The CS Visions Framework and Equity-centered Computing Education with Rafi Santo and Sara Vogel

In this interview with Rafi Santo and Sara Vogel, we discuss informal learning in CS, the CS Visions Framework, equity through social justice pedagogy, considerations for Integration, and much more.

  • Welcome back to another episode of the

    CSK 8 podcast my name is Jared O'Leary

    this week's episode is actually a group

    interview where I am interviewing Rafi

    Santo and Sarah Vogel who are two of the

    three scholars that wrote the paper that

    I unpacked in last week's episode titled

    cs4 what diverse visions of computer

    science education in practice in this

    interview we discuss informal learning

    within CS education the ciaz visions

    framework social justice pedagogy and

    equity considerations for integration

    and much more if you haven't listened to

    last week's episode I highly recommend

    doing that as it will provide some

    context for a discussion on the CS

    visions framework and then once you've

    done that come back here and listen to

    this awesome interview with Rafi and

    Sarah there are a lot of scholars in

    publication that both Rafi and Sarah

    mentioned throughout this podcast so

    make sure you check out the show notes

    which you can find in the description

    using that link or by visiting jared

    O'Leary comm and none of the links are

    affiliate links nothing like that I

    really hope you enjoyed this episode and

    we will begin now with an introduction

    by Sarah and Rafi my name is Sarah Vogel

    I'm a doctoral candidate at the Graduate

    Center which is at the City University

    of New York in what is hopefully my last

    year in the program working on my

    dissertation and I'm also a research

    assistant with an NSF funded projects

    called participating in literacies and

    computer science which focuses on how

    bilingual young people use language

    resources in computer science education

    my name is rocky Santo I'm a learning

    scientist I focus largely on the

    intersection of digital culture learning

    and institutional change in education

    and I hold a position as a research

    associate at CS parole and I'm also the

    principal researcher at Taylor's

    learning but tell me the story of what

    led to your interest in computer science

    education research starting at a young

    age I was always kind of a tinkerer II

    kid who enjoyed like making little

    websites and using technology and later

    on when I became a teacher I was a

    bilingual teacher in the New York City

    public school system for a while I was

    always the most excited to watch

    students use technology to amplify their

    voices so I did projects with them where

    they would blog or tell stories with

    technology in videos I found this

    amazing organization which Rafi you

    was also a part of for many years called

    global kids there's a program within

    global kids where students use digital

    media to express themselves and so

    working at that organization they were

    doing a lot of game design work at the

    time when I was there and it wasn't just

    about making videos and using text to

    make it was about building tech so I

    sort of hooked on to this idea of CS

    education is also a means of student

    self-expression and I was placed at this

    at the school called New Directions in

    the Bronx which worked with quite

    vulnerable populations of students and

    they were also bilingual kids and

    watching them use technology in such

    innovative ways and integrating their

    communities and languages it was really

    exciting

    and as the CF for all movement kind of

    took off in New York City I thought

    about you know where students like this

    in that movement are people paying

    attention to the unique strengths and

    challenges facing what we call emergent

    bilinguals students so that's what sort

    of set me on the path to explore these

    questions as a researcher yeah I'm like

    Sarah we've got so many parallels for

    both New York City kids were kind of

    little thinkers in our in our earlier

    years and maybe you know early interest

    in technology and then both even worked

    in the same organization at global kids

    even in the same program in the online

    leadership work and you know I'm a kid

    of the of the nineties and early web and

    was always somebody who was kind of

    taking apart my computers and you know

    doing kind of that early work in web

    design as things like you know geo

    cities and other similar platforms came

    up and and really kind of grew up in a

    time when the web was very much more I

    would say tinker ball than it is more

    today and then within games you know in

    gaming culture I was never I was never a

    huge gamer but I always was involved and

    always really interested in the kind of

    you know kind of modifications and

    customization that you can do and just

    really found that technology was a place

    where I had a lot of agency and

    creativity personally as a kid and an

    early in my kind of like professional

    career saw the tools as very powerful

    modes of expression and reflection for

    me I did

    of vlogging when I was in college and

    then you know through into my early

    years my 20s my professional life and I

    just loved being in conversation through

    technology with a broader world and it

    really did kind of expand horizons of

    who I was in dialog with and also what

    hundred ideas I was exposed to like Sara

    said you know my my early work was

    really around the relationship between

    an emerging digital culture and digital

    tools and youth power and voice I had a

    really wonderful experience with global

    kids of really coming to see and

    understand how new media could be a

    venue for young people to equip explore

    their interests but also explore their

    power global kids as an organization is

    an organization dedicated to having kids

    think about both local issues and global

    issues and within the online leadership

    program there went digital now digital

    learning program there how to use

    technology to amplify and expand their

    voice and so we were always innovating

    around new media that were coming out

    virtual worlds like Second Life

    platforms our own game design practices

    of game design programming and tinkering

    in environments like scratch we were

    always just at the edge of trying to be

    like well what's happening in kind of

    the digital culture space more broadly

    and how can it be applied to our goals

    of organizing youth power and having

    them really be actors that are

    participating in their communities in

    ways that are consequential and then you

    know I've got broader work that really

    came out of that related to you know

    doing curriculum design around

    technology and whether it's game design

    digital storytelling programming that I

    did in my early grad career and then a

    lot of work you know building off of

    that in informal digital learning in the

    out-of-school space in New York really

    rooted in kind of community-based

    organizations and that was sort of the

    line in again as Sarah mentioned to you

    when the ps4 all movement kicked off you

    know it certainly locally here in New

    York where we're both based seeing so

    many of the ideas I've been working on

    for many years at that point

    finding a pretty prominent place in a

    big hall yeah it's interesting going to

    the various education conferences how

    there's an interest in game based

    learning but not a lot of people in

    certainly know about game design in

    relation to game based learning so I was

    at a conference last week at the time of

    this recording where they were talking

    about game based learning and stem

    classes and whatnot and they're like oh

    well you should hire developers to

    create these games and yadda yadda I was

    like okay that's cool and all but hey

    how about you actually like collaborate

    with a computer science educator and

