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Instructing / Practicing Category: Posts in Education Blog
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Disrupting Class: Challenging Tradition, Part 1

Posted by DELL-Adam G |  Posted in Education Blog |  Posted on 19 Nov 2009
This book that really challenged our view of how technology supports the learning environment. The book is titled Disrupting Class: How Disruptive Innovation Will Change the Way the World Learns by Clayton M. Christensen . Here is a link to an article ...more>

This book that really challenged our view of how technology supports the learning environment. The book is titled Disrupting Class: How Disruptive Innovation Will Change the Way the World Learns by Clayton M. Christensen. Here is a link to an article about the book. In the book Christensen discusses why it has been so difficult for schools to change to a more student-centric approach to learning and how technology will support the change in the context of disruptive innovation.

The premise is based on the notion that we have tried to integrate technology into a system that is very resistant to change. The processes and structures of the system will only produce pockets of innovation with technology, but will not produce a total shift toward student-centric learning. The author believes that the shift will happen in two phases. The first phase will be to apply disruptive technologies in places where the alternative is nothing. For example, in schools that have students that want to take Latin, but the school lacks the resources, they can use online or distance learning to provide the instruction. The second phase will occur when 50% of all instruction is delivered online and is gives the student the ability to learn based on their dominant learning styles.

Here is where I am challenged – my view, up to this point, has been that we will reach a tipping point when the technology finally becomes ubiquitous and we can focus on learning. I guess my premise failed to account for the fact that the school systems that we work in will continue to support antiquated processes and structures.

Do you think we can truly get to a student-centric approach to learning if we don’t consider learning styles, change the present notion of schools (a building), and build the technology to support this approach?

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Let the Voting Begin – Dell Asks You to Vote in the Student Photography Contest

Posted by DELL-Bri B |  Posted in Education Blog |  Posted on 17 Nov 2009
Vote for your favorite student photo for a chance to win a Latitude 2100 notebook. Our first global student photography competition, Where Do You Like to Learn ended on Sunday with more than 200 entries from all around the world! On Monday, we selected ...more>

Vote for your favorite student photo for a chance to win a Latitude 2100 notebook. Our first global student photography competition, Where Do You Like to Learn ended on Sunday with more than 200 entries from all around the world! On Monday, we selected our nine finalists, shown below. Our panel of Dell judges included Jason St Peter, a Dell employee and photography blogger and KerryatDell and I from the Education team. With so many fantastic student pictures, picking the top finalists was no easy task.

How to vote and be entered into the prize draw:

Voting is easy, simply post a comment to this blog and indicate the number of the photograph that you want to win (i.e. 'I vote for photo #6'). In addition to helping one student win a Latitude 2100 netbook, and a teacher win a tablet PC and projector, you will also be entered into a prize drawing for your very own Latitude 2100*!

Voting is open from November 19 - December 4, 2009, so pick your favorite photo (click on it below to see a larger image) and ask your friends to join the Edu4U community to vote! Only one vote per person will be counted, so help your favorite photo win the grand prize.

Vote #1

 

Vote #2

 

Vote #3

Vote #4

 Vote #5

Vote #6

 Vote #7

 Vote #8

 Vote #9

 

Author's Note: You may notice that there are 9 image finalists instead of 10. The reason for this is that since the time of the finalists being selected the 10th image has been withdrawn from the competition.

*Sweepstakes limited to residents of United States, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, India, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Mexico, New Zealand, South Korea, Spain, and the United Kingdom. Click here to read full terms and conditions for this contest.

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Authored by Paul Tumarkin: Over 230 Organizations Send a Clear Message: We Need to Integrate 21st Century Skills into Content

Posted by DELL-Bri B |  Posted in Education Blog |  Posted on 5 Nov 2009
Along with being a father, guitarist, student of aikido, and dog-lover, Paul Tumarkin serves as the Communications Director for the Partnership for 21st Century Skills, the leading advocacy organization focused on infusing 21st century skills into education ...more>

 

 

Along with being a father, guitarist, student of aikido, and dog-lover, Paul Tumarkin serves as the Communications Director for the Partnership for 21st Century Skills, the leading advocacy organization focused on infusing 21st century skills into education. 

