Shifting Our Schools episode 4: Celebrating Shifted Teachers

By admin, 21 February, 2008, 1 Comment

Introductions

Jeff and David go solo.

|Essential Question|

The SOS team paused tonight to celebrate the teachers in their schools who are making the shift. No philosophical discussion tonight, just concrete and practical instructional strategies.

David: See his Lessons Learned blog post where he shares information about teachers from Hsinchu International School and Hong Kong International School.

Jeff: Take a look at his links below from Shanghai American School.

|Supporting Links|
David’s:

HKIS Teacher Toolkit Best Practices
Hsinchu International School
Brent Loken of HIS: Using Geometry Sketchpad
Examples of “Exhibitions” by HIS students

Jeff’s:

SAS PE
SAS Humanities Wiki
SAS Humanities Culture Wiki
SAS Teacher Blog
SAS Math Teacher Blog
SAS 7th Humanities Class
SAS TOK Class
Voki Avatar Creation and Voice

Episode4 chatroom notes

|Sign Off|

  • Next show is Thursday March 6th. Catch it live at 7:00 PM Shanghai time.
  • Our guest will be Kim Cofino from the International School of Bangkok. Check out her Always Learning blog.
  • Essential Question for the show: How to connect?
  • Don’t forget to post Web sites/blogs to the SOS Del.icio.us bookmarking site that support our upcoming EQ.

Shifting Our Schools episode 3: Passion for learning, how to nurture and grow it?

By admin, 8 February, 2008, No Comment

|Introductions|

Clay Burell joined David and Jeff all sharing their Chinese New Year experiences from Korea, Taiwan and China.

Intro for Clay: Clay has taught language arts in the U.S., Europe, China and now Korea. He works to take “schooliness” out of his students’ learning experiences. A big part of his effort is to help his students build personal learning networks (PLN). He is now running an elective PLN focused elective course so look to follow his students’ learning via Clay’s Beyond-School blog.

|Essential Question|

Passion for learning, how to nurture and grow it?

David:

See his blog where he shares about his son’s passion for learning and what contributes to it.
Jeff:

  • Finding passion in our students
  • Learning needs to have meaning
  • Learning needs to be authentic
  • Learning needs to be deep

The SOS Team Discussion:

How to give credit for the engaging work that students want to do outside out of class? How to substitute the learning the kids are doing on their own for the prescribed classwork?
Student 2.0 writing blog that Clay initiated and continues to draw readers. Here is an excellent example of passionate learners working outside of the classroom.

Success for Clay in creating authentic learning where passionate learning takes place:

A student interviewed Clay as a minority person living in Korea. It was recorded for a podcast. It ended up being newsworthy and drew the community in to access the student’s blog and continue the discussion.

Barriers for Clay in helping his school make the shift:

Students in our high schools are often so trained in a ways that get in the way of thinking laterally and making connections that we have to “unteach” them. To create their own projects and follow their own ideas doesn’t come easy. “Give me something I can do quickly and get out of the way” is often the way our high school students operate. They often are not willing to take risks. Conclusion: We really need to start in the elementary to build a learning environment that doesn’t take the passion away.

Clay’s PLN class involves each student completing a project of personal interest that they research and then blog/podcast/vodcast about weekly. They connect to Twitter to build out their network finding people who can help them with their research. Clay finds this process to really support his hope that his students will become networked learners.

Take Away from the discussion:

One approach to shift a school is for your instructional technologist to start the year working with early adopters the first third of the year and to then move to the middle range adopters the next third of the year and to focus on the laggard group at end of the year.

It is imperative to have the instructional technologists work with groups of teachers during the school day to get buy in from the teachers. After school doesn’t work due to scheduling problems. Think about bringing in subs for a whole day. This really validates the process. Get the technical lessons (e.g., how to run a blog, use Skype, etc.) in first to remove those barriers. You can them focus on the curriculum and adapting the instruction and assessments to meet 21st century learning goals.

Teachers looking to start blogging should think about using them as their portfolios and as a way to communicate to parents and to share classroom content with students. This is a triple winner that gives teachers a real reason for using the tool. We want our students to be like trapeze artists following the flow of information moving from say Twitter to Skype then to IM then to producing one’s learning on a blog from where the conversation continues as readers comment.

Go to deeper level with our curriculum. The learning must be authentic and relevant. The kids demand it.

|Blog Posts of the Week|

Clay: Networked learning can be playful and fun at Ideas and Thoughts.
David: A home schooler shares her blueprint for passionate learning at Karen’s Blog.
Jeff: Look for rich visuals and brain-research supported posts as well as the “User Hierarchy of Needs” at Creating Passionate Users.

