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Silicon Valley Courts Brand-Name Teachers, Raising Ethics Issues (nytimes.com)

An anonymous reader shares a report: One of the tech-savviest teachers in the United States teaches third grade here at Mapleton Elementary, a public school with about 100 students in the sparsely populated plains west of Fargo. Her name is Kayla Delzer. Her third graders adore her. She teaches them to post daily on the class Twitter and Instagram accounts she set up. She remodeled her classroom based on Starbucks. And she uses apps like Seesaw, a student portfolio platform where teachers and parents may view and comment on a child's schoolwork. Ms. Delzer also has a second calling. She is a schoolteacher with her own brand, Top Dog Teaching. Education start-ups like Seesaw give her their premium classroom technology as well as swag like T-shirts or freebies for the teachers who attend her workshops. She agrees to use their products in her classroom and give the companies feedback. And she recommends their wares to thousands of teachers who follow her on social media. "I will embed it in my brand every day," Ms. Delzer said of Seesaw. "I get to make it better." Ms. Delzer is a member of a growing tribe of teacher influencers, many of whom promote classroom technology. They attract notice through their blogs, social media accounts and conference talks. And they are cultivated not only by start-ups like Seesaw, but by giants like Amazon, Apple, Google and Microsoft, to influence which tools are used to teach American schoolchildren.

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  1. No, this is not a teacher, this is flesh-Facebook by TimothyHollins · · Score: 5, Interesting

    TFS calls this a teacher. She is not. She's Facebook. Her kids aren't the customers, they are the product. She's selling brand indoctrination to young children and charging the companies for it.

    What the hell does a child learn by using Twitter? To be a worse person? To avoid having a self-developed opinion? To jump on the harassment campaign because it's fun when it's not coming your way? The joys of death threats? To always share everything all the time and never read a book or introspect?
    Instagram? That service that causes the most depression in its users? Yeah, that's a great tool for kids. Nothing says well-developed like hiding all the pictures of your life that aren't perfect. Nothing teaches you self-respect like living for "likes". Should we really teach kids to be emotionally dependent prostitutes?

    This isn't a teacher, this is the incarnation of greed above humanity and technology replacing instead of supporting mental growth.

  2. Other alternatives -- especially homeschooling by Paul+Fernhout · · Score: 5, Interesting

    http://www.home-school.com/Art...
    "Let me begin by characterizing where I'm coming from. I taught for thirty years in the Manhattan Public School. It was never my intention to teach. It happened by accident. I expected only to teach for a year or two. I got caught up in what seemed to me inexplicable problems that were so interesting that I would ask, "Would you mind if I stay an extra year?" When I woke up, thirty years had passed. After I got out, I still didn't have the answer to these puzzles. That was almost exactly nine years ago, and I set out to answer my questions. Had I known that it would take nine years to do that, I might very well have gotten a new set of questions. But as it was, one thing led to another, and I began to see that schools were functioning exactly as they had been designed to function, and that just puzzled the heck out of me. I said, "How could this happen? What purpose would explain schools being the way they are?" So I've been on a detective hunt for nine years. And what I'd like to say first of all to homeschoolers in particular - because they're right on the front lines, and they have to depend largely on themselves for courage and for inspiration - is that you made the right choice. You've made a choice to free your children to be the best people they can be, the best citizens they can be, and to be their personal best. But had you allowed those kids to remain in the grip of institutional schooling, the kids would have become instruments of a different purpose. People should understand that the local insanity that they think they're reacting against, if that's in fact their motive for homeschooling, is institution-wide, it's quite intentional, and it leads to an end that's useful to somebody [just not the school kids]."

    Homeschooling costs one parent not being in the workforce though -- which means six figures a year in a place like Silicon Valley if both parents could work at professional jobs.