 

 

In June, the Partnership for 21st Century Skills (P21) hosted the first National Summit on 21st Century Skills in Washington, D.C. focused on the critical need to combine rigorous core subjects with skills such as critical thinking, communication, innovation and creativity. Over 350 policy-makers, education leaders and business professionals joined in the discussion. In addition, the Partnership held an online Cyber Summit that drew over 3,000 participants. Those events were not endings but beginnings.

Based on feedback received from the national, state and local participants, the Partnership put forth a set of guiding principles to clearly define and advance the teaching of 21st century skills and core content. The National Action Agenda on 21st Century Skills was launched on October 9, 2009. You can read the principles on the P21 website here. The effort was widely supported by over 230 organizations – including Dell, the National School Boards Association, Upper Arlington City (Ohio) School District, Community Unit School District #200 (Ill.), National Staff Development Council, Catalina Foothills (Ariz.) Unified School District #16, National Association of State Boards of Education, Norfolk (Va.) Public School District and many others.

Certainly, discussions continue, but the message is clear from all sectors of U.S. society: our education policies, practices and strategies need to change to effectively prepare our children for the world that awaits them.

According to Ken Kay, President of the Partnership for 21st Century Skills, “The fact that so many schools, districts and state departments of education have signed demonstrates that the 21st century skills movement is gaining momentum in our communities and that we are closer to providing a world-class education for every child.”

So where will the movement go next? As we head to an eventual reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), the 21st century skills movement will have a voice in the process. The Partnership will engage with the Obama administration and state and local leaders to ensure education policy is on the right track.

Still, a movement is only as good as its supporters – we need your voice! So, subscribe to blogs like this one or the P21 e-newsletter or Twitter. How about writing your own blog or--even better--a letter to the leaders in your state?

Whatever you do, be heard. Be a part of change.

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Authored by Jan Demedts: Maximize on the Power of Peer Training

Posted by DELL-Bri B |  Posted in Education Blog |  Posted on 2 Nov 2009
Jan Demedts IT Consultant and System Administrator Don Bosco Onderwijscentrum, Belgium Maximize on the Power of Peer Training On training pioneer teachers in IT skills so that they can act as IT role models and influence colleagues through peer to peer ...more>

 

Jan Demedts

IT Consultant and System Administrator

Don Bosco Onderwijscentrum, Belgium

Maximize on the Power of Peer Training

On training pioneer teachers in IT skills so that they can act as IT role models and influence colleagues through peer to peer training (from a K-12 perspective)

A demanding job

Teaching is a multi-layered and demanding job. The educational landscape is constantly changing, with new generations of students entering the classrooms every year, bringing in new words, fashions, skills, likes and dislikes. Teachers are challenged on a daily basis to prove themselves as educator, instructor, administrator, manager, psychologist, coach, companion, even standup comedian. Successful teachers need to draw from a broad range of social, educational and collaboration skills while they are working with students, colleagues and other partners outside of the school.

With the invasion of audiovisual equipment, computers and other electronic devices into everyday school life, teachers are also challenged to prove themselves as able technologists, not just during moments of preparation, but also on the class battlefield with up to 30 IT-savvy youngsters watching, commenting, assessing. Lots of things can go wrong: the projector doesn't show the pc image, there's no sound from the speakers, the webserver or even the school's internet access is down. Arghhh!

It's not just being able to handle the hardware and do some basic troubleshooting. To maximize learning and educational opportunities and to facilitate school administration, teachers are required to manage their subjects/class groups in learning platforms and student management systems, be proficient with online assessment/grading tools and collaboration tools like Google Docs. Frequent changes in software and platforms (upgrades, new functionality, change of provider) mean that there's always something new to be learned. Also teachers have tried out many web 2.0 applications and put them to good educational usage, with You Tube as one of the better known examples.

Teachers must also know about the potentially unwanted aspects of information technology. They need to know about the darker sides of the internet (as many students already do), about the pros and cons of social networking (Netlog, Facebook …) and should be able to advise their students on how to deal with privacy and cyberbullying.

