Post Your Test


PostYourTest.com is a site that invites students to post and view exams from their college classes or other classes iin order to, in their own words, "help you understand your course material or similar material, create study groups, and exchange other content with your classmates."

Sounds like a nightmare for teachers, but they also say on the site that it can be used by teachers "to post and view exams from your college classes or from classes around the world to see how other professors administer exams, and create class groups to facilitate organizing your events, content and classes."

So, you can use the site to cheat, and it can force teachers to change their exams and not reuse them. Probable bad, some possible good.

Recently, they made a policy change that eliminates the ability of professors to request that tests from their courses be banned from the site. Professors must now wait for content to be posted before requesting removal. Plus, they require that they have to submit a form stating that they actually own the copyright to the material and that their request meets requirements of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. Wow. "Require" and "faculty" don't usually go in the same sentence very comfortably. Monitor the site. Check if your exam is there.

(Oh yeah, they are a Facebook App and they are on MySpace too, of course.)

First, Second and Third World Schools

I first became aware of ED in 08 at a conference, and I wrote a post about the documentary they produced last December called Two Million Minutes.

That film compares education in the United States to that of India and China. The premise of that film is that that amount of time is the same for all (though the amount spent in school or studying varies) and will determine their economic prospects for the rest of their lives.

I was thinking about the film when I checked in on Thomas L. Friedman's blog. Friedman is headed in a new direction for his latest book, Hot Flat and Crowded. His "Geo-Greenism" is all about the Energy Technology revolution which he also sees as both transformative and disruptive. But many educators are still digesting and trying to make sense of the "flat classroom" and what it means.

The producers of that first documentary have produced several more programs since I last blogged about their work. Two Million Minutes in India is the second chapter, made one year later, and it looks at the students who have completed their freshman year of college, and brings together the two American students and the two Indian students for a roundtable discussion.

Chapter 3 is Two Million Minutes in China which follows the same format. Both of these latest films asks the students questions like:How well did high school prepare them? Do the wish they had done things differently? How do they see their peers in the other countries now? What has their first year of college been like? How different is the college experience between these two countries?In an interview with Dr. Lin, Headmaster of the Xiwai International School, he states that the school's mission is "to cultivate within each of its students a balance of Chinese wisdom and a global perspective." Xiwai International School is a public-private joint venture in education between Xiwai Investment Co. and Shanghai International Studies University. The former is a company specializing in education investment; it consists of shareholders and senior managers, including individuals from the international banking sector, such as Goldman Sachs, and from Chinese and overseas educational institutions. Shanghai International Studies University is one of China 's key universities, directly under the jurisdiction of the Chinese Ministry of Education.

Nations with the best schools attract many of the best jobs. As jobs move from America to other countries (see The World Is Flat and countless other books, articles and blogs), our economy and the economy of our children will suffer even more than today.

- Almost 70% of America's eighth-graders do not read at grade level.

- Our 15-year-olds rank 25th in math and 21st in science.

- America showed no improvement in its post-secondary graduation rate between 2000 and 2005.

Two Million Minutes: Lesson Plan
is the last in this DVD series.


It explores what can be done at the national, state, and local level to change our culture. It discusses how Governors, Mayors and community leaders can use Symbols, Rhetoric, Recognition and Rewards to bring cultural change to benefit our children in the 21st century.
It is a Call to Action, with an Action Plan.

If you or your students think American education standards are higher than the Third World, take a shot at the online Third World Challenge. Find out now if you, your students or your own children are competitive on a test to enter 11th grade in rural India.


The Strong American Schools campaign of ED in 08 addresses some of these issues of crisis in our public schools.

From their site:
Flogging U.S. schools to perform - governments threaten principals and teachers with school takeovers and job loss, the media reports and reprimands, society invests more money each year, foundations pour in additional billions, yet the result remains the same - the decline continues.


The Two Million Minutes series took a deep look into high school education in India, China and the U.S. and concludes the fault lies not in our schools but in ourselves. While our schools do have enormous challenges, so do the schools in India and China. At the core of our achievement differences lies a cultural difference of significance.


American culture – the blend of media, government, family expectations, community values, and behavioral norms "send our children a steady stream of "signals" as to what we as adults value in life. Those signals are decidedly NOT academic or intellectual achievement. When it comes to school, America is a sports and extracurricular culture and our kids get that message.


On the other side of the globe, the Indian and Chinese cultures are quite different and better suited for the economic competition the 21st century. In high school, academics are the priority, with sports played for exercise and team building. Parents invest in tutors to accelerate their child's learning, not just for remedial work. While parents may not come to a single soccer match, they wouldn't miss a math, science, debate, elocution or chess team tournament.



I'm not much for politics, especially in this blog, but these issue can't help but touch on political issues too. To me, they are fundamentally educational issues, but all of in education know that it's hard to avoid the political (whether local or national) when you do talk about reform. I hope that the following information on their site is accurate: "Strong American Schools, a project of Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors, is a nonpartisan campaign supported by The Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation promoting sound education policies for all Americans. SAS does not support or oppose any candidate for public office and does not take positions on legislation."

