week.”
Me: “And you explained to her you’d been volunteering on this project all summer, that you’re an important player in it, and that it’s community service in a big way?”
Student: “Yeah.”
Me: “And she said ‘No,’ pure and simple?”
Student: “Yeah.”
Me: “So what are you guys going to be planning in the Student Council that’s so important she’s forcing you to drop all other activities?”
Student: “The Haunted House for Halloween. And the next Student Assembly.”
Me: “The Haunted House….so, like, getting the pumpkins and doing some Halloween thing in the gym?”
Student: “Yeah.”
Me: “And the Student Assembly: what are you planning for that?”
Student: “Introducing the Sports teams. And raising school spirit.”
Me: “And how many people do you have meeting twice a week to plan a Haunted House and a 40-minute assembly to introduce the basketball players and give a few speeches and such?”
Student: “Seventeen.”
Me: “Seventeen?”
Student: “Yeah.”
Me: “Seventeen people meeting twice a week for the next 20 weeks to plan a haunted house in the gym, and an assembly to introduce sports teams? How long can it take to come up with a plan to introduce sports teams?”
Student: “I know.”
Me: “I hate school. Look at how trivial it makes you, even when you want to make a difference in the real world.”
Student: “I don’t have any choice. Ms. Stucco won’t let me out.”
Me: “And look how powerless you suddenly are. You’re 17. You’re a young adult. You know physics, calculus, and history far more than most of your teachers, but have zero power in school despite that. ‘She won’t let me.’ I hate school.”
So, your advice: I want to suggest he quit Student Council, since it’s clearly one very school-blindered, trivial waste of time for all these poor students seeking election in order to show they can handle power effectively - like adults do.
Another idea is to instead advise him to wage a bit of a rebellion inside the Student Council, by asking the very sensible question - “Is this the best we can do? Jack-o-lanterns and basketballs? Can we give the StuCo some teeth? Extend it into the real world? Isn’t it pathetically fay right now? Trivial? Irrelevant? Infantile?”
The sad thing is, it’s institutionalized. The Rat-Race for college admissions puts a high premium on silly bullets like holding a class office. College counselors, administrators, parents, students, teachers - the whole school culture - treat the Student Council like it’s an honorable thing. In reality, it limits the horizons of the 17 most motivated leaders from each grade level to the paltry world of the schoolhouse. It’s outrageously trivial and infantile.
I don’t know if it’s “consensus trance,” blind traditionalism, or winking condescension (”Let the kids play like they have power”), but it smells really bad to me.
(Luckily, we’re filming for a documentary of “Project Global Cooling.” The student above is going to interview next week as the first casualty in a conflict between “real worldliness” and “schooliness.” The documentary is shaping up to be about the psychology of schools as much as anything else.)
And I can’t help but think: if I were a college admissions officer, and I read a college application essay about how a student chose to sacrifice a prestigious but trivial office for the sake of one less prestigious but more substantial?
I would like that applicant. A real person, with real principles, instead of a budding careerist: what a concept.
A Gallery of Hats: Overdue Updates
Who is the audience for this post? AudienceS is more accurate. They are people who are interested in:
- Expanding the Global Cooling Project - I’ve never been so excited about anything, and an update is overdue;
- Notes from the trenches of a teachergeek in his first weeks as tech coordinator at a new Apple 1:1 school (it’s been a hellish but fertile path so far);
- Joining the second year of the 1001 Flat World Tales project (another overdue update);
- How edublogger posts are stealthily replacing textbook readings in my AP Literature classroom.
In short, it’s a report from underneath the many different hats I’ve added to my wardrobe. I’m astonished by what my life has become after 7 short months of edublogging and edtech experimentation. I would never have predicted wearing any of these hats this time last year. So here goes:
1. Project Global Cooling / Citizenship 2.0: Real-world Learning without Grades or Homework - We’re Public
I think I learned a lesson about timing this summer: don’t try to generate collaborative ideas during vacation, because most people are very sensibly signing out for some downtime. And by the time they sign back in, all the blog posts will be buried in the archives.
