Wednesday, May 22, 2019

Video Killed The Radio Star: The Buggles and Blended Learning

Sometimes small and innocuous changes in the way we do things leads to revolutions that aren't seen until they are directly on top of us.

Case in point... Go ahead, hit play and listen. :)

Especially the line "and now I understand the problems, you can see. I met your children, what did you tell them?"

  



When the Buggles, a name derivative from mixing the words bugs and The Beatles, released this video and MTv played it as their first ever video, the world was in the throws of change.  During the radio age, all that mattered was the voice and the music.  The Buggles, as implied in the album's name, "Age of Plastic," predicted that the advent of video and VCRs effectively killed the older radio stars.  Now, because of the advent of new technologies, a new generation of artists would synthesize music, technology, and aesthetics (note the oversized sunglasses are meant to portray a "bug's" eyes) to produce the NEW stars.  Stars like Madonna and Prince and stations like MTv and VH1 were now not only possible, but fated.

Video allowed the artist to fully flesh out their vision and music beyond lyrics and sounds.  Their thinking became visible.

Sure... Radio continued, but radio as the main and only medium through which music was sold and consumed was over. Eventually, MTv gave way to CDs, MP3s, and finally Spotify and Pandora.  The consumer's need for personalized access to music, when and where and how they wanted it, could not be ignored or denied.

Video killed the radio star and we ALL celebrated it.

In a very similar fashion, a better understanding of the brain, technology leaps, and the push for equity for ALL students has placed an unyielding amount of pressure on the old "sit and git" and "sage on the stage" way to teach.  I might argue that YouTube killed the old way to teach.

Notice, I did not use the word learn.  Students are learning under the old regime, but in a way that can be characterized as the "soft bigotry of low expectations" kind of way.  In "sit and git" classrooms, when students ARE inspired and excited to learn something new, unfortunately, they are likely self-medicating by turning to an instructor who personalizes their learning: YouTube.

There is a tension in many classrooms between the advancement of the personalization of learning happening all around us and the master of the content who still wants to lecture or show off what they learned about Texas History fro their 1980's college days.  In so many cases, Google and YouTube are better teachers in a fact based, low Bloom's environment.

Blended learning with its emphasis on flexibility, student empowerment, and a nod toward the outside-the-classroom world is the Buggles of today.  "Teaching" is now more about guiding students to not need us (empowerment), because in many cases they really don't need us.

In previous posts we talked about the umbrella visual's portrayal of flexibility in place, pace, path, and time as it is driven by data to create personalized learning experiences for students.  So what are the benefits?

Student Benefits:

  • Ownership over their own learning goals
  • Learning that happens inside and outside the classroom
  • A greater reliance on peer to peer feedback and refinement practices
  • An end to the view that the teacher is the "master" of the student's learning and success
  • A stronger community fabric with peers and the teacher
  • Greater ability to express their knowledge in a variety of ways to authentic audiences
  • More retention because the learning is personally authentic 
Teacher Benefits:
  • Students are better engaged and less discipline issues
  • Students are afforded more leadership opportunities and are less of a discipline issue
  • After the front loading of planning, more T.I.M.E.
    • more time to guide
    • more time to reflect
    • more time to build relationships
    • more time to become better at letting go
    • more time seeing that investing trust in students pays off
    • more time to evaluate because students are helping in the grading/evaluating
  • Pride in helping to create independent learners
  • Inspiration brought on by students who creatively display their knowledge
  • Getting help from students in planning lessons and/or integrating technology
  • A new way to breath life into old lessons
  • Contributing to a skill set that will help small human beings grow up to be successful larger human beings
  • Parents will see at home what you are doing in class and they will be thankful for the view
Like all things worth while, becoming a Blended Learning teacher takes time and effort.  Start off small, find what works for you and your students, and build around successes.

The difference between the song and the video Video Killed the Radio Star is a small tweak in delivery and an acknowledgment and incorporation of the new ways.  The Buggles became both radios stars and the harbingers of the demise of radio stars by moving in a new-ish direction.  They carried what worked in the old system and married it to the new system.  You can do the same and your students will thank you for it. 




1 comment:

  1. Great blog entry Charles. While we are working hard to blend our learning for the students both virtual and F2F, we are experiencing what we have known for a long time; that is some kids can not do independent work so virtual school for them is an absolute struggle because they can't, won't or flat out refuse to do the work and then they lie to their parent about it. Parents, then in turn contact the teachers upset about their students grades only to find out they have been lied to. From that point, the parents ask, what can WE do to fix it? My response is something similar to this offering: It is going to take you, the parent to step up and become more involved in your child's learning and remain in communication with us, or send your student back to campus for F2F instruction so we can monitor progress and take action steps to stop the lack of engagement and return them to a state of engagement. I've seen both work and have had students turn the page when it looked bleak for them. Fact is, some students thrive better in class while others can thrive virtually or F2F. This is the joy of blended learning. Your not having to change the content, just the way the student learns it via, path, place, pace, and time. Again, great post.

    ReplyDelete