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My pathway to open source teaching

By Art Fuller, Founder & Chair


My pathway to open source teaching dates back to my experience as a child, specifically, annual summer visits to the birthplace of my parents, Montgomery, Alabama. As a child, I fondly remember visiting at least 10 male cousins, around my age. We used to play sports all day and enjoy childhood games all night. My parents were one of the few from the family to move away from Montgomery.

Little did I know this simple act provided me with an opportunity to experience an array of social networks and educational expectations which none of my male cousins imagined. It is true that both of my parents earned Bachelors degrees from Alabama A & M University, but so did the parents of a number of my cousins.

Today, at the age of 34, my trips to Montgomery are filled with remorse, as I am the only one remaining who is not deceased, incarcerated, or strung out on the addiction of alcohol, drugs, and/or low expectations. I am the only male from this group who has a college degree or owns his own house. I am convinced my access to a different set of social networks and educational norms is the primary reason.

This belief was solidified during my three years with a comprehensive school reform organization in which I visited nearly two hundred urban schools throughout the nation, particularly the Southeastern United States. Within many schools, I saw the same faces of my male cousins. This experience convinced me that I had to find a way for these same faces to become exposed to the same type of social and academic networks which I benefited.

My parents have always encouraged me to explore everything and it is through this exploration that I personally found motivating topics that required me to learn and develop new skills. I envision Open Source Teaching is such a platform, where all learners can find any area of interest and explore it deeply guided by on-demand and engaging new media that provides open access to the expert applied knowledge of the world's experts, within all areas of commerce.

It is my hope that exposure to the language, descriptions, stories, and applied knowledge of such people (in a format beyond traditional text) can create a spark in individuals to acquire the necessary skills to excel in wherever their interest resides. This is the fundamental premise of open source teaching and the reason I am committed to institutionalizing this work so that learners throughout the world are empowered.

Open source teaching is and will continue to be my life's work.
I welcome your support of the new form of public service for a knowledge economy, open source teaching.

-Art


 

My pathway to open source teaching

By Rich Haglund, J.D., Deputy to the Board


My pathway to open source teaching
By Rich Haglund, J.D.
Special Assistant to the Chair

When I was in elementary school, my parents gave me a book with suggested questions to ask when visiting museums, powerplants, hospitals and other places that might be of interest.  I may have only conducted one or two such informational interviews while in elementary school, but the trend had started. 

When I was 12 years old, a friend's mother told me that if I became a doctor, I could marry her daughter.  So, I spent some time in a sports medicine clinic and talked to doctors and therapists there about their work.  After taking chemistry and physics in high school, I decided writing for Sports Illustrated was a better career goal for me.  I worked on my writing skills and talked to former writers for Sports Illustrated.  

In college, I realized that my ultimate goal was to become commissioner of major league baseball.  Because I learned the late A. Bartlett Giamatti had been a university president before commissioner, I secured a part-time job working in the office of the president at the university I was attending. I soon realized that I didn't want to spend the majority of my time soliciting donations.

Between college and law school, I worked for a company that made firewalls for network security.  Even though I didn't have experienc, the CEO recognized that I could learn what I needed to be successful in that industry.

In law school, I developed an interest in education law.  So, I talked with the university's general counsel.  That led to a summer job and my participation on a committee auditing the university's athletic program.  Writing for an education law publication led to a writing job during school and, eventually, to my current job with the State Board of Education.

Unfortunately, most children do not have access to expert knowledge through their social or educational networks.  Nor do they have parents or other mentors who will help them explore their interests in real-world applications of what they are studying.  They don't see immediate relevance to what they are studying.

Open source learning - in its pre-Internet, "analog" form - has taught me what I need to study and why.  It has allowed me to make a living doing things that I am passionate about.  Open source teaching can be the means for students - particularly those who might not be part of social and educational networks like mine - to find out what interests them and to understand what they need to do to pursue those interests.