 

 

|Sign Off|

  • Next show is Thursday February 21st. Catch it live at 7:00 PM Shanghai time.
  • Our guest will be Justin Hardman from the Hong Kong International School. Check out his Blueprint: New World, New School blog.
  • Essential Question for the show: How to expand the learning community to the parents?
  • Don’t forget to post Web sites/blogs to the SOS Del.icio.us bookmarking site that support our upcoming EQ.

Shifting Our Schools episode 2: How does making connections affect learning?

By admin, 24 January, 2008, No Comment

Show Notes

|Introductions|

Justin Medved and Kim Cofino joined David and Jeff in welcoming our featured guest Julie Lindsay. Kim could only stay a short moment but will join us again in future shows.

Intro for Julie: Co-creator of Flat Classroom and Horizon telecollaborative learning projects. Julie and Vicki Davis wrote a Learning and Leading with Technology article on the topic. Access at ISTE but you will need membership to download the article.

|Essential Question|

How does making connections affect learning?

Jeff:

  • Learn from anyone anywhere
    • MIT opencourseware
    • Yale opencourseware
    • iTunes unverisity
  • Authentic audiences are created
  • Students understand the power of connections in their social lives we need to teach them how to use those same connections for learning.
  • George Siemen’s Didactics of Microlearning
    • I find informal publishing in blogs and online articles more rewarding than traditional publishing processes. The feedback on what I write informally is more immediate and, as a result, plays a greater role in the subsequent formation of ideas. Writing a journal article, book, or book chapter, is concerned with presenting what one knows. Writing in informal spaces (such as a blog) is concerned with inviting others to join in an exploration of understanding a phenomenon not yet fully known.
  • Learning is about connections. Connecting new ideas to what is already known or thought to be known. In a connected world we take that one step further and connect those new ideas to what other know and create new knowledge from it.

David: See his blog post

The SOS Team Discussion:

Julie shared explained how the Flat Classroom Project is based upon Thomas Friedman’s book The World is Flat. You can access the wiki classroom for more information. She also spoke about the Horizon project from this past year and how it will continue next year. For more information, access the Horizon Project wiki.

We then spoke about the type of learning skills that come from students networking using digital learning collaboration tools. Check out Julie’s excellent post on global digital citizenship.

Justin shared 3 guiding questions developed at ISB based on the new literacy skills our students need. They are working at integrating these guiding questions across their curriculum. Our students will not just be citizens of their localities but will be participants in broader communities connected digitally.

The questions are:

  • How do I find and use information to construct meaning and solve problems?
  • How do I effectively communicate?
  • How do I responsibly use information and communication to positively contribute to my world?

For more information on this new literacy and curriculum integration, check out their Google Doc and wiki.

The question was raised about how we can deal with the ever changing world of new technologies and improvements to current tools that might lead our schools to switch from current online providers (i.e., blogs, wikis, etc.) to new ones. This will further be discussed in a later show when we focus on school portals and connecting to the community.

Take Away from the discussion: Part of shifting our instruction is realizing that teachers can be supported to learn how to use the the tools yet the real work is learning how to use the tools to create learning moments.

The 21st century skills that students need for communication, constant learning and creativity in our networked world obviously can only be developed if we design and implement learning opportunities where we use the technology that is becoming an increasing part of the business and everyday aspects of our world. These collaborative learning projects need to be scaffolded with clear communication of responsibilities along with rubrics to outline what is expected when students generate learning objects.

It is very important to have someone on staff in our schools who is staying on top of emerging technologies.

While some schools are looking to what 21st century skills their students will need and have revamped their mission and student learning outcomes, our school stakeholders need to review their mission statements to see if they are looking forward to prepare students properly. By using the UbD curriculum review process, we can then work to shift our instruction, learning content, and assessments to help our students reach the learning outcomes documented by our updated and relevant mission statements.

|Blog Posts of the Week|

Jeff: George Siemen’s post on Shifting Knowledge
David: George Siemen’s post on Connectivism vs Constructivism
Julie: Jabiz Raisdana’s post on Blogging & Connections
Justin: Kim Cofino’s post on Telecollaborative Tools

|Sign Off|

  • Next show is Thursday February 7th. Catch it live at 7:00 PM Shanghai time.
  • Our guest will be Clay Burell from the Korea International School. Check out his Beyond School blog.
  • Essential Question for the show: Passion for learning, how to nurture and grow it?
  • Don’t forget to post Web sites/blogs to the SOS Del.icio.us bookmarking site that support our upcoming EQ.