SPEAKER: All right. Hello, world. [APPLAUSE] Normally, of course, we begin with, this is CS50. But this morning, I thought we'd begin with CS50, this is Guy White. [APPLAUSE] GUY WHITE: Good morning, Indonesia. Good morning, my friends. It's so good to see you, and I love the energy already this morning. As I was looking at some of you, as you were doing the puzzles, you were so concentrated but so awake. How many of you had your morning coffee or tea? Very good. And so what we're going to do this morning is we're going to be talking about pedagogy. But before we talk about pedagogy today, I just wanted to say, again, a hearty welcome. My greatest thanks for the opportunity to be with you here today. We are here for you this weekend. And my great hope is that you are going to get-- you're going to, this week, plant seeds that will lead to greater things. As I said yesterday, today is not the end. It's just the-- AUDIENCE: Beginning. GUY WHITE: Very good, everyone. So what we're going to be doing is we're going to be choosing and figuring out what row we're in. So everyone here in this first row, look at me and say A. AUDIENCE: A. GUY WHITE: OK, everyone here in this group, in this second row, say B. AUDIENCE: B. GUY WHITE: Very good. Everyone in this third row, say C. AUDIENCE: C. GUY WHITE: And everyone in this fourth row I think says D. AUDIENCE: D. GUY WHITE: And then we have groups E-- AUDIENCE: Yes. GUY WHITE: --and group F. OK, very good. Thank you so much. So what I'd like you to do, first of all, this is going to be very exciting. Group A, group A only, stand up. Group A. Group B, stand up. Now, group A, turn around and touch the finger of the person behind you. Yeah, touch the-- No no, no, no, no, no. It's OK. No, no. So what you can do, make sure you have one partner, one partner, one partner, one partner. Very good. One partner. OK, now group C, go ahead and stand up. And group D, stand up and turn around, group C, and meet your partner. Good. OK. Very good. Good. That's fine. And-- all right. It's good, it's good. Oh, yeah. What you can do-- you can-- what you could do is you could touch pens, you know? Touch pens. That's good. Touch pens. This is good. All right. So looking at your partner, say hello. AUDIENCE: Hello! GUY WHITE: OK. So what I'd like you to do is I'd like you-- you're going to spend about 30 seconds, you're going to talk with your partner about who are you and where do you teach. Who are you, where do you teach? 30 seconds, go, talk to them. [SIDE CONVERSATION] It's good. Yeah, switch, back and forth, good. All right, and pause. And pause. Very good. And let us go like this. Can we go like this? In Indonesia-- in the United States, in the United States, when we want to be quiet, we go like this. What do we do in Indonesia when we want to be quiet? Oh, like that, oh, shh. Oh, oh. That's very direct. AUDIENCE: Snake. GUY WHITE: Like a snake. AUDIENCE: Yeah! GUY WHITE: Oh, OK. All right, very good. So that is the first-- that is the first round of many rounds where we're talking to each other, right? Now, we have different groups here. So a group A, say hello. AUDIENCE: Hello! GUY WHITE: Group B, say hello. AUDIENCE: Hello! GUY WHITE: K, so group B, do not move. Group B, do not move. K. Group D, say hello. AUDIENCE: Hello. GUY WHITE: Do not move. OK? Do not move. Stay right there. Group-- what happened to my group B? They're gone. OK. So group B, don't move either. All right. So if you are group A or group C or group E, what I'd like you to do is move one person to your right. Go ahead and move this way, this way. You can leave your stuff. Just move one person. If you're at the end, come on around. [INAUDIBLE], you're going to go all the way to the end over there. Other way, other way, other way-- this way, this way, this way. This way, good. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, yes, exactly. Very good. All right. OK, now good, and now group C, move one across. Very good, and one down. And you, sir, can come all the way around, over to the other side. And then group C or group E, same thing. You'll rotate. So you can go all the way around. And you can all move one, OK? So if you would, turn and meet your new partner. Turn, meet your new partner behind you. Group A, turn around. Group C, turn around. Look, a new partner. Go ahead and say hello to this new partner. AUDIENCE: Hello! GUY WHITE: Again, who are you, and where do you teach? Who are you, and where do you teach? All right, and now, so silent snake. What's a snake say? Sss. AUDIENCE: Sss. GUY WHITE: Very good. The silent snake. I like that. I'm going to use that at home. I'm going to say to my-- I have three children, you know, I have 10, 8, 7 years old. And so I've been sending them many pictures of Indonesia. And they're like, Daddy, that's very nice, very nice. But then I showed them a picture of the cats here on campus. And they want all the cat pictures. It's so exciting. So that was our first two rounds. So let's see if we can do that again-- again, same groups. Rotate. Go ahead and rotate to the next person. Rotate. Oh, very good. Rotate, rotate, rotate. Good. See-- look, you all have it now. So you understand. All right, now, turn around and meet your new partner. Now, this time, this time add some spice to your introduction. Give them some new information. So