My undergraduate advisor told me I had to be crazy to pursue a doctorate in philosophy, and my father helped me recognize that I was really interested in hand-on, practical philosophy.  I don't think it makes much sense to debate whether I exist or not when there are two outs and a man on second and the next hitter has a .200 average.  Open source teaching can be the means to help some student decide she wants to pursue existential philosophy or to tinker with the designated hitter rule.  Or both.  Open source teaching can help more students be able to act for themselves, rather than to be acted upon by the flattening of the world and other circumstances which they cannot control.

And it may give me the opportunity to have (or at least hear) that informational interview with the Commissioner.


My pathway to open source teaching

By David Sevier, Ed.D., Founder


Open Source Teaching is next in a life’s work devoted to bringing students to the realization that knowledge is the deciding factor between those who “can” and those who “wish they could.”


As a child growing up in the Highland Rim on Tennessee my summers were spent working in my grandfather’s tobacco fields. Tobacco is a labor intensive crop well-suited to the Tennessee soil. Tobacco requires many hands at every step in the process; it must be seeded in beds, transplanted to the fields, topped at the bloom stage, harvested onto stakes, and cured by hanging in barns.


During these times I worked with people from every stage of life and economic tier. In the spring, I stood beside landowners pulling small plants from seedling beds; in late summer, poor day laborers and I climbed barn rafters hanging mature tobacco leaves to start the curing process. It was hard, hot, work which culminated at the tobacco auction held in December, just in time to start preparing the fields for next year’s crop.


Many events during that time stand out, but one event surpasses the others. I was a teenager carrying seedling plants to the field in wet burlap bags with a day laborer. He was grizzled, had gnarled hands, a crooked grin, and was the product of a lifetime of personal neglect. I guessed him to be about 60 years old. He was 35. He had gone to school but the system had passed him by on many occasions. He was not unintelligent; in fact, he had obtained a level of informal education few of us could ever expect to obtain. What he was missing was not education, it was knowledge.


Looking back, I now realize the impression that experience had on me. It made me realize that going to school was not the single key to unlocking the doors in life, it is schooling coupled with access to knowledge that makes things in life possible. Schooling without knowledge is hollow; knowledge without application is pointless.


I have spent the vast majority of my professional life in school buildings either as a teacher or as an administrator. Even after leaving K-12 public education I have continued to work in the area of state-level education public policy. At each stop along the way I have become increasingly convinced that students can only come to a full understanding of their life choices if they have an opportunity to hear from those who have their devoted their lives to similar endeavors. The time-honored tradition of sitting at the feet of the master is still the best way to learn about an area of interest. In short, water tastes sweetest when it comes directly from the well.

The Open Source Teaching Project
brings learners to the source, it makes knowledge real for learners, it allows those who have achieved great things to inspire others, it is where sharing becomes learning.

-David


 

My pathway to open source teaching

By Mary Catherine Sevier, President


Not until I became a mother did I realize the disparity of the educational offerings available to children within a single town, much less within the world. Thirty five years ago, when I began formal schooling, the world was in many ways a larger place than it is now. One's education was circumscribed by one's location. Many students did not expect or frankly need to attend higher education programs. Attaining a high school degree equipped many to accomplish the American dream of a house, a yard and 2.5 children.


Times have changed. Rare is the individual who can rise above minimum wage positions with less than an associate's degree; rare also is the area of the country where minimum wage provides a living standard above the poverty level. The world is rapidly shrinking with the constant advent of technology which links us in an ever tighter web. In spite of the plethora of information and opportunities afforded society in today's technological world, we are stuck in proverbial ruts.


I believe Open Source Teaching can be the major force in accelerating the standard for learning and living. Through simple inspiration from others, the world's teenagers can find their horizons expanding beyond their backyards, street corners, and even classrooms. Most of our children will make their living in fields which either do not exist right now or will be unrecognizable changed. OST is the ultimate example of paying it forward – with a minimal investment of our time today, we can impact our children's world for the better tomorrow.


We at Open Source Teaching are meeting the future headlong. I hope you will join us.

-Mary Catherine


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