Angela looked at playing in a sandbox through the eyes of children. Playing on purpose is very healthy for the mind, heart and the soul. Through playing it gives you the power to discover new things to learn. Playing will bring joy, happiness and excitement back to work. Here are the 10 things Angela learned. 1. Sharing is caring- The people who share, care and give more of your hearts will find success. 2. Messy is good- There is beauty and freedom from getting messy. 3. Imagination is your greatest asset- If a person dreams big, bold and is brave enough: anything and everything is possible. 4. Sand is for filling buckets- Never throw sand at someone because it not only hurts them; but, it wastes all your playtime. 5. Hugs help and smiles matter- In the sandbox love is the killer app. Be KIND! 6. Take it to the community- Problems will always arise, when they do turn towards your community for help. The community is the web. Ask for help when you need it. It’s OK! 7. Strangers are future friends- When you first meet someone they are a stranger. As you get to know them and they may become your friend. 8.Be Remarkable- Do what you love, do it well and have the courage to do it the way you want. 9. Here you are the master of your universe- The limitations a person has are the ones they place on themselves “To win, you need only to defeat your doubt.” 10. Play is Work- If you honor the tools, rules and most of all one another there’s nothing you can’t do. And Finally, YOU MATTER! There are endless possibilities when you know that you matter. Let all your students know that they matter and I firmly believe they will be willing to succeed.
As I stated before, this presentation is awesome and I will show it to all my classes. It gave me renewed hope and energy. It was very creative because it brought me back to my childhood and it was remarkable how children playing can change how you view the world.
Think about where you can use this tool, classrooms and at staff in-services. You can have open discussions. Put the people into groups and brainstorm of what was the meaning of the “The Sandbox Manifesto” and how it had influence them to change.
Lonnie,
ReplyDeleteSounds like you got a great speech in your back pocket for your athletes if you ever need it! In a time when negativity and pessimism are at an all time high, your glass seems to be half full my man.
It seems like a similar attitude towards trying new things online and putting some of these ideas into play will get us on the right track to making the online learning experience something positive for our students.
Thanks for sharing ... and if Louis doesn't like your post or my reply, we need to remind him not to throw sand!
:)