turn around and meet your new partner. [SIDE CONVERSATION] OK. And silent snake-- a snake says what? AUDIENCE: Sss. GUY WHITE: New question. New question is, where did you grow up? Where did you grow up? And did you like it? Where did you grow up, and did you like it? Go ahead. Talk to your partner. And silent snake. A silent snake says what? You taught me. Like this? Is this like a silent snake, like this? This is like a duck. Very good. OK. So, excellent. So you've met each other. You now know each other. You have many friends now. So why, of course-- and so now we have one more question. A very important question for me is, I want you to look at this partner. Now, is there a game-- is there a game-- where is it? I only know it by its English name. But do you know a game called [NON-ENGLISH SPEECH]? AUDIENCE: Yeah! GUY WHITE: Yeah, OK. OK, so rock, paper, scissors, OK? So what I'd like you to do is I'd like you to best two out of three, right? And I want to see who wins. Here's the question I want you to answer. The question is, what is your favorite part about being a teacher? Go ahead, look at your partner. Go ahead and play. Go ahead and play [NON-ENGLISH SPEECH]. Just figure out who talks first. All right. And if you will, go ahead and turn and face me. Silent snake. Very-- very good. You've taught me something. Thank you. I want to say, you've been teaching me for six months. My heart is so full. Thank you. And so-- thank you. And so this is a very special partner with you because what you are going to do with this partner, later today, you're going to have a special mission with this partner. Later on today, you're going to be walking down the hall. You're going to be going to a meal. You'll be going to lunch. And you two, you and your partner, will see each other. And this is a very important moment because what I'd like you and your partner to do, if you touch, you could-- if you can touch, I want you to make a secret handshake, OK? Secret handshake. OK, if you can't touch, maybe a secret dance. OK. All right, go ahead, make up your secret handshake with your partner. Turn back to a partner, secret handshake. Go home. Go home, birds. If your friend is just standing there, say go home, friend. Go home. Thank you, thank you, thank you. Good job. And at the end of this row, there are papers. Take one and pass it down. At the end of this row, there are papers. Go ahead and take one and pass it down. Same thing with you, sir. Take one paper-- pass it down. Yes, this paper. Yeah, one paper, pass it down. Very good. Same thing with you. Yes, exactly. Everyone will get a piece of paper. Papers coming your way. Wonderful, team. I am so happy again. So you are here today for you. You are here today for your family. You are also here for your students. And something that I believe as a teacher is that every student can learn. Every student can learn. Every student can learn. Do you believe that every student can learn? AUDIENCE: Yeah. GUY WHITE: Right. You and I have that in common. However, every student has their own challenges, right? They have their life at home. They have the legacy of their family. And it takes a lot of effort to help them rise up even when they're in a lot of difficulty. And that is what pedagogy is. Pedagogy is the chance for you to raise a student, to bring a student from where they are when they found you to where they can be through your assistance. The student needs to work, right? But of course, we as teachers, we work so hard for our students. We're willing to do almost anything for our students. I've known teachers that get to the school before the sun comes up and leaves when the sun goes down. I have known teachers that have taken students into their home, given them food, given them clothing because they just know that if they invest into that student, they are going to get something far greater than if that student never encountered you as a teacher. So number one, I believe that every student has a future. But no student, no student gets anywhere without a teacher, right? Do you agree with that? No one gets anywhere without a teacher. And that's what pedagogy is all about pedagogy. Pedagogy is the act of you facilitating their learning. You're not doing the job for them. But the student isn't carrying everything on their back. Some teachers-- you know many teachers where the teachers will say, well, it's the job of the student to learn, which is true. It's part of the job of the student to learn. But schools were not built for teachers. Schools were not built for teachers. Schools were not built for principals or administrators. Schools were built for students. And I want you to think back in your mind right now about a teacher, a teacher that invested their time and their heart into you. I want you to think about, without that teacher, you probably would not be where you are today. So that's what we're going to be talking about today. We're going to be talking about pedagogy. We're going to be talking about the instructional strategies that you can use to help students learn, to facilitate their learning and reach a higher level. And of course, I'll send you all these slides. And I'm also going to be talking about some of the CS50 teaching values that you've been exposed to that you might decide to take on into your classroom