    like have kids design games for other

    kids and what could you do with that and

    yeah it's just funny that like there are

    people in the school that can help you

    with that thing and help you develop

    those games but instead people are

    looking outside of it rather than

    actually collaborating with it

    their own teachers in their school yeah

    and I think a really powerful you know

    part of my journey and especially as a

    learning scientist was coming to ideas

    of what really powerful learning is

    right what is powerful learning I know

    when I was at global kids and probably

    when Sarah was there too were really

    heavily influenced by the work of the

    kind of constructionist learning

    movement really foundationally led by

    Seymour Papert and then his

    contemporaries and miss Resnick and yes

    means I laid her out who really just saw

    the power that comes of making things

    creating things digital artifacts non

    digital artifacts in community in social

    context and things that were personally

    relevant to you and I think to me the

    one of the reasons that I was never

    really oriented towards technology for

    technology's sake but really interested

    as a burgeoning learning scientist at

    the time and like what is powerful

    learning look like and I saw in the kind

    of creative and constructionist

    orientations that can be found in

    learning in computer science really a

    powerful mode of engaging with the world

    and engaging and learning so could you

    paint like a vignette of a story that

    kind of like impacts you today that is

    an example of what powerful learning

    looks like

    I can definitely kind of piggyback on

    what he was saying about global kids

    just for the sake of picking one mobile

    kids had this project developed by a lot

    of people I'm going to miss people when

    I say book people like Mary Joseph and

    Juan drew Leo and Jack Martin some good

    writers is now the library's jeweler so

    Daniel all these other obviously people

    who came together to think

    about history and how to have students

    explore the history of their

    neighborhood using the tools of game

    design and specifically location-based

    game design so this is a really mixed

    genre exploded with things like Pokemon

    go but at the time few people are

    thinking about games in public spaces

    and having them really support students

    and exploring local issues and histories

    I got to run this project which is

    called New York City haunt because the

    idea is that you're excavating the

    ghosts that haunt all around New York

    City several locations including the

    school that I mentioned before which was

    called New Directions this is a school

    that students it was like a trance for

    middle school so it with students who

    for one reason or another their previous

    middle schools like thrust them off

    which is a really sad state of affairs

    in New York City that this even happened

    but the schools that word New Directions

    would just accept all the students that

    other middle schools like didn't know

    how to deal with so students were

    extremely intelligent and capable and

    interesting and I got to do this project

    near City Hall with them and it was in

    sort of an intergenerational experience

    because we had middle school students

    who were often of varying ages because

    it was an overage under credited kind of

    situation we also had their younger

    brothers and sisters who just decided to

    come along for the summer we had high

    school-aged interns from global kids and

    we had college agent turns and adult

    facilitators and so it was this

    incredible opportunity to engage in like

    an intergenerational collaborative place

    boost game design when do you ever get

    to do that like this is like the mother

    lode as an educator just are awesome

    situations we have like the

    nine-year-old inspiring the 18 year old

    to like you know pick their head up off

    the table and and and get creative and

    you'd have the 18 year old talking about

    you know hip-hop with a 9 year old and

    they created this incredible game that

    takes place in the neighborhood in the

    Bronx about rebuilding after sort of the

    artisans that occurred in the South

    Bronx that we know are sort of part of

    the history of the South Bronx the

    disinvestment and of that area and

    students thinking about

    the items that would be needed for a

    group of concerned citizens to repair

    and rebuild their neighborhoods and so

    it's just this opportunity to do this

    culturally sustaining like technology

    rich intergenerational project and I

    just like thank the stars that I got to

    see that and and got to participate on

    that before going into education

    research where so much so many buzzwords

    about literally sustaining pedagogy of

    being thrown around and to really know

    what that means and what it looks like

    or what it can look like that's really

    exciting yeah I love projects that allow

    kids to collaborate outside of their age

    band because like most grade levels

    you're in a class with kids who are like

    plus or minus maybe one year age

    difference from you and to have like a

    second grader collaborate with a high

    school or even just like comment on

    stuff it's awesome

    yeah and I think the example that comes

    to mind is in some ways really similar

    but it has some interesting contrast it

    was also in my time at global patron

    think it's a very special place that we

    can kind of acknowledge that you know I

    had mentioned that we were doing some

    work in Second Life which folks might

    not be familiar with but it was an early

    platform that was kind of a 3d virtual

    world it wasn't a game it was very

    creativity oriented so you can create

    you know if you kind of think about

    minecraft now or you're building over

    the sandbox first but my cover you kind

    of build anything second life was sort

    of like that but it had its own coding

    language you can you know customize your

    avatars to know nth degree you know

    doing graphic design porting it into the

    system and doing scripts that really

    allowed you to kind of much make games

    or little small interesting interactions

    and toys but you can kind of really use

    your imagination really broadly and we

    did work in Second Life and we ran some

    programs there where we had kids that we

    never met one summer we had a program

    where we had kids in the US Canada

    Australia and Russia actually they were

    all you know in a program together we'd

    meet online in this virtual world on

    this kind of crazy island with a volcano

    that we we had and you know big part of

    that program was like many programs at

    Global kids having kids decide on issues

    they cared about and figure out how to

    run some kind of campaign except in this

    case it wasn't in the quote-unquote real

    world it was in this virtual space and

    after like a number of weeks of the this

    kind of camp that we had online

    the kids they're all teenagers decided

    to do a big campaign around sex

    trafficking of course it's always

    refused incredibly intense issues we did

    not choose that issue reliably kids

    enjoy and choose these issues and they

    created just incredible incredible

    installation on the island work together

    with our help it really wasn't adult

    youth collaboration I think again the

    theme of like what it looks like not to

    cap you know young people working

    individually on even on their own

    project put on something very large

    something's very ambitious and some that

    requires them to collaborate with adults

    and maybe was younger to them them

    everyone had different roles some kids

    was gonna her gramming some kids were

    good at the graphic design sides and

    some kids were create project managers

    and they created this amazing it was

    actually I mean come A's and as you went

    through the maze there was all these

