Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Weekly Message from Steve Warner, Head of School (November 5, 2013)

Greetings, GreenMount Community,

            Have any of you ever experienced “phantom pocket vibration syndrome”?  Sure you have.  This is when you think that your cell phone in your pocket is vibrating when it actually isn’t.  If you have experience this more than a few times you are probably part of the “Net Generation” or an older “Gen-Xer”. You have become very dependent on your cell phone and the social connections that you must have in order to survive.
Have you ever driven more than five miles back to your house when you discover that you left your phone at home? Yep, you’re hooked!  In my day we drove until we saw a phone booth (remember those?) along the side of the road to make a call.  And I can count on half of my hand the number of times a phone call was important enough for me to pull over at a phone booth.  Today, phone booths - when you can find them - serve a different purpose.  This past summer, in London, my wife wanted to take a picture of me in one of those famous English phone booths.  I complied, but holding my breath – phew!
            Our AIMS conference yesterday turned out to be very worthwhile and informative.  In addition to the workshop on how different generations are using technology that I attended, we heard a great keynote from Dr. David Eagleman, a neuroscientist and Director of the Laboratory for Perception and Action at the Baylor College of Medicine.  His presentation was a fascinating look at how our brains mature and how educators can use this awareness to help students use their capacities to their fullest.  He talked a lot about the “plasticity” of the brain and how we can train it to be more receptive and creative.  Indeed, our staff has done some research on teaching creativity and you have also done a lot to hasten your children’s curiosity and creative nature.  He said that unless we intervene in the brains of our students, their brains will always take the path of least résistance.  I am sure you can read a lot into that statement.
But Dr. Eagleman talked more specifically about how our brains are wired and how we can make them function better by forcing them to create different pathways between neurons.  I do not have enough allotted space in this newsletter to talk about specifics (and I can’t remember most of them – my myelin sheath is deteriorating), but I was struck by some notable similarities between what he said and what we do here at GreenMount:

  • We must use provocative, creative questions in our discussions with students – we do that
  • We must have students experience ideas and situations – we do that
  • We must allow students to delve deeply into subject matter – we do that
  • We must stimulate emotional engagement with subject matter – we do that
  • We have to create an enriched environment for learning – we do that too.
It is always nice to hear experts validate our philosophy, isn’t it?
I also attended a workshop (allude to to in my opening paragraph) delivered by Dr. Larry Rosen from California State University.  He has done a great deal of research on technology and how it affects different generations.  His main point is that we have to deal with a generation of students who are ultra-dependent on social interaction through technology.  I have noted that if I call my daughters on the phone, I may never hear back from them.  Conversely, if I text them, they reply in seconds - really?
Dr. Rosen’s fear is that our children are not developing FTF interactions.  (I’m sorry, that’s “Face-To-Face”.)  He says that students today cannot go more than 15 minutes without some form of technological communication, and that children are even sleeping with their cell phones on vibrate.  Once again, I see GreenMount students and families as outliers here.  I do not see our middle school students suffering from anxiety because they haven’t had time to text someone.  Whatever you are doing to foster human interaction, keep doing it.  Help us to keep our students from suffering from FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out)!

Cheers, 

Steve