• Home
  • About
  • #SAchat
    • About #SAchat
    • #SAchat Archives
    • #SAchat Awards
  • More
    • Leadership Team
    • Be a Writer
    • SA Directory
  • #SAReads

Education Reform: Feeling Like An Outsider


Posted by Tom Krieglstein on 06 Dec 2011 / 2 Comments



Earlier this year, I was honored to be invited to attended the inaugural #140edu conference in NYC which brought together several hundred educators for two days to talk about the future of education. Modeled after TED, each person was given roughly 10 minutes to talk about his/her topic. My topic was on leveraging social media to increase student engagement outside the classroom. You can watch my keynote here.

After the first day of the conference it was clear that the focus of my talk was different than almost everyone else. While everyone was involved in education some how and had a desire to improve it, almost all the topics involved how to make “in-classroom” learning better, while my focus was on “out-of-classroom” learning. In higher ed this is often an area managed by a Student Affairs department.

I’ve attended dozens of education reform/revolution type conferences over the years, and I always end up feeling like the lone wolf talking about the “out-of-classroom” learning space. The informal learning moments that happen in-between classes.

Higher education analyst, Thomas G. Mortenson, revealed that a typical student will spend 15% of their day in class or working on classroom work and 35% of their day sleeping. That leaves 50% of the day for working or hanging around the campus community.

According to a UCLA national study of college seniors 4 out of 5 seniors say their most significant learning moments happened outside the classroom.

Academic researchers Astin, Tinto, and several others, conclude that the more socially involved a student is within the campus community, the higher his/her retention and graduation rates are.

With such strong data to support the work I’m doing, why do I always feel like an outsider at the education reform conferences where the conversation is dominated by in-classroom learning?

Written by Tom Krieglstein


  • Stella Maher

    Tom, I heard about that conference but got the impression it was geared more toward K-12 education than higher education.  As a former high school teacher, I would point out that many school boards actually ban educators from connecting with students over social media.  I think having groups on facebook and using it to connect with my students brought us closer together and gave them an outlet to reach me with questions about assignments or theatre rehearsals.  Since I left I think they have increased restrictions that you cannot friend students and must have limited profiles.  I’m not sure how much they are restricting twitter – that would be easier to have a feed directly relating to your class.  But just a thought on why it may seem so outside of the box for many educators.  Even at the high school and sometimes college level, students don’t realize their teachers have a life outside of the classroom – sometimes it’s really helpful for them to see teachers as real people and role models who struggle with some of the same things they do.  And as you say, it’s a great way to engage beyond the four-walls and limited time of class. 

  • http://twitter.com/cindykane Cindy Kane

    Tom – You mentioned that you were invited as a speaker… let’s focus on who’s issuing these invitations and help them broaden their thinking about the out-of-classroom piece of educational reform!  Now that you’re “inside”…you’re a great person to do that on behalf of all of us!  Cindy

  • Latest Activity

  • Tags

    #sabest #sachat 9/11 acpa Advice advising career Community Conferences Education and Technology Education Theory engagement facebook Graduate Students higher ed Higher Education how to ideas interviews Job Search leadership leadership development NASPA Orientation Personal Poll professional development reflection residence life social justice Social Media student activities Student Affairs student affairs technology Student Development Student Engagement Student Engagement Theory students Supervision technology This and that Top Content Twitter Uncategorized video
  • Search

  • Archives

  • Categories




Copyright © 2012 Swift Kick