    kind of knowledge building experiences

    that the player would go through about

    child sex trafficking they created a

    donation system as well to became bad in

    second life work is at the end of the

    maze could donate and child sex

    trafficking an important Geo that does

    leading work in that and and it was this

    amazing experience of first of all like

    you know staying up so many nights

    together online and kind of geeking out

    together but also really a sense of

    accomplishment together of how you can

    use creativity and technology to advance

    ideas of justice in this case it wasn't

    a local community it just was in a

    virtual local community there's probably

    about no peoples and kids on Team Second

    Life and I think most of them went

    through the maze at the end of it even

    though we had there just maybe a dozen

    and a half kids that work on the project

    so I thought would really stuck with me

    is something that was like okay this is

    really at this sweet spot of stuff that

    kids care about stuff related to justice

    stuff that really advances their ability

    to be a gent akin the world has hard

    skills has soft skills really all that's

    was together and really reflects more

    how you work in the real world in

    collaboration and and on large project

    right as opposed to we usually see in

    more traditional environment so there

    aren't good exceptions for that even in

    schools so did this occur in a

    formalized educational environment like

    a school or outside of it I mean in the

    example I gave it was entirely online

    and kids

    together literally in the virtual world

    yeah my example the camp it was a summer

    camp took place at a school but it used

    the school space in a completely

    different way then you normally see

    schools being used where like you know

    students were looking at those old

    cracks on the walls of the school that

    tell you who the honor roll was in 1950

    right so they were using their schools

    as sort of an artifact of history to

    excavate you know seems and people and

    so yes it took place in a school but not

    within the formal strictures of what

    school looks like because I'm interested

    the roles that remained kids like being

    a project manager being the coder and

    whatnot oftentimes in schools it's like

    well you have to sample all of the roles

    and do a little bit at all of them

    rather than specialize in one area and I

    personally find value in cultivating

    individualized expertise so I'm

    wondering if you were to kind of do some

    of the stuff in a classroom where there

    are like sets of standards or

    expectations of everybody coming out

    falsely as being or knowing the same

    thing what might you do or navigate or

    how might you like to speak to an

    administrator with those kinds of

    expectations yeah I mean I can say from

    actually studying other organizations

    I'm thinking in particular of one

    organization of studies a youth media

    organization do you filmmaking

    organization in Chicago called free

    spirit media they focus on youth kind of

    making both documentary as well as kind

    of PSA films and you know narrative or

    reporting what they do in a couple of

    their programs that I studied is that

    they'll have every kid cycle through in

    the first semester every role involved

    in a production team so you know whether

    it's being the overall project manager

    being the cinematographer doing editing

    Jean free production everyone has to

    cycle through all of those roles and

    then the second semester they choose to

    specialize and go deep in one of them

    and so I think that there is a lot of

    value but it's from an empathy

    standpoint to have to cycle through all

    those roles as well as from a skills and

    outcome standpoint so that everyone kind

    of does get at everything and then the

    kind of agency that can come from going

    very very deep and I think that's very

    applicable to you things like game

    design or app development or other forms

    of

    yes work yeah and then the way I have to

    handle this in terms of work in schools

    because I haven't run little kids

    programming like as a class when we

    would do community school partnerships

    navigating those is always tricky and

    challenging students also very different

    expectations of what happens in a school

    day versus what happens outside of

    school

    one way that we did that was we would

    have sort of mini challenges where kids

    could sort of see a project through or

    see small projects through who and

    complete many roles and then I sort of

    see four projects where then they would

    kind of specialize so everyone would get

    a chance to see what it was like to use

    the software that we use for the coding

    of the location based game design was a

    blazer so they could see how to code and

    tell whether how to draw some artwork

    how to write a little story and then

    afterwards take what they wanted so very

    similar to what rap is saying where you

    get a taste of everything so you get

    that real deep rich exposure and then

    you can go deep on what you care about

    what you like to do and you identity

    that way yeah I did that with

    programming languages in the classes i

    facilitated so like we'd spend some time

    in scratch then in sonic PI using Ruby

    and then doing Swift and then getting

    JavaScript and then after that is all

    right pick whatever you want whatever is

    more in alignment with what you're

    interested in exploring and then they

    could dive deep into that thing and then

    they'd often kind of jump between the

    languages and whatnot so what was

    something that's you believed when you

    first began working in education that

    you no longer believe I got into

    education in 2009 which was the capital

    or reform movement right like was at a

    fever pitch and you had also that

    coinciding with the austerity budgets of

    the financial crisis it was like a time

    of intense pressure on scrub on teachers

    on students all of those kind of the

    guise of accountability in some way is

    also in the air was this idea of the

    achievement gap and how the role of

    teachers was to close this achievement

    gap and there was this educational

    research supporting this view that a

    good teacher was a single greatest

    predictor

    of student achievement and student

    achievement was measurable by a safe

    exam and the rhetoric trickled down to

    me as a first-year like wide-eyed

    teacher as all as students are doing

    well then you are tonight like teachers

    are the problem and I think that now

    having had a lot more experience in

    non-traditional education spaces both

    here and abroad I was able to work in

    Mexico and Argentina and see like

    different approaches to education and

    education reform collectivist and

    movement based education approaches I

    can now kind of question all of those

    assumptions and those assumptions are

    still with us but I think that you know

    in a lot of this rhetoric and now I can

    kind of question this idea that there's

    only one way that students can do well

    and achieve and now you see that that I

    actually see you know that's a quite

    racist and classist premise Riven in

    that model of the edge of the

    achievement gap achievement is always

    this you know the performance of a white

    standard english-speaking middle class

    person way it was kind of the benchmark

    and then everyone else has to sort of

    measure up to that and that is a racist

    classist premise around the staff kind

    of rhetoric and then also the second one

    being like teachers can make a big

    difference that they can only be as

    effective as those support systems

    around them and teachers are embedded in

    these you know larger systems and forces

    in education and also outside of it and

    then also the third one was you have to

    be critical of Education research

    because you know these oftentimes

    quantitative studies that take