In June and July, I wrote my way into a project idea that has taken root here in Seoul, and that wants to take root around the world as well. It’s more ambitious than the 1001 Flat World Tales - and far more relevant - but it’s also far less labor-intensive for teachers. Best of both worlds.
If you’re aware of the Live Earth Concerts that took place this summer in eight cities around the world, all web-hosted as the “festive” slice of the far more serious challenge of raising consciousness and creating sane lifestyle changes in response to the looming challenge of climate change and global warming, then the Project Global Cooling idea will make sense to you. Change the high-profile celebrities and professional web designers, computer graphics artists, journalists, filmmakers, etc to the young adults in our schools, and you have Project Global Cooling.
In a nutshell: around the world on Earth Day ‘08 (April 19, Saturday), student-organized “downtown music festivals” will take place. The performers will be local musicians - student bands, college bands, local bands. The concerts will be filmed, uploaded to YouTube or whatever, and embedded on the Project Global Cooling website, to form a gallery of world music featuring the next generation of world musicians.
Again, this is precisely what Live Earth did. Bands in the US, Europe, Africa, Asia, and Australia (?) performed on the same day. They filmed the concerts and streamed them on a central website - one that included MUCH MORE THAN MUSIC.
Our website will also feature much more: a collaborative blog authored by students involved in organizing this project in their locales around the world, documenting their successes and failures as they attempt to be taken seriously as citizens, not students; young adults, not children; community members, not disenfranchised “kids.”
It will also feature short, student-made promotional videos aimed at going “viral,” addressing Global Warming and the small things we can do to forestall it, with a style modeled after real-world videographers a la MTV, not “schooly” homework videos. Like the world music gallery, the PSA video gallery will accentuate the local culture while addressing the global problem. They’ll be as varied as the imaginations of our young contributors: comic, hip, sexy, ironic, brooding, whatever they decide. The goal, again, is to make videos so attractive that they become viral - with a purpose. My Seoul students have some great scripts already, aimed at projecting the Korean look and attitude onto the world stage.
Other categories on the website include (but are not limited to):
- “Student-powered”: gallery featuring the most remarkable accomplishments by students around the world in making this thing happen by April
- “Earth News”: student summaries and reflections on the latest updates from the scientific community about issues related to climate change
- “Green Entrepreneurship”: reports from the business-oriented about commercial opportunities to reap profit while at the same time benefiting society
- “Skeptic’s Corner”: a page devoted to any controversies about the science its challengers
- Podcasts and radio shows are obviously easy to include on any and all of these pages.
Finally, all banners, graphics, flash animations, slideshows, graphs, charts, etc, will be contributed by the students wanting to do more with the skills they learn in their computer classes than turn a product in to teacher for a grade.
The beauty: 28 students in my high school have signed up for this project as an activity block - a club - at school. There are no grades, no homework, no lesson plans involved. But there is much learning to come. Students at my school will be involved in real-world learning as they:
- propose to school administrators that the school adopt and adhere to a “Carbon-neutral Pledge,” with short- and long-term steps to reduce our school’s carbon footprint permanently. (Buying different lightbulbs, for example, is a simple, concrete, and consequential step the school can take. And it’s win-win: lower energy bills for the school, less emissions for the future from our school forevermore. Many more such steps are easy enough to take.)
- plan and execute proposals for corporate and community sponsorship, donation of a live music club’s performance space, etc.
- make films.
- coordinate and network with other students worldwide working toward the same goal.
- manage the funds using real-world accounting skills.
- promote the concert using real-world marketing and promotion skills.
- discover that you can “have fun doing good,” and that citizenship doesn’t have to be boring.
- learn real-world web 2.o power.
- make a documentary film of the whole year’s project.
- on and on.
