Thursday, September 20, 2012

A New Collaboration for Culture and Education and ??


In our globalized world, many of us have committed cultural faux pas and ended up learning a valuable lesson, and its no wonder the most impactful cultural exchanges occur first hand. Real world lessons. Learning need not be painful or humiliating, however. Unanticipated realizations that individuals laugh at the same visual joke despite differences in language, ethnicity, income, gender, religion, whatever, is just as lasting, if not more so. 

Even though my students are already pretty well-traveled, they are hungry for even more, authentic cultural exchanges. After mixed results with QuadBlogs previously, I was open to trying something new this year.

A former colleague connected me with Dr. Brad Maguth from the University of Akron in Ohio to collaborate with students in his Social Studies methodology course. Enthusiastic about collaboration, I signed on without knowing much else. Thus, my mostly Asian, grade 10 students will be collaborating with American pre-service teachers several years their senior. 

For me, envisioning future teachers who step into their classroom on day one with an enhanced global perspective was well worth extra time and energy the collaboration may entail. Besides, since university is just over the horizon for my students, the collaboration provides opportunities to learn the “real” scoop from those who have already tread the path, perhaps start building their PLNs, and, of course, have some real-life cultural exchanges along the way.

Dr. Maguth was originally interested in having the undergrad and graduate students in his class get to know mine through sharing of projects, videos, and correspondence (via ePals). The plan was after getting to know my grade 10s, the pre-service teachers would design a lesson for them, which I would adapt if needed, implement, video, and then Dr. Maguth and his students would embark on reflection. 

In reality, the collaboration, while still new, has so far resulted in a multitude of organic and unanticipated discussions ranging from PLNs, the ages of college students in the US, favorite musicians, TCKs, stereotypes and cultural competence, how I became an international educator, and perspectives on current events, including the sharing of haikus written about Mitt Romney, the Duchess of Cambridge, fiery protests, and contested Asian islands.

There has not been much talk about the planned-on lesson lately; we will eventually get to it. In the meantime, the organic discussions continue, and opportunities for both mildly embarrassing and enlightening cultural lessons are ongoing. 

Stay tuned for more updates. Meanwhile, I'd love to hear about other collaborations between pre-service teachers and distant classrooms that may be taking place. Or, if they don't already exist, why not?

No comments:

Post a Comment