    aggregated data across districts and

    student populations you can't apply that

    to individual schools and classrooms or

    experiences and so I think it sort of

    imbued me a healthy skepticism of this

    these ideas about reform and I'm just so

    glad that rhetoric has also shifted

    since then about what priorities and

    education should be to some extent I

    think there's maybe two big things that

    come to mind for me in terms of

    learning and one is I would just say as

    a preface I find it very satisfying to

    find myself wrong or to change my views

    as I learn more I think that's one of

    the most gratifying things about being a

    professional is dedicated to thinking

    deeply about education is that we come

    in and we we think are our best thoughts

    that we have our you know strongest

    commitments and then we have a released

    in a stance towards learning we need to

    be willing and able to to shift what we

    think we know which really again is kind

    of doubling down on unlearning right

    it's deciding we're gonna be learner so

    for me I think that one was my belief in

    through the way I came into education my

    experiences both as a child in a formal

    education system and then as an early

    professional I'm in more an informal

    learning environment was that an idea

    that really the only places we could

    have very powerful learning are in

    informal learning environments this is a

    view that I very strongly held I would

    say probably in the first decade of my

    career you know starting working as

    first classroom tutor in formal

    classroom environments and seeing really

    practices that I did not find firing

    from a learning perspective and and then

    my experience in school itself which was

    in general I found very uninspiring for

    the most part I was very disengaged by

    the kind of curricula and teaching with

    some small exceptions that I experienced

    and then going and working in informal

    environment starting in museums and then

    moving into after-school programs

    virtual and online programs and really

    really creative stuff I just really came

    to believe that like the only powerful

    learning could be in informal settings

    that was interest driven and and and

    know collaboratively done and and those

    principles have like interest driven and

    collaboratively done all that those

    haven't changed but I've actually

    started to see a lot more within the

    school system I was in the formal

    education system just really incredible

    not just teachers but schools that have

    supported this work there's really great

    research by Joel Mehta of Harvard and

    Sarah fine book called in search of

    deeper learning with quest to remake the

    American high school it really documents

    a lot of the kinds of things we talk

    about in the best informal and out of

    school programs

    how they have come in in certain places

    in high schools and I think that's a big

    been a big shift for me and made me much

    more excited to work with formal

    schooling settings and now doing so many

    much work with districts around CS I'm

    bringing that belief that it really was

    kind of powerful that I can't happen in

    schools I would say that the second big

    shift in my thinking about education and

    that really came out of the work that

    Sara Dickey and I did on the CS visions

    work which we'll get into was the idea

    that education and learning is really

    only about the young person and

    obviously our deep commitment to young

    people to their interests to their power

    to their learning to their desires and

    aspirations for their future obviously a

    huge huge huge partner that we don't

    listen to that enough and I've really

    come to think more deeply about how do

    we think about education as a public

    good and if it's a public good it's not

    only about the young person themselves

    are an individual young person but about

    a society and about how a society is

    structured about who gets what and and

    what a society kind of needs to advance

    so even if something is maybe not of

    interest to a young person it might be

    something that is really critical for

    all of us that that young person has you

    know for me you know my deep deep

    commitment to civic education to

    democratic participation as one of the

    key roles of education you know not

    every kid really is super interested in

    thinking about you know whether it's

    Civic issues or political issues or even

    local community issues like you can't

    assume that every kid is but there is a

    neat the responsibility that we have

    collectively as a society to ensure that

    every young person we have so much work

    to do on this but it should ensure that

    every young person comes out of their

    schooling in k12 and further in higher

    education with an orientation course

    being a citizen and that that's not just

    about that it's about home and so that

    shift of really understanding that

    education it's not just about the

    individual but really is about society

    has been a shift in my thinking that

    it's important it might seem obvious in

    retrospect but we all come from our

    places I'll have our learning journeys

    and that was part of mine

    so you mentioned the seus visions

    framework and so last week's episode

    that airs right before this I kind of

    unpack what the framework is and kind of

    talk

    about how I was considering the

    different visions within the work that

    I've created but I'm wondering what is

    like the elevator speech that you might

    give for the CS visions framework so I

    can give it a shot I've never tried it

    out of an elevator but you see the CS

    visions framework which is desired by

    Raffi Center Oh myself and the ccheng

    who could not join us on this test that

    is a wonderful collaborator so the

    co-surgeon say work helps people see the

    values underlying rationale for CS

    education and those impacts that they

    hope it has for students communities in

    the world once stakeholders have a sense

    for those underlying values we believe

    that we can more coherently plan for

    programmatic and instructional designs

    and implementation so the framework that

    we developed charts out what are various

    different underlying values and impacts

    the CS education can have and how do

    those values potentially look like in

    practice how do they drive practice and

    then going back to what Raffy was saying

    about education as a public good

    we believe sort of that by exposing

    people to this range of values that can

    drive CF education we hope to

    demonstrate that pluralism in CS

    education is sort of a good in and of

    itself just like there's no one way to

    educate it there's no one way to do CF

    education that's sort of it in a

    nutshell we have both the paper that was

    developed for 60 which is the computer

    science education conference in 2017

    which sort of outlines those seven

    values and impact areas that you talked

    about on your podcast last week and then

    we also have the more practitioner

    friendly resource that makes those links

    to practice and the way that I think

    about it always and really the question

    that we started with is CS for what like

    the CS fishin's framework is a tool that

    helps really anybody more thoughtfully

    and deliberately answer the questions

    yes for what and we have a very firm

    belief that especially

    in the context of a very robust policy

    movement that is there you know state

    leaders federal leaders even district

    leaders are very much pushing ahead on

    this and we think that there can be a

    danger for rushing too quickly we know

    this in general and education that rapid

    reforms and rushes to change rarely work

    well even taking out questions of

    efficacy you know of rush to

    implementation having impacts on

    efficacy and quality we we're mostly

    concerned in this work with impact on

    actually what's being accomplished like