Best of all: like the 1001 Tales, this is an endless project, to be grown, improved, repeated annually. Picture the archives of the PGC website as more and more content is added to each of its galleries over the years. Picture the learning of each new year of students as they learn from the prior year’s successes, and improve upon its weaknesses. And picture, finally, the fact that world-changing habits of mind and action will be instituted in the culture of each school and community that joins this project. (And don’t forget to picture the proud fun when the music is playing on a fine April day, thanks to the power and energy of students who decided to branch out and become people too.)
If this isn’t enough, click the “world citizenship” label on this blog to see all the posts related to this project since its inception.
Many adults expressed interest when I announced this, so I’m hoping that they’ll remember, get in touch, and pass the project idea on to their student network locally. Any interested adults and students can join the PGC’s planning Ning at The Global Cooling Collective (http://globallycool.ning.com). I recently switched the Ning from private, members-only, to public. I hope that makes it easier to get involved.
And I’d like to link to the PGC blog itself - it’s already got some nice banners and graphics from my Seoul students, and credited to them. But I can’t make that link because….
2. My Techno Life is Cursed: On “Breaking” Skype, Ning, WordPressMU, Moodle, and Other Joys of a Noob Tech Coordinator
Westley Fields in Australia cracked me up in an email last week, the day after my 1:1 Parent Presentation with Google Earth and Skype crashed and burned with Skype’s global outage, 10 minutes before I presented.
“YOU BROKE SKYPE!” he wrote.
As it turns out, that was just a warm-up. Since then, I have broken:
Ning. Twice:
First, I was locked out of my AP Literature class Ning for two days. More bad timing (more of Somebody Up There’s wrath): on the same day I sent a support request to the folks at Ning, who are always stellar with prompt responses and fixes, they disabled their “support@ning.com” address to switch to a web-based help-ticket form on their site. So they didn’t see my help requests. And I didn’t read their auto-generated response to my email requests, because I figured they’d say the same old “Thanks we’ll be in contact soon.” Instead, they said (I discovered two hours ago), “WE WON’T READ THIS. GO TO THE NEW SUPPORT PAGE AND MAKE YOUR REQUEST THERE.”
So for three or four days, I sat on my hands, locked out of my own virtual classroom, waiting. My students, meanwhile, had full access to the site. They must have laughed at the idea of a teacher unable to enter his own class.
Anyway, Ning fixed it when I emailed Gina, and we discovered the breakdown. I love Ning.
Second, Ning recently upgraded their service so that network creators can switch private sites to public, and vice versa. I’d made the Global Cooling Collective private, but wanted to switch that for easier growth, so I pushed all the right buttons. A Ning bug, though, made it shut down the site altogether. So PGC visitors from this blog reached a “closed” message.
Ning fixed it today. We’re open now. (Check out the Seoul group. It’s active and interesting.)
Moodle and WordPressMU:
Short version: I tried to upgrade Moodle on our remote server. I still don’t speak PHP or MySQL database, am not a whiz at cPanel and WebHost Manager, and all this website admin biz. But I tried anyway. Failure. I dinked, deleting this file and that on the Moodle server, trusting instinct and vague hypotheses.
By the end, I’d screwed things up so royally, I just admitted defeat and sent a request to the server support to wipe the Moodle site clean. I had a back-up, so I would just reinstall the whole thing.
Pop quiz: Mr. Burell requested WHAT to be wiped clean?
If you answered “the Moodle site,” you’re a better reader than the server support guy (may he burn in hell).
He didn’t only nuke Moodle. He nuked my school’s entire WordPressMU site.
So I’m back where I started last year: a blank server.
Luckily, I backed up the school blogs a day or two earlier, so they’re not lost. I just don’t know how to put them back. The support staff for my server offered to reinstall for me, but dammit, I want to learn this stuff, so I said no. I’ll learn and succeed, or die trying. Once I have this down, the future is golden. How hard can it be to figure out how to change code in a PHP file, to create a MySQL database? Trained monkey stuff.