The picture will be clear now: to get through the daily routine of 21st century school life, teachers need a broad range of IT skills combined with flexibility, creativity and … stamina.

Training the teachers and dealing with resistance

Taking all this into account, a major question arises: how to provide efficient IT training that makes teachers adopt the required IT skills and make them feel proficient, happy and confident in their daily routine?

This is no easy matter: not all teachers welcome the new IT techniques and some teachers even openly question IT at school and resist IT decisions made by the school management.

It is important to understand why. Many teachers have a strong individualistic side to their personality since they are used to managing class groups on their own and behind closed doors. At the same time they are intellectuals, critical of decisions taken at higher levels and wary of yet another change. Many times they have good reason: over the last decades K-12 schools have been swept by waves of pedagogic reform and an increase of control and administrative requirements.

A second reason why some teachers resist IT is the stress that comes with IT: some people are good with computers and others simply are not. Some teachers jump at new software and will readily put new IT techniques to the test in the classroom, while others dread having to take a class to a computer room and will postpone this as long as they can. They feel clumsy in front of their students and oppressed by the new curricula that want teachers to use computers in their classes to improve the students' interest, activity and learning efficiency.

Especially the fact that teachers have to use IT in front of large groups of IT-savvy and highly critical (pre-) adolescents should not be underestimated. Being able to work a computer at home or in an office does not equal being able to work a computer publicly in a classroom with the projector magnifying the demonstration of the teacher's IT skills.

It certainly does not equal managing a group of 25 students, each working on a computer of their own, and being able to teach well in the subject that is being taught: IT is only the method, improved learning is the real aim.

A good IT training strategy

A good IT training strategy should accept this resistance against IT/change and should try to work around it. The school management should not simply try to force new IT skills down the teachers' throats. The motto for school leaders is: be respectful to your human capital, motivate your decisions and set up well-devised change implementation schemes!

Good support facilities at school are very important in this respect: teachers should be able to get help and advice from school-based IT coordinators whenever they need it. Teachers also have every right to a dependable infrastructure: enough high quality hardware, a stable computer network and server infrastructure, good backup facilities, a trustworthy internet connection ... so ample IT funding for schools by the government and education boards is vital.

There should also be regular training opportunities. However, sending all the teachers on a regular basis to IT training sessions during (paid) work hours, is not feasible. That would be too disruptive for school life: the lessons must always go on for most of the students. Sending all teachers to IT training sessions after work hours (in their private time) is also something a school cannot easily do. Although widely underestimated, teachers have loads of school work after school hours ...

On the job IT-training to evangelize new IT-based methods

What then is the best way to train teachers in IT skills?

Let's start with the input. Teacher training schools have an important responsibility in procuring freshly trained teachers that are fully proficient and motivated to implement the K-12 schools' IT strategies. But once on the job and through the years, both young and older teachers will need IT-training to keep up with change in school IT.

A major question then is who should give the IT training sessions. Every school has one or more IT administrators: are they the best IT trainers? For many teachers they aren't since the IT-guys are perceived as being too savvy and too fast with IT ("IT is easy for them"), which to many teachers is intimidating and causes stress.

In my experience there is a better way to optimize the efficiency of K-12 schools IT training schemes:

  • send a small number of volunteering teachers during work hours to internal or external training sessions on specific IT subjects given by specialised trainers or by the school's own IT-administrators
  • for most teachers, target at on the job training in the school when the teachers aren't teaching (in between lessons, during noon breaks)
  • work with a peer training model: train volunteering/pioneering teachers to be IT evangelists/role models and let those teachers spread the news, the IT-skills and examples of concrete implementations into lesson plans
  • invite and reward these evangelists to give short IT training sessions in the schools on well-defined subjects and make sure the announcement/invitation to these sessions is worded in simple language so that it is clear to the target group
  • for these sessions, try to get some teachers of the target group to put their name on the attendee list: if the training session is meant for beginners, the IT skills of the teachers on the list should be rated by their colleagues as indeed beginners level ... otherwise real beginners will not put their names down for fear of losing face during the IT training session
  • stimulate the different departments (maths, modern languages, science, ...) to organise internal demos and share lessons material on the schools learning platform
  • do not rush things: let the IT evangelization spread at its own pace.