    if you rush to implementation and you

    don't think about what ultimate purpose

    you're wanting to have she has education

    in place you're probably accomplishing

    somebody else's goals right and and we

    think of that as a problem we want

    communities educators even tool makers

    designers curriculum designers to really

    be thinking critically about like whose

    interests are being served by this are

    we serving the interests that we believe

    in or are by not reflecting and asking

    ourselves the questions yes for are we

    serving some other kind of interest and

    then there are a lot of other impacts on

    quality which you know Sarah alluded to

    in this idea is coherence right if you

    don't have a really strong North Star

    and I'll say that it has to be set and

    always be the same it can't evolve but

    if you don't have a strong North Star

    how are you gonna online as a district

    how are you gonna align your curriculum

    your professional development your

    course offerings your credit

    requirements your you know supports for

    it for students how do you have all that

    aligned if you don't have a North Star

    around what the ultimate purposes are if

    that's not in place you'll end up with

    kind of a spaghetti mess and you won't

    reach any outcomes well you'll just sort

    of kind you might have conflicting

    policies in place conflicting supports

    in place you know if I and I think we

    have we should name some of it as we

    talk about this right a vision that's

    about creativity has different

    implications than I create you know a

    vision that's about economic viability

    and Workforce Development a vision

    that's about you know closing

    representation counts as different

    implications

    than ambition that's about you know

    promoting systems-thinking example which

    is something you know it can be

    associated with different types of cs

    education and you really want to think

    wow if this is for jobs is if it's for

    justice if it's for innovation each of

    those has implications for how you

    design the curriculum it's they're not

    necessarily mutually exclusive but there

    might involve trade-offs or there might

    also involve sequencing right you know

    we can say that hey we're oriented

    towards creativity in a very central way

    for all of our students we want you know

    computing to be an avenue for creativity

    we do have some curriculum early on that

    has some like puzzle based stuff that is

    that has a predetermined answer but

    that's in a sequence of courses and

    learning opportunities that eventually

    create the possibility of maybe using

    much more open-ended platforms say like

    Python or processing that support

    creativity in various ways and I also

    add that Raffy mentioned a couple times

    their sense of we like these are CS

    education showing our values is it

    reflecting the values that we care about

    well who is this we is something that

    we've had to wrestle with as well

    because if it's just the same voices

    that are always at the table and

    policymaking conversations then your CSS

    in might continue to serve now interest

    in conjunction with thinking about

    values Jewish planning or C I said in

    order for it to work you have to have a

    really broad sense of who the we is and

    engage in what could be like fairly

    messy deliberative processes with lots

    of voices especially those that aren't

    often at the table like families you

    know if you have immigrant families in

    your communities making sure that your

    outreach is available in different

    languages thinking about students with

    disabilities thinking about teachers at

    various levels these are all the voices

    that have to be at the table so that you

    can really capture what your community

    believe CS education is for yeah and

    really the underlying value that we have

    behind this work and it might sound you

    know kind of

    highfalutin but it really is democracy

    right we I think believe deeply in the

    idea of education as a a public good and

    be a democratically oriented public good

    right that it must be something where it

    is collectively determined what shape

    this public good takes because it is

    about all of us and the the idea of

    having deliberative tools and processes

    whether it's about CS education or not

    to us is very powerful it's about really

    realizing these democratic ideals of

    Education yeah one of the things that

    really kind of was eye-opening for me is

    much of anecdotally speaking much of the

    discourse that I've noticed tends to

    revolve around economic and workforce

    development and I love that you're like

    well there's all these other areas that

    you can kind of align to or have impacts

    on and whatnot and I think this is a

    great way of framing it because if a

    district or a teacher or school or

    whatever is starting C s education and

    all they hear is people talking about

    jobs jobs jobs Workforce Development and

    then they see this and go oh but wait

    there's actually more options for us

    rather than going down this very narrow

    pipe line that's geared towards one set

    of interests or impacts so I really like

    the way that it was framed and like here

    are a bunch of different programs and

    here's how they kind of combine the

    multiple things together and synthesize

    like two or three of these into

    something that works really well for the

    communities that they're working with

    yeah and and jobs is an important

    outcome for sure of Education but why

    should we be adding an entirely new

    discipline into our school systems

    purely so that a small subset of that

    population of that of their school going

    kids eventually enters that discipline

    or that sector we don't teach English

    and English language art so that

    everyone can become an a novelist or a

    writer we do it because it's the core

    mode of communication Society we don't

    teach science so that everyone becomes a

    scientist we do it because if you know a

    citizen and society needs to be

    scientifically literate some ODE of

    thinking and of course Kamala G and

    similarly if we think about computer

    science as being something that we

    believe every kid should have

    it's not so that they should all be

    entering these tech jobs or CS jobs but

    so that they can operate in the world

    more broadly what's a good reason that's

    actually have CSP for everyone we don't

    think that jobs is you know a sufficient

    reason forget to have a for all I don't

    yes and that was sort of you'd asked us

    before like what inspired us to create

    this framework that I think really has a

    core motive innovation we were watching

    the media we were watching the news as

    mayors and governors and Senators talked

    about CSR all's President Obama

    announced it at the State of the Union

    at the time and we thought to ourselves

    about our experience as educators in new

    york city's vibrant digital media spaces

    and that we have to amplify this

    conversation so that was sort of a core

    motivation I'd written a course paper on

    it in my very first year as a doctoral

    student Rafi and Dixie write it and

    we're like we're on board we want to

    work on this with us

    and so that set sort of led us to

    generate the framework but the framework

    was not just the three of us and that's

    something to really pull the point on it

    was developed through what Rafi and

    Dixie and their collaborators called a

    participatory knowledge building session

    so we brought folks together from

    organizations in New York City that do

    digital media and PS work with kids tool

    designers policymakers at the New York

    City Department of Education formal and

    informal educators and we asked them

    that question that Rafi asked before of

    cs4 what why should we teach CSR kids

    they gave us tons of different reasons

    that came from lots of different