from this point forward. Does that sound like a good plan for today? Thank you. OK. So what I'd like to do is, I'd like to introduce you to your piece of paper. Everyone, take your piece of paper and hold it up. Let me see your piece of paper. All right, good. So what we're going to be doing is we're going to be creating what's called a KWL chart. Has anyone ever created a KWL chart before? Oh, this is brand new. This is good stuff. OK. So what you're going to do is you're going to fold your paper. In the United States, we call this a burrito. What do you call it? A what? AUDIENCE: [NON-ENGLISH SPEECH] GUY WHITE: No, no. Like a food. What food is this like when you fold it three ways? AUDIENCE: [INAUDIBLE] lapis. GUY WHITE: Lapis? Lapis? OK. OK. So you fold it in three columns like this, right? All right, three columns. This is called a KWL chart. Very good. I get to learn a lot about you as a teacher as you fold this paper. Some of you are like, what paper? This is good. Very good. And if you would, at the top of your KWL chart, at the top, go ahead and in the columns at the top, let's write down these things. On the first column, let's write down the word "know." That's the K. No, K-N-O-W, K-N-O-W. I want you to write down what are the-- and so this is a place where you're going to write down-- in a few minutes, not yet-- you're going to write down some of the things that you know already about computer science and teaching computer science. These are your specialties. These are the things that you know really well. The second part of the KWL chart is the W, which is the "want to know," the "want to know." That is, the things you want to find out today or maybe the things you want to find out in the future because like I said, this is not the end of the journey. This is the beginning because in the coming weeks and months, you are a community now. You're a community of teachers. Your contact with each other is going to be beyond today. You're going to speak-- you're like a graduating class, right? And you will speak to each other for a very long time. So these are the things you want to know through our time together today. And at the end of today, you might write down what you've learned. What did I learn in the day? So this tool is like a reflection throughout the day. What do I know already? What do I want to know? And what did I learn through the day? If you would, write down one thing, in your language. I'm not collecting this. But go ahead, and right now, go ahead and write down one thing you want to know today. What is one thing in the middle column you want to know today? What do you want to know today? And what I'm going to do is I'm going to come around with the microphone, and I'm going to give you the opportunity to share one thing you want to know. I'm going to hear from three people. What do you want to know? Do you want to share? What do you want to know? AUDIENCE: I want to know how to be a fun teacher. GUY WHITE: Fun teacher. I love that. How many of you want to be a fun teacher and learn how to be a fun teacher? Excellent. Who else would like to share what they want to know? Yes, sir. AUDIENCE: I want to know how to make students fun when they're learning computer science. GUY WHITE: Absolutely. And how many of you want to make computer science also fun? Yes, OK. Let's do one more. Who else would like-- OK, yes. Can you speak loud for us, sir? Instructional design for your class. How many of you want to know about instructional design for your class? Perfect. You are in the right place. We're definitely going to be doing that together in the next 30 minutes. So what I'd like to do is I'd like to go into a short lecture portion today. So here's what we're going to do. We're going to have a very small period of time where I'm going to be talking to you, very short, and then we're going to be going into another group activity. And then we're going to be finishing off in one final closure together in about 30 minutes. So let's talk about pedagogy for a little while. Keep in mind these slides will be made available to you after our time together. As I mentioned, pedagogy is the process-- it's facilitating the process. That is, you are like a coach. You are like a mentor, right? For example, in my home, when my children are learning how to sweep the floor, I could be like the teacher who says, go sweep the floor. And then they don't sweep the floor. Why didn't you sweep-- why didn't you sweep the floor? And then I get angry-- sweep the floor. But they don't know how to sweep the floor. They've never learned that. My children maybe didn't learn that. But the mentor, the facilitator, what would the mentor-facilitator do? They would pick up the broom themselves and say, look at me, baby. This is how you sweep. I make my sweeping dance. And then they say, oh, the sweeping dance looks so much fun. So you give them a broom too. And then you do the sweeping dance together, right? And then you both are having fun together. And they learn something. It's the same thing. They learned the same thing, but this time, you are part of it because you are a mentor, a facilitator, not just a lecturer. You can watch a lecturer on YouTube. Right. Exactly. Facilitates learning-- lectures are important too, though. I want to talk about the levels of learning. If you think