Working At The Edge

Make School Different: Digital leadership & Transformation

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The Mirror

By Randy Ziegenfuss

It’s human nature to not want to take responsibility for problems. We are good – very good –  at this behavior in education. One of the most common problems I hear about (largely from adults – parents and teachers) is the “distraction” of technology. And the scapegoat is almost always, “the technology” or the students. Scott McLeod blogged about this today, and I absolutely agree with him.

Classroom management stems from good instruction. Engaging learning environments mitigate ‘off-task’ behavior. We need to stop blaming students or laptops for our own failure to create better learning spaces (and that’s true whether we’re talking P-12 or postsecondary).

Another problem area we educators are good at shifting responsibility for is the growing number of students exiting brick-and-mortar schools to go to charter schools, particularly cyber charter schools. We inevitably blame the students – they’re lazy, they can’t handle rigor, they just don’t fit in, etc. We also blame the “greedy” cyber schools. It’s really not learning any way.

When instances arise where we blame technology, or blame other people outside our organizations, we need to stop. Take a breath. Hold the mirror up. And ask some of the tough questions:

  • What are we doing to contribute to the situation? And be honest.
  • Why did those students decide to attend a cyber school? In what ways can we better meet the needs of these students?
  • What can we do to change the classroom so our students won’t even think of being distracted by something other than the planned learning at hand?

I’m not saying that we are always at fault. That is by no means the case. But let’s start with ourselves. Hold up the mirror and ask the tough questions. Don’t give in to the temptation to make something or someone else the scapegoat for your problems. Only when we hold up the mirror and are honest and authentic can we begin to address our challenges.

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Randy Ziegenfuss
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Randy Ziegenfuss
I've retired from public education after 34 years, most recently as Superintendent. In addition to blogging at WorkingAtTheEdge.org, I co-host two podcasts at TLTalkRadio.org and ShiftYourParadigm.org. Learn more at https://workingattheedge.org/about/.
Randy Ziegenfuss
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Latest posts by Randy Ziegenfuss (see all)
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Filed Under: Leadership, Learning, Teaching

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  1. Know a skeptical parent? Have them watch this. | Working at the edge says:
    July 12, 2012 at 12:10 am

    […] navigation ← The Mirror Jul 12 […]

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About Working At The Edge:

My name is Randy Ziegenfuss, and I'm a retired public school superintendent and a life-long educator with over 34 years experience developing a passion for teaching, learning, leadership and technology. <read more...>

I first came across the phrase working at the edge while learning about the work of Marzano, et al. School Leadership That Works: From Research to Results. In this work, the researchers define 21 responsibilities of the school leader, one being change agent. A change agent is defined as one who is, "...willing to challenge school practices that have been in place for a long time and promoting the value of working at the edge of one's competence."

Randy Ziegenfuss, Ed.D.

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