    backgrounds and standpoint and then we

    sort of synthesized them through the

    through the framework and did member

    checking at various moments through the

    process to make sure it was really

    speaking to community members the

    framework was a labor of love of many

    many people so before we started

    recording you mentioned and even just

    recently that you started working on

    this a while ago this framework and then

    it's now kind of housed within cs4 also

    I'm wondering how does this framework

    fit into the mission

    of cs4 all yeah so I mean one thing that

    I think it's really important to say is

    that cs4 all and its previous

    incarnation of CS NYC the foundation for

    computer science education in New York

    City has always been a huge huge

    supporter of this work early in the

    development of the framework folks from

    CS NYC /es for all were participants

    they helped develop it but they always

    saw and really all the highlight

    especially and eliezer the founder and

    current executive director and other

    co-founder in the form of Michael

    Preston always really saw the value of

    this work and I think it came in at her

    at an important time and yes for all's

    development as an organization when it

    was really formally Co hearing around if

    strategy of supporting local change at

    the district level which is really

    something it's very distinct within the

    CSI field a lot of the field I know is

    full of really amazing professional

    development providers and curriculum

    providers and tool makers but there was

    really I think this really saw there was

    a huge need for district as

    organizations to think about how they

    wanted to equitably to stannous

    sustainably and rigorously reap you know

    in a computer science education and

    there was nobody else doing that the

    cs:go really went and deep on a this

    kind of local change for for district

    and within that really saw the value of

    the C efficient framework as really an

    important starting point for district

    leaders or even you know teachers or

    instructional coaches principals that

    might not have any orientation towards

    CS or very limited knowledge of CS but

    are experts in their students are

    experts in their communities are experts

    in their needs and I've always thought

    about the purpose of Education and so

    the idea of starting with their values

    around the purpose of Education and then

    bridging that in to a set of activities

    that we've now developed over the course

    of a number of years that support the

    liberation around what are even possible

    purposes of computer science education

    what are ways you might think about it

    and where does that maybe a line before

    you already care about that was really a

    critical place start with district so

    now the visions framework is is an

    Associated activity

    the first things we do with district in

    our what we call our script workshops

    which are strategic planning or

    transference the Association and I think

    it also aligns philosophically with

    house es for all thinks about processes

    of educational change and how it thinks

    about really the cs for all movement as

    not being something that is telling

    people what to do but rather supporting

    communities in their own agency and in

    their own desires to figure out what

    they want their relationship to CS

    education to be what how they want to

    fashion CS education in their own image

    and towards their own needs and

    aspirations and so the the visions

    framework and activities really allow us

    as an organization at CS for all to

    express our values around not telling

    people what to do

    supporting districts to do what they

    think is important yeah and I believe I

    went through some of those activities at

    the CS for all event in El Paso about a

    year ago mmm and I enjoyed it led to

    some really good conversations among the

    table like the people who are talking

    about how they had different values and

    impact areas and bi and it was

    interesting to go through this so I

    could see a district going through

    scripts being a very valuable thing when

    it's aligned with stuff like this like

    these activities will be wonderful one

    of the things that you had both

    mentioned I believe if I remember

    correctly in the relatively recent

    webinar was that you like to focus on

    equity and social justice and I know see

    as for all does as well but for both of

    you as CSS educators and scholars what

    do you wish other CS educators

    understood better about social justice

    within through and around computer

    science education I think one core piece

    is that you know when we wrote the most

    recent white paper and our author's note

    we talked we made our own values really

    transparent and like you said social

    justice and using computing as a vehicle

    to support students and making change in

    the world and being critical about

    technology that's a core part of what we

    believe CS education is for and rathas

    of others believe similarly and so in

    supporting folks

    who want to integrate social justice

    education with CS we don't have to

    reinvent the wheel I think that the

    first point I would make so many amazing

    social justice minded educators have

    already thought about great principles

    for this work so culturally responsive

    and sustaining pedagogy which is Paris

    and aleem great lights and feelings

    Geneva gay there are some real

    incredible thinkers who've been doing

    this for a while Louis mara and funds of

    knowledge there's a lot that you can

    read and learn about though there are

    all these efforts to integrate and to

    support social justice pedagogy within

    education at large and the glow would be

    to think about what does that look like

    in SDS context a lot of those efforts

    fundamentally say the same thing get to

    know your community is get to know your

    students experiences and their ways of

    knowing and their aspirations so a lot

    of it feel at this point even

    commonsensical but there is repeating

    open over because it often just doesn't

    happen there are tons of ways to draw on

    the knowledge of organizations like in

    New York City we have the New York

    Coalition of radical educators the

    connected learning community and the

    hive Learning Network whether all these

    youth development organizations who've

    been doing this work for a long time so

    I would say don't lean than the wheel

    looks with these wonderful Falls and

    then some other strong partnerships with

    communities to really understand their

    values and their purposes for CS ed

    would be a great start because the worst

    thing that could happen is people coming

    in with their own notions of what social

    justice is an imposing medicine on

    others social justice is about building

    from the grassroots listening to people

    and then working in solidarity to fight

    for change and ensure a more just

    society yeah and I completely agree I

    think I think one of the the big

    messages I would have around you know

    values of equity and justice within CS

    education is that you know we've made

    really great strides in certain parts of

    the equity conversation you know in

    particular just the idea of CS for all

    in and of itself is very powerful right

    it's the idea of a kind of universal

    access to something that we

    good and then you know in particular you

    know how thoughtful the conversation

    about broadening participation has been

    about it's not just for all but we need

    to say you know part of that implicit in

    that and and we need to elevate within

    that this idea is that there are

    particular groups that have been

    historically marginalized historically

    excluded askin American students young

    women young especially young women of

    color games with disabilities rural

    students there's all sorts of groups

    that have really been excluded and not