What should we be doing in our classrooms?


Albert Einstein said, "Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results."



MORE
Here are some definitions of what the first, second and third world means, and some related videos at the EDin08 YouTube Channel


Can You Get Expelled For Running A Study Group?


I missed this story back in March. A student at Ryerson University in Toronto, Canada was almost expelled from the university for creating a study group. Huh? I was in study groups when I was an undergrad along time ago. So what did he do that was so different or so wrong?

He created that study group online using Facebook. Running a Facebook study group was seen by Ryerson as cheating.

The student is Cris Avenir, a freshman computer engineering student, and he was charged as the administrator of the online group (he wasn't the creator, but took over the admin role) and with an additional 146 counts for each classmate who was a member of it. Geeeeez.

Though I missed this story when it broke, there was a lot of online debate about whether the study group amounted to online cheating or it was students exchanged academic ideas in the same way that face-to-face groups, tutoring and mentoring work.

Initially, when his "Dungeons/Mastering Chemistry Solutions" was made known to his chemistry professor, the teacher  gave him an F in the course and charged him with academic misconduct. The main thrust of the professor's charge was that he had told students to work independently.

The Ryerson University's Faculty Appeals Committee ultimately announced that they would not expel the 18-year-old, but he would be required to take a course on academic misconduct, have a note on his transcript saying he was disciplined, and get a zero on one of his assignments, worth 10 per cent of his course grade.

His defense was that the group allowed students to share notes on assignments that were worth 10% of the overall course grade and was no different than any study group that met in he library or student center. The Facebook group was originally created by Ryerson students who had study group sessions in a room on campus known as "the dungeon" and wanted to continue online. 

Chris has an entry on Wikipedia now and I don't see any news posts after the decision about an appeal or follow up.

I doubt that Ryerson University expected the world headlines and online posts about their actions, but the incident became a kind of test case. There are other online study groups in higher education and in secondary schools. I did a search on "study groups" in Facebook and there were over more than 500 which is the number a Facebook search stops at, so maybe there are 5000. If we could search other sites like MySpace, Ning sites etc. we would find plenty more.

I'm not sure the real issue for us is whether or not students were supposed to work together on those Ryerson chemistry problems in person or online. The local issue is whether or not the university reacted appropriately. The global issue is how we react to students using the Internet on their own to learn.

Students are going to do creative, legal, illegal, helpful and harmful things online - and I'm not convinced that students will always be clear on where their actions fall.

Is being in an online study group wrong? I doubt it. But I would have to see the information on the course's syllabus and the school’s acceptable use policy, their academic rules and their student’s rights and responsibilities.

What? You say that online study groups isn't even addressed in any of those documents? Oh...

Students are very comfortable working and having online discussions - more comfortable than most of their teachers - and we keep asking them to work online in learning management systems, ePortfolios, blogs, and social networks. Schools (and teachers) need to look formally at their policies for technology use.

You don't want me and the rest of the bloggers writing about your course or school, do you?

7 Things You Should Know

The "7 Things You Should Know About..." series from the EDUCAUSE Learning Initiative (ELI) provides concise information on emerging learning technologies. Each brief focuses on a single technology and describes what it is, where it is going, and why it matters to teaching and learning. Use these briefs for a no-jargon, quick overview of a topic and share them with time-pressed colleagues.

The 3 latest guides:

7 Things You Should Know About Second Life
Second
Life is a virtual world with tens of millions of square meters of virtual lands, more than 13 million “residents,” and a thriving economy. Large numbers of colleges and universities—or, in some cases, individual departments or faculty—are active in Second Life, not only for academic purposes but also for campus visits, recruiting activities for prospective students, and fundraising. Second Life lets educators easily build and modify learning spaces to test how different strategies for a physical space affect learning, and a similar approach can be taken toward educational activities in those spaces.

7 Things You Should Know About Multi-Touch Interfaces
Multi-touch interfaces are input devices that recognize two or more simultaneous touches, allowing one or more users to interact with computer applications through various gestures created by fingers on a surface. Some devices also recognize differences in pressure and temperature. Multi-touch technology introduces users to swipes, pinches, rotations, and other actions that allow for richer, more immediate interaction
with digital content. Multi-touch devices and supporting applications offer diverse ways of visualizing information to improve understanding, and they facilitate new ways to foster collaborative creation, permitting several users to work simultaneously on a single screen.

7 Things You Should Know About Ning
Ning is an online service that allows users to create their own social networks and join and participate in other networks. No technical skill is required to set up a social network, and there are no limits to the number of networks a user can join. Users of Ning social networks have
access to functionality similar to that of more well-known social networks, such as Facebook and MySpace. Various features allow users to read news or learn about related events, join groups, read and comment on blog entries, view photos and videos, and other activities as set up by the network creator. RSS feeds let users subscribe to updates from specific parts of the social network.