about-- same example. My children, the first time they saw a broom, you know, they saw mommy and daddy using a broom. It's the first time. What's the question? What do they ask the first time they see a broom? What's a broom, right? So they want to know-- so this is the first level of learning. For your students to program an array, you don't say, go do an array. Instead, what you say is, what is an array? Here's a picture of an array. And that's the second level of learning, right, is the area of description. We describe to our students what the item is. What is it? What is an array? And we show them a picture. We show them a picture of many yellow blocks of memory and pieces of memory side by side. And you know what? I don't know about you, but the first time I saw that graphic, I'm like, it's boxes. I know about boxes, right? I can do boxes-- I can do an array. And then the next level from that, after your students know what an array is and how to describe an array, then what they can do is they can perhaps explain it back to you. They can give you an example of an array. Here's an array with a 2, a 3, and a 4. Here's an array with an A, a B, and a C. They can give you back that example. The next level of learning above that is a very challenging one. This is the compare and contrast level. This is similarities and differences, right? So for example, you learned about an array, and you learned about a linked list, right? So this is comparing an array to a linked list. And this is where the student for the first time says, oh, for an array, I have to know how big the array is going to be up front, right? But over here on the linked list, I can make it as big as I want as long as I have the system resources to grow it. So at this compare and contrast level, the student can take their learning a little bit higher. This is a very high level of learning. If you stopped here, it's really good. But you can keep going because on top of this, we have the idea of synthesizing. Synthesize is where you can not only compare and contrast, but you can look at many different perspectives because in C, we have arrays. And in C, we have linked lists. But in Python, we have what? Dictionaries and lists. So we can not just compare and contrast, but we can synthesize all the information together. And then the highest level of learning that we'll talk about today is to create something. By the way, wonderful team, why do you think your last activity in CS50 was a creative final project? Because it's the highest level of learning because you have gone through all the levels of learning, and now you can synthesize it and create something brand new. So when you're working with your students in your classroom, you want to make sure you're walking them up this thing. And as many of you know, some of your students are going to be down at the bottom, while some students are up in the middle, and some students are already making products and selling them on apple.com, right? Some of your students are like, teacher, go faster. And some of your students are like, teacher, where are you? So we help students at different levels. And what we call that is scaffolding. And Margaret's going to be talking about this a lot later today. There are three-- scaffolding, you ever see on the side of the building, when they're building a building, and they have the scaffolds, they have the metal pieces that are holding up the building? They have the places where the workers can stand really up high. You know the scaffolding? That's what scaffolding. Scaffolding is where you can raise certain students up and allow that student to learn even though they're not at the same place as other students. Let me give you a great example. There are some students that might have missed the array lesson. They just maybe watched 10 minutes of the array lesson. And then we have another student that's watched two hours of arrays. And then you might even have another student that can make arrays all day. They're really good at it. What you could do is if you put them all in the same group together, they can help each other out. The top student can kind of become the teacher and the mentor. The middle student is still rising, and the student who is at the bottom, the student-- this student can learn from the other two because the other students are patient like them. There are three ways you can scaffold instruction for your students. The first is with sensory, sensory. And by the way, when you walked in today, there's a lot of sensory today. I was fist bumping as you walked in. That was showing that I'm welcoming you. That's a sensory scaffold. Also when you walked in, what was happening up in the air? The music, right? The music, and that is a-- again, that is a type of scaffolding as well because I'm using your five senses. Some of you, you burn things in your classroom to make it smell good, right? Some classrooms smell like a locker room at a gym, right, kind of thing. You go in the classroom like, mm, this smells like a shoe. I did not burn any incense here, but that's another type of sensory thing. Many of you-- I'll get to that one in a moment. The next one is graphic. Graphic is the next one. And in CS50, we surely use a lot of graphic scaffolding. We use pictures. Rather than simply talking all the time, we're showing what we're talking about because if learning is not tangible, if someone can't see it, touch it, hear it, only-- if they're only getting it through one of their senses, it can be really challenging. So graphic with pictures and things like this is very useful. That's why there's numbers around the room that we'll be going to quite shortly. Similarly, we have interactive. Notice that when I'm talking to you, I'm not hiding behind here. I'm not sitting only here. Instead, you saw me walking up and around. Sometimes you know that students, they're having trouble in your classroom, maybe they're super energetic like they're a little wrestler, like a Hulk, right? And some of your boys and girls in your class are like Hulks. You need to walk up to them and be like calm, calm, calm, calm, calm, calm down. Calm down. And we call that-- that interactive is called presence, right? We're calming down our student. It's OK. Sometimes-- I don't know about you, but sometimes I got in trouble in class. And sometimes I'd be sitting there, and I'd be talking to my friends. And I'd feel from behind me the eyes of my teacher. And I would say to my friends, she is behind me, isn't she? That's the interactive portion. So when you're in your classroom, you're not just standing behind a desk, standing behind a podium. Instead, you're providing the interaction that your students need. The last thing that I want to talk about is assessment because some of you, when we think about assessment, very common when I first began teaching, assessment is testing. And testing's at the end, right? Did you learn? Show me the broom. But there are three ways you can assess your students. What you can do is you can do what's called a formative assessment. A formative assessment is at the beginning. For example, when you were walking around the classroom today and talking to each other, I asked questions like, what is your favorite thing to teach? What type of teacher would you like to be? Where did you come from? Did you like it? What we're doing is, I'm listening when you're talking, and I'm hearing, are my students, are they ready for today? Or are they sleepy, right, and tired? But no, you're very energetic. And I'm also listening for how things are going. For example, when we walked in the room today, many of you had a really good idea. You had the Post-it Note that I gave you earlier today. Take out your Post-it Note and wave it at me. Yeah. Good, good, good, good, good, good, good. OK. Many of you, when you walked in today-- thank you so much. Did anyone not get a Post-it Note, by the way? OK, everyone has one, OK. If you lost it, that's OK as long as you know your number. When some of you walked in, you had a good idea. You already knew that later, I'm going to be sending you to these numbers. So some of you, I said sit in the first four rows. And you're like, no, no, I'm going up to number 20 over here. You say, Mr. Guy, I am way ahead of you. And so by simply looking at how the understanding is at the beginning of the lesson, I'm able to see how things are going. There's also a process assessment that's in the middle of the lesson. It's at the middle of the lesson. The middle of the lesson is the process assessment. And in the middle of the lesson, I might ask-- so let's say we were learning an array. And we're halfway through the lesson. What might I ask my students? I might ask, what is an array, as a good starting point, right? And see-- if we're halfway through the lesson, they probably should know what an array is. What else might I ask them? Can you give me an example of an array? Fantastic. Because if they can give an example, then I already know that they've already defined it and described it. And now they're explain level, right? And then you go up to one student, and then before you even ask the question, the student goes, I make arrays every night. And you're like, good for you. Now go teach the class. I'm going to go get coffee. And then the last piece-- you are a fun crowd. The last piece is the summative assessment. It's the assessment that happens at the end of the lesson, right? It's the lesson that happens at the end. So in CS50, we had a number of summative assessments. First of all, every single week. Oh, by the way, before I get to the summative-- process assessment. It's, yes, the quizzes, and the quizzes. And in case CS50x, there's sometimes labs. This is a place to observe the student, things like this, right? But then in the summative assessment every single week, we had the full problem set. Only one the whole week, right? Well, many problem sets. But yeah yeah. But you get the idea one group of problems. So a big summative assessment every week. And then about 2/3 through the course, we had the test, which is an even bigger assessment. And then finally, the final assessment is the final project. And you know what's so interesting is when you look at how your students are doing along the way, there's very few surprises because the whole way, you've been walking with them. They walk into the room, and they're learning something brand new for the first time. And then you're walking with them as they're growing in their knowledge. And then finally, at the end, you're excited with them because you know they're going to do pretty good. You hope so. [LAUGHTER] And then they do. And then you get to celebrate. And then you get start it all over again. And that's what pedagogy is, is you walking through the learning cycle with your students. Pedagogy is not just handing students an assignment and saying, go. Instead, what you're doing is you're walking with them during the entire process because you are not just a teacher. You are a teacher who is a mentor, a teacher who believes in your students, a teacher who is going to mentor and grow your students with them. You're going to be walking with them the whole time. Isn't that beautiful? So instructional strategies are the way that you do that. Instructional strategies are the methods by which you facilitate learning. So an example of some of the methods is we might have a partner activity, right? We did crossing pens or touching fingers, right? We have one on one. We have a group activity. I could put you in groups and have you walk around the room like we will in a few moments. Similarly, what I could do, is I could give you a test that's an instructional strategy. There are lots of instructional strategies you can use. At CS50, we use many. In fact, many of the assessment strategies we use-- the labs, the quizzes, lecture, problem sets, you having sectioned together and having opportunity to interact, breakout rooms, the activities in breakout rooms-- these are all things that are part of the instructional strategies. In the physical classroom, there's a lot you can do because you're right there. And you can change things rather quickly because if the lesson is not going as planned, do you keep doing the plan? No, you change the plan, right? You change the plan. And that's what you do in pedagogy is you change up your instructional strategies based upon what you're seeing. So what we're going to be doing is we're going to be beginning, in a moment, our gallery walk. And our gallery walk is perhaps my favorite instructional strategy to use in a physical room. It's very difficult to pull off in an online environment. If you would, if you are number one on your Post-it Note, a number one, where are my number ones? All my number ones, show me. Good, good, good, good, good, good. Where are my number ones? Where are my number ones? Where's my number ones? K, help-- but do you remember your number? Good, you're number one. Good, good, good, good. OK, so number one, in a moment-- not yet-- but number one is going to end up right here with your group. You're going to go find your new group. Don't move yet. Don't move your stuff. Everyone, don't touch your stuff. Do you have students that watch the clock? They are looking at the clock. They're zipping up their backpack. [LAUGHTER] They know that lunch is about to happen. So they're zipping up their backpack, and they're so sneaky about it. They're like this. They don't even break eye contact. They're looking right at you the whole time. So, stay still. And then we have group number two is going to-- where's my group number twos? Let me see. Where's twos-- OK, good, good, good, good. Where's my group number three? Right here. Good, good. Group number fours, where are my fours? Where are my fours? It's going to be right here. Group number five is over here. Let me see my fives. Very good. See? Notice, by the way, do you notice the scaffolding here? At the beginning, I said, where's my number ones? And six of you went, what is a number one? So by going like this, I'm making sure that you all are tracking with me during the whole time, right? You could do this in your classroom all the time. And then where's my number sixes? Good. And then my number sevens are going to be right back here. Now, my big request is that, look at this row that I'm in right here. Everyone will be going through this row. Please do not go on the top row, where the camera is because I do two things in my life. If there's ever a glass door, I hit it with my head, right? Very embarrassing. The other thing that I do is I trip on cords. When there's a cord, I'm on the ground. So please be very careful here. Let's not go up on the top. Let's just go straight through here when you go through. I don't want you to trip. Where is-- oh, here, I'm going to go down here. [INAUDIBLE]. Where are my 11s? 11, 11, K, 12. good. And then 13s, where are my 13s? Right here. 14s will be right here. 15s [INAUDIBLE]. And then 16s. And then 17s will be right here. And then 18s will be right here. 19s will be right here. And 20s-- OK, now, don't move. [LAUGHTER] Some of you are so sneaky. OK. So what you're going to do is you're going to take only one thing with you. Two things, actually. You're going to take your KWL chart. May I, sir? Take your KWL chart with you and something to write with. Here's what you're going to do. When you get to your station, there is a question at the station. What I want you to do is I want you to write on my paper, on the big paper. You and your group are going to make notes and answer the question, OK? You're going to stay at that station until I say rotate. When I say rotate, you're going to go up one number. All right. So let's test this out. Go find your number. Go ahead. All right, so all eyes on me, please. So if you are 20, if you are 20, you'll go to number one. But if you're number one, you'll go to number two. If you're number seven, you'll go find station