    given access we need to think carefully

    about those we've made huge strides and

    obviously we're not done with that work

    but those are established as I think

    valid what is not yet established as

    values is one what Sarah just said and I

    think what we're trying to partly argue

    for in this white paper that equity is

    not just in outcomes but in process it's

    about who's the table and if you if you

    in in may if you just impose from above

    yes all kids must and then you don't

    involve anybody from a community any

    students any teachers like first of all

    good luck with implementation but second

    of all like it's just that's really not

    equitable that's really you know it's

    kind of authoritarian that's not how we

    want educational change to look even if

    it has some idea of equity isn't how

    come for students the process really

    matters so that's one way and I think

    that we do see and I think very smart

    especially mark districts and smart

    out-of-school organizations that are

    really thoughtful and dedicated really

    do I think approach in these ways really

    do you think you know in New York they

    really did a amazing community

    engagement process with teachers

    principals out of school organizations

    industry to think about like well what

    do we want this to be and I was I was

    really excited to be able to participate

    in that in kudos to the New York City da

    we for the way they did that I think the

    other big area of equity of CSS

    underexplored right now is how issues of

    equity really play directly into the

    curriculum itself right you can think

    about equity in access to CS but what is

    the CSR giving access to if it's just

    loops and variables or even you know

    amazing creative computing there's lots

    of things that you're not addressing

    that are actually equity issues with

    in CS that are critical in the kpop CS

    framework there are five big concept

    areas one of them is the social impacts

    of computing and if I want to look for a

    curricula that teaches it about Luke's

    and variables then I've got a million

    options and if I want curricula to teach

    about the social impacts of computing my

    field narrows practically to zero right

    there's very very little out there and

    those are the places where we can talk

    about things like algorithmic bias

    things like you know the culture of

    computing and how it might exclude

    certain groups and how we might think

    about changing and having those

    discussions with our students it's a

    place that we can think about emerging

    issues of privacy and surveillance in

    society it's the place where we can talk

    with students about what is the role of

    Technology in democracy and public

    discourse disinformation and these are

    things like I think kids are really

    interested in - right I think that kids

    can really get into this it also from an

    implementation standpoint means that

    you're not relying on teachers having to

    have all of this knowledge around great

    you know say quote unquote deep I would

    say this is a different form of deep but

    you know what we might classically think

    of as like well I know five programming

    languages and now I can teach computer

    science every teacher in the world is

    like then you're like holy cow learning

    the other correction but you talk to a

    social studies teacher about doing a

    unit on how to think about you know the

    social impacts of computing in World War

    two and wow you know their eyes are

    gonna light up right you have a whole

    different way in and from animal tation

    standpoint that means that you're also

    able to have that many more educators

    that are going to be part of this

    process and so I think that there's

    really two big points of equity in

    process and equity in the kind of as

    represented and the ideas you teach

    about are two big things we need to

    elevate to get the to go beyond but not

    leave behind at all the discourse around

    access and the discourse around running

    participation books which are absolutely

    critical but we can't stop there right

    we need to extend those and so into

    further conceptions of what good

    equitable and justice oriented CSS

    ocation can look like yeah I think that

    builds off of podcasts released very

    recently at least at the time of

    recording with Sarah Judd she was

    talking about a lot of that stuff really

    related to AI and education and the

    curriculum that she's developing and

    then Sarah what you mentioned several

    times in this podcast I've highly

    recommended to people read outside of

    the field like you need to be reading

    from other people don't just keep going

    down this same rabbit hole because

    there's a lot of people who have already

    talked about these things in other

    subject areas that are very applicable

    to what we're doing in CS education

    definitely there's great work on

    culturally responsive computing like I

    know Kimber Kimberly Scott Ronnie graph

    there are a lot of folks who have been

    applying ideas from Gloria

    ladson-billings work to computing and

    sort of like those intersections they're

    gonna become really important so I'm

    curious what questions have I not asked

    that you would like to discuss related

    to the framework or anything else

    laughing I've been thinking a lot about

    curricular integration recently like

    when you think about all these different

    impacts and values underlying computing

    education that we talk about in the

    framework another one that is versioning

    and people are trying to really put a

    lot of attention to is the sense of how

    do we use computing in the school

    discipline and so that that's something

    that maybe is that we can't get into in

    depth in this podcast deserves a whole

    other one I have so many issues about

    like yeah how do we get social studies

    teachers excited

    so that and how are these disciplines

    fundamentally changing you know now

    there's digital humanities there are so

    many fields that students don't get

    exposure to in their k-12 lives that

    involve using the tools of computing to

    do work in the disciplines yeah that's

    an interesting area of discussion one of

    the things that I have recommended for

    districts who are interested in

    integration is to not just start with

    CSS integrated but to start with like

    csr coding as its own thing and then

    integrating after the kids and some of

    the teachers have had experience with it

    because it's really hard if we think of

    it from like the TPAC framework like the

    technological knowledge the pedagogical

    knowledge and content knowledge if

    you're gonna ask a bunch of teachers to

    not only teach their subject area but to

    also learn the technology which would be

    like the coding platform the pedagogy

    involved with how to teach CS education

    or coding and then the content knowledge

    involved with that and how they

    intersect with other

    disciplines it's really hard to do but

    it'd be a lot easier if like okay in

    your coding class you learn how to do

    this thing now we're gonna take those

    concepts and apply it to this subject

    area how can you take what you've

    learned like in scratch to make a social

    studies project etc yeah it takes

    cooperation and it takes I think that it

    sort of starts to unveil and reveal all

    the structural areas to incorporating

    serious education into a school day like

    that I left curricular integration it's

    such a puzzle like all of a sudden you

    realize oh wait teachers are in these

    disciplinary silos they don't work

    together across disciplines

    you know when are we gonna have enough

    time in the school day to fit in all of

    these you know to do these this like

    rich multidisciplinary work yeah and I

    think that speaks to something that you

    know I think we can tease but it's

    really it's almost like its entire own

    subject I think one of the really big