Then, serendipity: I posted about Lyceum yesterday as a possible alternative to the slow WPMU (their support forums can be frustrating and unkind as well, depending on the day). Lyceum’s creator replied to that post, and I invited him to collaborate on a screencast demonstrating how to install Lyceum using WebHost Manager and cPanel. He’s going to talk me through the process on Skype tonight, using Vyew to see my Seoul desktop on his in New York, and we’ll have a screencast for all sorry bastards like me who can’t decipher the tech-head gobbledygook as they try to simply put a blogging software on a server.
So stay tuned on more about Lyceum for student blogging. Think “WordPress MU, but faster and nicer.”
Other errata as tech coordinator: Lessons learned:
- Teachers don’t like being learners: I made screencasts for MacBook and Firefox setup before the teachers received their laptops. I anticipated every difficulty and need. I made a support blog for the teachers to see these screencasts. Two weeks later, almost none of them have taken the 20 minutes to save themselves a year of headaches. Instead, they’re emailing me requests for personal visits to “teach” them 1 on 1. “Did you watch the tutorial?” “No….”
- IT Managers kill me: It’s really hard to get the IT Manager to allow the school server to be useful to teachers. Or to ask this teacher for input before making decisions that will affect all us teachers. For example, the student email setup: Here is an exhaustive list of all the family names in Korean society: Kim, Park, Choi, Hong, Lee, Kang. I may have left two or three out. When you’ve got ten Lees, Parks, and Chois at each grade level, and dozens 9-12, creating school email accounts using a familyname+first initial doesn’t cut it. I had to fight ten objections to simply adding a two-digit graduation year suffix to each name (lpark09) to at least tell teachers if this LPark was the freshman, sophomore, junior, or senior LPark. When that didn’t work, I told the principal. He pulled rank, so it’s happening. Lesson: be pushy and proactive. Probe the IT staff for any news on what they’re doing that will affect the classroom before they finish it. Don’t expect them to ask for your input; don’t expect to be happy if you don’t give that input while there’s time.
That’s enough for now.
3. 1001 Flat World Tales, Year 2:
I’m behind on contacting Dana, Cindy, Jo, somebody in Kazakhstan, Chris, Michele, and others about this year’s 1001 Flat World Tales - 2.0. I’ll be in touch soon. Lots of room for new ideas and synergy. I’m excited to incorporate others’ ideas into this iteration.
Chris and Michele are working on the final touches for the website, eBook, “blook,” and paperback version of the first edition of published tales. Stay tuned.
4. Edublogs as Textbooks?
As for using edublogs to replace lessons in textbooks, I’ll only say this: I’ve assigned students to read Christian Long’s post about “what an A paper is,” and to watch Wes Fryer’s “Engage, Don’t Enthrall” video podcast, and will soon add Carolyn Foote’s post on how to search online smartly, all in the first three classes of the year. This is interesting to me. My Bloglines edublogs folders are morphing into textbook replacements.
Sorry for the length. I just wanted to get a few monkeys off my back.
Hat photos 1 and 3 by Stuck in Customs
Hat photo 4 by wiseacre photo
Hat photo 2 by mireia
All photos via Creative Commons Search
Cassandra and Curriculum as Usual: "A Crude Awakening"
[Update: A fuller discussion of Peak Oil and the A Crude Awakening documentary is taking place at Crooks and Liars. Skeptics and believers are listening and debating there.]
I wonder if Cassandra, as the Greeks approached Troy, got more silent indifference from those she tried to warn, or instead argumentation and debate? My guess is the former.
I wonder how people in education - the institution that holds the minds and characters of the next generation captive for 12+ years of molding - react to Cassandras like the international scientific community about global warming.
And about its cousin, the Oil Crash.
Curriculum as usual, anyone?
Or is anyone designing inquiry-based learning into the claims of these experts? I’m no expert, but I’ve got ears that Apollo hasn’t plugged. Seems we should give these warnings a listen now. And free our students to listen to them too, and hone their info-literacy skills on something, oh, maybe a bit relevant.
And remember: the tragedy was, Cassandra was right. But Trojans were bewitched (call it consensus trance) - and Troy fell.