eight. Go walk with your group. Find the next station, so 10. [SIDE CONVERSATION] Oh, by the-- pause, pause, pause, pause. I have made an error. OK. Groups one through 10. If you are at 10, you go back to one. If you are at-- if you are at 20, you go back to 10, or 11. Go back to 11. If you are 20, go back to 11. OK, thank you. And one last time, eyes on me, please. Let's do silent snake. See, this is where, as an instructor, I realized, oh, I made a mistake. I need to fix it. So look right here. So this is one side of the room, right? If you started here in this activity, you're not going to leave it. You're going to be going around this side only, right? OK. If you were on this side, you're only going to go around this side only, OK? All right. Go ahead and find your next place, and go ahead and begin. Yeah. Good job, team. Yay. AUDIENCE: Yay! [APPLAUSE] GUY WHITE: Well, my great hope is that through our time together today that I've given you a lot of ideas about how you can make learning around computer science very exciting. These activities that we've done today, these strategies can be employed in any lesson, whether you're doing a lesson about math, whether you're doing a lesson about literature or writing, whether you're doing a computer science lesson, these are all universal strategies you can use throughout. But I'd like to take a moment to talk about those things that you encountered in CS50. Some of the values that were behind some of the pedagogy. A teaching value is a highly regarded principle, a standard of behavior. For example, a value that I have, personally, is that every student can learn. A value that I have is that no student learns anything without a teacher. That's a personal value, as a teacher. But I'd like you to think about some of the values you saw on display in this class as you went through CS50. You pseudocoded. That was part of the instruction, but there was a principle of value behind the pseudocoding. What do you think the principle, the value was behind pseudocoding? What's the big idea there? What do you think? Why did we do that? AUDIENCE: Step by step. GUY WHITE: Right. The idea that, step by step, and reflecting upon things step by step. So a value that you could take from our session together today is that just as you in this class engaged in pseudocoding, and just as your students will also engage in pseudo coding as you're teaching them, I'd like you to think about how you can do the same process with the instruction in your classroom. Just like you're writing an algorithm, you're writing a program, and you're making pseudocode for the program, you can do the same thing for your students with the learning. You think to yourself, mm, what do my students need to know when they walk in the room? How will I know that they know those things when they walk in the room? What will they have to know each step of the learning along the way? And as you're looking at the lectures again, because now you're going to be using, probably-- you'll probably be using much of our lecture materials and our problem sets again-- you're going to be able to look at sort of the pedagogy behind it. And you'll start asking yourself, hmm, I wonder why we taught this first and this second and this third. And you're going to start seeing why the path of learning is that it is. And you will be deciding on the path of learning that is best for you and your students. Another value that I hope that you take with you here today, something that we talked a lot, is-- it's interesting, check 50 is a program. But there's a value, a principle behind check 50. By the way, we didn't need to do check 50. We could just do submit 50 only. One submission, that's it. But instead, you had check 50. What's the value behind check 50? What's the big idea, the principle behind that? [INTERPOSING VOICES] AUDIENCE: Make sure it's correct. GUY WHITE: To make sure it's correct and to-- AUDIENCE: To compare the [INAUDIBLE], to compare [INAUDIBLE]. GUY WHITE: Compare your answer to see if it's-- yes. AUDIENCE: To do self-assessment. GUY WHITE: To do the self-assessment, most definitely, because it's interesting, when you give students the ability to test their own work and it's simple for them to do, they give you what you want. When you give them the way to check their work and you walk them through that process, then they are much more likely to give you exactly what you're wanting because instead of saying, just go do this and then I'll test you at the end, you're allowing them to do this self-checking and self-assessment throughout the entire process. So likewise, as you go into your classrooms, you could extend this value to your own. And you could be checking yourself in a way. You could be checking your own instruction, and you can be asking questions-- how do I know that my students are actually going through this lesson and getting what they're expecting? And how can I place in their hands the ability to make sure that their work is good? But more important, team, it's more important that you as an educator ask yourself, how do I know that the students are following me well? How do I know that the students are learning what I'm expecting them to learn? Because sometimes, and many times, it doesn't work out. There were three times during my lesson with you here today that it wasn't going exactly like I planned so we had to make an adjustment. And that's what we do as teachers. We make adjustments because some days, students, they walk in, and they're ready. Some days, they walk in, and they've had a very hard morning. And they need your help. They need extra help from you. So this ability to self-assess is a value that we have really talked about. We had this value-- it's interesting, you know, debugging. It sounds like just a method. It's just a part of making a program. And yes, it's part of making a program. People have been debugging as long as the computers have been around. But there's a value behind us teaching you about the different methods of debugging. What's the value behind debugging? AUDIENCE: You know how to make the right [INAUDIBLE]. GUY WHITE: Yes, and yes, sir. AUDIENCE: Second chance. GUY WHITE: Yeah, a second chance. And also, I heard the word over here-- self correction. Right, The idea of being able to ask yourself questions as you go and make self corrections and because there will be times when, as you're working with your-- as you are working with your program, you think everything's working perfectly fine, but it doesn't work fine. And it's the same way with your students. Sometimes you'll have to do the debugging with your students and figure out, not just debugging a program, but sometimes the learning algorithm that you've created, the process you've created in the room-- I'm going to do this step, I'm going to do this ste, I'm going to do this-- and then it doesn't work. And you'll have to figure out, why is there a bug in my teaching, right? And you'll have to make the adjustment. Another value, a fourth value that we talked about in this course, believe it or not, is the idea of rubber duck debugging, right? My friend is right here. And if you think about it, when I was growing up, the idea of asking myself questions about how things were going, that was not something that was instilled on me and was a value. That came later on in life. And so that's why we teach this, in a way, is that as much as this is a programming way of getting out an answer, behind that, behind that pedagogy is this idea that I can work with myself. I can talk with myself, and I can walk through a process myself. I can learn if I just have the patience to stick with it. Many of you, and I didn't put this on the slide, but many of you had a night where you are working on a problem set, and it just was not working. AUDIENCE: Yeah, yeah. Yeah. GUY WHITE: And so you decide to go to bed. [LAUGHTER] AUDIENCE: No, no, no! That's right. Definitely right. GUY WHITE: But then I've had this experience-- probably all of you have had this experience-- where then you wake up at, like, 3:00 in the morning and you can see linked lists in your brain. And you're thinking, I know how to do the pointer now. And so it's another day, and everything's good because your mind needs time. And just like that, your students' minds need time. You need to give them the time to do that. And you give them the space. Sometimes they don't know how to do that for themselves. I think of my precious daughters. They are so strong. They don't want to cry sometimes. And so they're sitting there, and I'll say, do you need to cry? And then [SOBS]. [LAUGHTER] And yes, and sometimes like that with your students, you'll see them stuck. And they're like this [GROWLS]. And what you can do is you can say, are you stuck with the pointers? And they say, yes. And so you can help them through that moment. A final value worth mentioning is that play-- that learning, play is learning. And learning is play. And did you notice how even when you were working with C, it was sometimes fun? I remember the first time I got that first JPEG file out of that raw card file on recover. I'm like, I'm a hacker. [LAUGHTER] I felt like Neo from The Matrix. I'm at my laptop. I'm going to conquer the world. [LAUGHTER] What you've learned in this class is that you can take this idea of play and you can extend it out. You can allow your students to have fun and learn computer science at the same time. I remember my first exposure to computer science in my undergrad, I didn't last there long. When I arrived to my undergraduate university at UC Riverside in California, I remember I was part of the incoming class, 245 students, computer science. And I remember I went to the dean's office because I wasn't doing so well in a class. And on the wall was the 1999 graduating class of computer science, not 250 people, 22 people. So I asked, I said, Mr. Dean, how many students started in 1995? And he goes 300, but by 1999, only a few remained-- 20 something remained. And in my heart, I knew I was not going to be one of those 22 people. So for me, I had to go a different direction. But then later on in life, I was able to return back to computer science. And now I'm doing OK because my brain has had time. And I've had amazing teachers. And I've had teachers like I'm asking you to be, mentors. And so my hope today, if you get one thing from my time together today with you, is for you to be a mentor to your students, above all things, not just someone that's telling them things, but one that's willing to walk them along to help them learn. Can we do this together? Yeah, thank you. Thank you, everyone. [APPLAUSE]