    questions that we a set have so much

    work to do on it as a field is

    ultimately this question of how do we

    translate our values into practice right

    so really when it comes down to it and

    this is work that you know I've been

    doing research on you know studying

    school district change over the course

    of years you know longitudinal studies

    of school districts and really trying to

    see how do they go from say the process

    of doing a visions deliberation activity

    where they talk about like well we care

    about creativity and we care about you

    know social mobility and technology to

    actually translate that into the kind of

    systems change and when and how are they

    able to adhere to their values when do

    they encounter barriers because so much

    of this work is about the complexity

    really working within and trying to

    transform the existing ways that schools

    as institutions and districts as

    organizations are structured and I think

    that's you know what Sarah was just

    talking about about like well actually

    do teachers across disciplines have like

    time to collaborate together heck do

    teachers within disciplines have time to

    collaborate together I mean so I mean I

    think that you know I would hope that as

    we go about this work we can both route

    these questions of how we translate

    values into system change

    questions will be asked together as a

    field and really think about together

    that we're not just only thinking about

    kind of CS learning on a short time

    scale and within the kind of context of

    a curriculum or a classroom or a set of

    students but really thinking about like

    what is it actually really mean to

    undergo the kind of institutional

    transformation that are required to

    actually enact our values in this and I

    think there's more people who are doing

    this but we really need everyone who's

    doing this work to be sharing those

    lessons back not just hey I've got this

    great unit but I want to actually know I

    how the heck did that unit come to be if

    you're working within a school district

    and district and teachers work on how do

    they even get there how'd they get

    enough knowledge to make it and then

    what have you found out as you've tried

    to actually implement over time or

    instead of that scale those are really

    critical critical absolutely

    as I mentioned before the start

    recording like I'm really interested in

    the multi inter and transdisciplinary

    spaces and what not an engagement but we

    can't even really get there yet if we

    still have like certification issues in

    that well what does it mean to be a CS

    educator in a state where there's no

    certification and there's no background

    in that and how do you develop that

    professional knowledge and understanding

    and get qualified people in the room to

    do that and then how do you get them to

    help others with integration like

    there's all these things we have to get

    through before we can like really start

    diving deep into the integration stuff I

    think is like all the levers that have

    to get pulled at once like you drown

    classroom examples to show people who

    trained teachers or who prepared

    teachers to show that this is that in

    the classroom you need people who

    prepare teachers in order to it's a

    cycle you need all of like standards and

    policy and teacher prep and leadership

    like everything has to be pulled at the

    same time in small ways in order to

    answer any of these questions yes yeah

    and I'm happy I think at some point we

    have to clear now are starting to see

    some models of how districts go about

    the process of change over time it's see

    like how how do you pull different

    different levers at what point

    what's based on your

    particulars of you know the political

    situation in your district existing

    resources in your district the existing

    knowledge of your team the fact that you

    even have a team and you have two teams

    around it you know all of those you know

    there's so many lessons that we're now

    starting to see around how do you even

    get started and how do you even get

    started that's a district but I think

    hopefully we'll have good things coming

    out and resources to support that

    process I think the visions deliberation

    tool is a part of that the script rubric

    there's another part of that and

    certainly being connected to national

    communities and friction sources like

    this podcast I really amaze it you know

    all gonna kind of play into that cluster

    of how you get started so where might

    people go to connect with you and the

    organizations that you work with all the

    resources including a online fun little

    quiz an unplugged

    visions activity our visions white paper

    can all be found at visions dots yes for

    all dot org that's yes fo are all org

    not the number and I'm at empathetic on

    Twitter you can always reach out to me

    there if you are not a member of CS for

    all you can also become a member a whole

    districts can become members content

    providers can become members individual

    researchers can become members

    understand come members and if you do

    become over that you get added to yes

    for all slash community and then you can

    reach out directly to so many folks

    within that network directly you know

    this is a community-based effort there's

    we're not going to get to this song

    alone and so definitely join and connect

    with you know so many good colleagues in

    this space the website for the NSF

    project that I work with which is

    participating in literacies in computer

    science right now the website just a

    landing page

    Tirra c fo RG but soon we're going to

    have lots of resources up there about

    supporting bilingual students in

    computer science education so you can

    stay tuned p lab ti LA - CS org and then

    i can just be found that at Sarah Evo go

    on Twitter I say RA e vo GTL and with

    that that concludes this week's episode

    of the cska podcast I hope you enjoyed

    this interview with Rafi and Sarah I

    know I certainly did again you can find

    the show notes with other Ling

    to the various scholars and publications

    that were mentioned just by clicking in

    the link in the description or visiting

    Jared O'Leary com if you haven't done so

    yet I hope you consider sharing this

    with somebody else as it wouldn't mean a

    lot to me and it would help spread the

    word about scholarship and ideas related

    to CS education thank you so much for

    listening and I hope you listen again

    next week to another unpacking

    scholarship episode

Guest Bios

Rafi Santo, PhD, is a learning scientist focused on the intersection of technology, education, equity and institutional change. He is a research associate at CSforALL and principal researcher at Telos Learning. Centering his work within research-practice partnerships, he has studied, collaborated with, and facilitated a range of organizational networks related to digital learning and computing education. His work at CSforALL involves supporting and researching school districts as they develop equitable computing education initiatives rooted in student and community needs. He’s received support from the National Science Foundation, the Spencer Foundation, the MacArthur Foundation, the Mozilla Foundation, the Susan Crown Exchange and Google.

SaraVogel

Sara Vogel is a doctoral candidate in urban education at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, researching computer science education, bilingualism, and social justice pedagogy. She co-developed and is currently the lead research assistant on Participating in Literacies and Computer Science (PiLaCS), a National Science Foundation-funded project that leverages the diverse language practices of bilingual youth as resources in their computer science learning. A former bilingual teacher, she has also worked as a computing educator in informal settings with the nonprofit Global Kids Inc.


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