 

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Authored by Jim Dachos, Glogster: A Revolution in the Creative Expression of Knowledge and Skills - edu.glogster.com

Posted by DELL-Bri B |  Posted in Education Blog |  Posted on 24 Sep 2009
Jim Dachos. Education Manager with Glogster EDU (edu.glogster.com), Multi-state certified teacher with eight years of teaching experience. Former Senior Director in Assessment Services with National Evaluation Systems, now Evaluation Systems of Pearson ...more>

 

Jim Dachos. Education Manager with Glogster EDU (edu.glogster.com), Multi-state certified teacher with eight years of teaching experience. Former Senior Director in Assessment Services with National Evaluation Systems, now Evaluation Systems of Pearson.

Twitter: @glogstereduman

 

 

 

 

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Glogster EDU is a rapidly expanding Web 2.0 network of educators and students linked through innovative and imaginative learning experiences.
http://hbhskat.glogster.com/Cellular-Respiration/ *

Glogster EDU’s platform easily allows users to upload photos, videos, text, audio, and other exciting resources in creating unique online, interactive posters (Glogs) to express their knowledge and skills on classroom projects.
http://v7ps.glogster.com/english-final/ *

This free, dynamic, innovative digital outlet captures student’s excitement for online creations, keeps students engaged in course content, and makes learning more fun. Glogster’s digital platform encourages educators to integrate dynamic multisensory learning experiences into traditionally text-oriented subjects and motivates student’s desire to explore topics in which they may previously have been less interested. http://lolzz.glogster.com/Artemis-Fowl/ *

Creating Innovative and Interactive Learning Communities:

Teachers can easily and safely register up to 200 students in their monitored online learning community. Each teacher within the Glogster EDU learning community receives unique login names and passwords, distributes them to their students, and monitors the individual student-designed profile pages.

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Once the administrative tasks are complete, learners may begin to share their teacher directed “Glog Assignments” with other members of their learning community. Teachers are secure, knowing that their students are engaged in a private and safe environment that is monitored directly by the teachers themselves.

The teacher designs, implements and directs the assignment while controlling the activities within the virtual classroom.

Teachers and students share ideas, work together, and build positive peer and student/teacher relationships as they demonstrate creative self- expression, and content knowledge and skills through individual or group projects. Both, teachers and learners, can comment on the work of others, share ideas, and evaluate best practices and outcomes. Thus, Glogster EDU democratizes the classroom to allow for a participatory culture and prepare students with skills necessary for the 21st century.

 

Each member of the community is able to network with other teachers and peers in collaborative dialogue, interactive clip_image008classroom projects, thematic units, and school or district-wide initiatives. Since “glogs” may contain text, graphics, audio, video and image elements of a thematic activity, their versatility encourages educators in language arts, science, math, social studies, art, music and other disciplines to integrate shared activities. Projects may be saved and revisited at any point during the school year or archived for future classes and historical perspectives on projects completed in past years. Moreover, parents may be encouraged to participate in classroom activities, monitor their child’s progress, and contribute to projects in creative ways.
http://nobile3rdgrade.blogspot.com/

Virtual classrooms may extend beyond the immediate educational surroundings to include other Glogster EDU communities throughout the world. The results will be expanded opportunities for authentic work, global audiences and concrete experiences of students and educators making valuable contributions to their learning communities together.
http://b-7bobcats.wikispaces.com/Glogsters

 

Glogster EDU was conceived to imaginatively, productively, and collaboratively respond to the dynamic educational landscape encouraging the participation of all of its community members. We value the participation of educators and strive to assimilate their contributions.

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* Please note that the links provide will access our social networking site, Glogster and not Glogster EDU. Since all glogs on Glogster EDU are private the Glogster links are provided to illustrate creative examples. Additional content on Glogster, other than the glogs provided may contain objectionable materials.

Stay tuned to Part II, “Student-Centered Classroom/Activities and Instruction”. Your comments and Glogster EDU project suggestions are encouraged.

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