I will admit that I was a super geek when it came to back-to-school season. Specifically, shopping for the supplies and getting ready for the first day of school. I loved this stuff then and I continue to have a little obsession with office supplies. The thrill of fresh notebooks, the excitement over choosing exactly the right pen, the seemingly-limitless possibilities of backpacks. I would plan and organize and label everything. My pencil case was well stocked and every subject had a notebook.
Fast forward to my junior year of high school, when I decided I wanted to become a teacher. I loved accounting and finance and management strategies, so Business Education was the only logical choice to me. I didn't even entertain the idea of a degree in Business Administration, because I had no real interest in working in an office. I was fascinated by the act of learning concepts and putting pieces together to make sense of something.
Jumping forward again about ** years, I had finally got into what I thought was my dream job. I was teaching Business and Marketing at a large high school in North Dakota. From the outside looking in, it was exactly what I had been working toward. But after just a year or two, I became restless. I wasn't feeling the excitement over planning and reinventing my classroom. I was feeling the pull toward research in exciting teaching methods, in curriculum redesign, in technology integration. I felt that we were at a turning point in education and I didn't think I was in a position to have enough knowledge, experience, or influence to shape it.
That is when I found my true passion. I took a position where it was my job to research and share innovative ideas around technology integration. With this position was a requirement to learn about other subject areas, different building cultures, district policies, standards alignment, and core technology. I felt like I was coming home.
Looking back, my excitement over school supplies had very little to do with the actual paper in the notebook and ink in the pens. It had everything to do with the potential of a new school year. It all signaled that more learning was about to begin. That empty notebook would be filled to the brim with new knowledge and that backpack would enable me to take my learning with me wherever I chose to travel.
My teachers had done the job promised in the school’s mission statement. They had created a life-long learner. In the NESC Report, Opportunities, Challenges and Capacities for Choice, they define life-long learning as "....All purposeful learning activity, whether formal or informal, undertaken on an ongoing basis with the aim of improving knowledge, skills and competence" (p.170). I think there are two keys in this definition. The first is the phrase undertaken on an ongoing basis and the second is that it is both formal and informal.
It is my hope that all of us in the education field internalize and model this concept to our students. They need to see us as learners and as teachers. They need to understand that we learn in so many ways, formally and informally, inside the classroom and out. They need to hear that we learn and seek to understand so many different concepts, not just those most often discussed in the classroom. They need to be taught the value in learning about things we do not yet understand, even if (or especially if) it might not be on a test. The need for all citizens to be learners and critical thinkers is vitally important in this information-rich era.
For more reading on why I consider myself a geek and not a nerd, visit this blog post by geektyrant.
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