    Wrote this about NYS around 2009, but is would apply to CA too:
    http://www.pdfernhout.net/towa...
    "New York State current spends roughly 20,000 US dollars per schooled child per year to support the public school system. This essay suggests that the same amount of money be given directly to the family of each homeschooled child. Further, it suggests that eventually all parents would get this amount, as more and more families decide to homeschool because it is suddenly easier financially. It suggests why ultimately this will be a win/win situation for everyone involved (including parents, children, teachers, school staff, other people in the community, and even school administrators :-) because ultimately local schools will grow into larger vibrant community learning centers open to anyone in the community and looking more like college campuses. New York State could try this plan incrementally in a few different school districts across the state as pilot programs to see how it works out. This may seem like an unlikely idea to be adopted at first, but at least it is a starting point for building a positive vision of the future for all children in all our communities. Like straightforward ideas such as Medicare-for-all, this is an easy solution to state, likely with broad popular support, but it may be a hard thing to get done politically for all sorts of reasons. It might take an enormous struggle to make such a change, and most homeschoolers rightfully may say they are better off focusing on teaching their own and ignoring the school system as much as possible, and letting schooled families make their own choices. Still,homeschoolers might find it interesting to think about this idea and how the straightforward nature of it calls into question many assumptions related to how compulsory public schooling is justified. Also, ultimately, the more people who homeschool, the easier it b

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    A 21st century issue: the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity.
    1. Re: Other alternatives -- especially homeschooling by Paul+Fernhout · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Considering compulsory schooling is a relatively recent invention since Prussian times (intended to subordinate almost all citizens into a military hierarchy), how did children learn to interact with other people of all ages before the 1800s?
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      Hint -- it takes a village to raise child -- and village life is not what kids experience in a typical school (public or private).

      To begin with, when do kids in a typical school (public or private) actually get to interact with other kids in a playful loosely-structured way with only occasional adult supervision or intervention like in the past? As opposed to interacting with other people as if they were in a tightly-guarded prison? For many schools, outdoor play and unstructured recess is a thing of the past and kids are punished if they talk to each other in the classroom outside of narrowly prescribed situations. The kid of social interaction kids get in most schools is completely abnormal by historical standards.

      Contrast what goes on in a typical school with, say, a "Sudbury Free school" (one of the better private school models, but still not very common):
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
      "A Sudbury school is a type of school, usually for the K-12 age range, where students have complete responsibility for their own education, and the school is run by direct democracy in which students and staff are equals.[1] Students individually decide what to do with their time, and tend to learn as a by-product of ordinary experience rather than through coursework. There is no predetermined educational syllabus, prescriptive curriculum or standardized instruction. This is a form of democratic education. Daniel Greenberg, one of the founders of the original Sudbury Model school, writes that the two things that distinguish a Sudbury Model school are that everyone - adults and children - are treated equally and that there is no authority other than that granted by the consent of the governed.[2]"

      Although even within that free school model, there are issues related to forcing a kid to be somewhere other than their local community every day. A free school may also not be a great match for more introverted children.

      As I write in that essay on post-scarcity unschooling, quoting a job advertisement for truant officers suggesting truancy can lead to violent crime or a least an unsuccessful unproductive life: "See, that is the false choice -- suggesting you either confine a child to prison or they will commit their first violent crime and have to be imprisoned. That is a very dim view of human nature, neighborhoods and families. Yet, it is a self justifying view, in part destroying the very neighborhood fabric it claims to be defending. So, we are left with streets that are safe because there are no people on them. We have successfully destroyed the village in order to save it, using compulsory schooling instead of napalm."

      Or in this case, you suggest unless kids are put in prison for their formative years they will become "freaks".

      Given thousands of years of human history raising kids at home and in villages and towns (and yes, cities), doesn't the historical evidence suggest that it would more likely be the other way around? Especially when compulsory schooling was designed precisely to produce cannon fodder for Prussian wars? Which then coincided with two world wars originating out of the Prussian area?

      See also Alfie Kohn on bad effects of extrinsic rewards for learning, competition with other kids, and also of grading:
      http://www.alfiekohn.org/punis...
      http://www.alfiekohn.org/conte...
      http://www.alfiekohn.org/artic...

      As John Taylor Gatto points out, between school kids and teachers a

      --
      A 21st century issue: the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity.