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July 27, 2006

Teacher Professional Development

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Still in OZ - I presented a MasterClass session to about 50 educators at the Technology School of the Future in Adelaide last night. I had some really interesting discussions with some of the people there around the whole issue of teacher professional development, identified by them as the critical area to be addressed in schools as we seek to successfully integrate ICTs into our education system.

It seems to me that, after almost three decades of work with ICTs in schools and classrooms, there is still confusion about why technology actually matters. We are still facing the same challenges with regards to how we successfully integrate them into our practice in schools, about how we understand the value they add to what we do, and, for some, why we're even bothering with them in schools in the first place. The focus inevitably comes to the professional development of teachers and best we can prepare them in their thinking and practices.

One example of this was Hank, an assistant principal at a local Senior College that is in the process of placing 6-8 computers in every classroom through funding obtained from the (Australian) Federal Governments ???Invest In Our Schools??? grant. Hank is in charge of these ICT developments, and sees the biggest challenge is to change classroom pedagogy so that ICTs become an integral part of what occurs in the classroom without it taking over the classroom. Hank has set up a blog where he hopes to engage with other educators who may be able to help him make the right decisions in his school - so if you have some experience in this area he'd appreciate your help.

While musing on these thoughts this morning, I read with interest the recent Teachers Talk Tech report that has tracked and measured technology trends in education from the teacher???s perspective for the last four years. Key findings are reported as:

  • Technology is bridging the gap between 21st century skills and the core curriculum
  • The teaching process is fundamentally changing as professional development takes teachers from learning how computers work to using technology to change how they teach
  • Teachers believe technology is increasingly influencing how they teach thinking and learning skills to develop lifelong learners
  • Education is today where businesses were 20 years ago - on the cusp of radically transforming their fundamental environments

The report paints an optomistic picture, emphasising that it is teacher development that is the key to success - and that the teacher development must be sustained over time - the most significant thing for me in the reporting was a quote from one of the researchers:
"I think the biggest 'aha' of the study is that we are starting to see a direct correlation between hours of professional development and how thoroughly technology is being integrated into the classroom,... These are things we've always suspected, but now we have some actual statistics through the surveys that validate the correlations."

On a more pessimistic note, an article titled In a globalised world, mediocre teaching is doomed predicts that by 2036, the forms of teacher preparation that currently prevail in Western nations will have sunk into oblivion. We will have discarded schools of education, the pedagogies they teach, and the certification apparatus that they serve. The article is worth a read as it presents a view of a possible future scenario - one in which the very existence of schools themselves is questioned.

The issue here is that again, the focus of attention comes on teachers and their ability (or inability) to cope with the expectations placed upon them by the "system" and by the pace of change and innovation that is occurring.

Speaking of the the "system" - another comment made to me last night after the Masterclass has got me thinking... I'd spent much of the night discussing changes in pedagogical practice, and the need to re-examine our understandings of basic things such as our ideas about knowledge, about minds, and about learning. The challenge of moving away from thinking of knowledge as "stuff", and minds as "containers" and learning as the process of filling "minds" with "knowledge" was at the heart of what I was saying. Afterwards one one of the attendees pointed out that if you compare the amount of money being invested in the development of "stuff" (eg online learning objects) with the amount being spent on Teacher Professional Development, it becomes apparent where the emphasis of the "the system" is in this debate. Food for thought.


July 26, 2006

Skype for Mac with VC out now

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Great news this morning via TechCrunch - Skype has released a new version for Mac. Video support is finally available, though it???s a separate download. in beta form at the moment.

Drag and drop contact adding and file transfer are smooth. You can even drag and drop someone from your contact list into a group chat.


The note on the skype website says that the Video Preview of Skype for Mac is only recommended for experienced users and should not be used on a production system that you depend on. I think I'll be trying it out on a separate system before commiting to using it on my laptop!

July 25, 2006

Innovative portfolio development

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I spent the morning today with Stephen Palmer (pictured above) who is the ICT Manager at Essendon North Primary School here in Melbourne. Stephen is a remarkable young man who, in addition to managing the entire network of computers at ENPS, is also responsible for the development of an innovative ePortfolio tool which goes by the name of EdCube.

Created in Java, this product provides young students with the ability to arrange their portfolio items in a very intuitive way - see this example of the contents page from a sample portfolio created in this environment. Each of the titles listed in this contents page is linked to a page (dynamically created) containing samples of student work and their commentary about it.

Students can "place" files into their portfolio regardless of file format - Stephen demonstrated with a BitMap graphic that was converted to a JPG within the tool for example. The tool handles all sorts of file formats in this way - including audio and video files.

EdCube is currently being used within Essendon North School, and is also being trialed in a number of other schools within Victoria. Will be interesting to see where this may lead.


July 24, 2006

PEW Internet Blogging report

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Thanks to my colleague Jedd for drawing my attention to the latest report from Pew Internet titled Bloggers: A Portrait of the Internet???s New Storytellers ( PDF download available here )

This report is interesting because, despite a small sample size, it is the second in a series of surveys looking at the same questions, and thus provides some sense of the growth and development of blogging as an online activity.

Adding to the summary of key findings summarized on Jedd's blog, the part of the report I found really interesting was the section relating to the audience and motivation for blogging - (worth noting in relation to the comments made by Graham Wegner in my previous blog entry.)

When asked whether they blogged for themselves or for their audience, more than half of bloggers (52%) responded that they blog for themselves. About a third (32%) of bloggers blog mostly to entertain or engage their audience, and another 14% volunteered that they blogged for both themselves and their audience equally.

In response to a question about what kind of attention bloggers receive from their blogs and from whom, the report states:

Most frequently, bloggers received attention from other bloggers, either through exchanges of links or discussions proceeding from postings and their responses, either via comments or on other blogs. Nearly 60% of bloggers had been noticed by other bloggers. Young bloggers (age 18-29) were most likely to say that they had received this kind of attention. About half of bloggers (52%) report that their blog has been noticed by family members.

On a different note, I found the comment regarding the use of RSS very interesting. According to the report, few bloggers offer an RSS feed, possibly because many bloggers are not aware of the technology.

RSS does not have a strong presence yet, even within the blogosphere. Only 18% of bloggers in our survey say they offered an RSS feed of their blog. Nearly 6 in 10 (59%) say they do not have an RSS feed for their blog content, and close to another quarter (23%) say they do not know if they had a feed, or did not answer the question.

In relation to this finding, the writers comment that this is not un-typical, and that in a general internet-user survey conducted in May-June 2005 only 9% of internet users said they have a good idea of the meaning of the term ???RSS feeds.??? I'd expect this figure to change dramatically in the next 12 months!

July 23, 2006

Blogging as Professional Learning

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Day two of the CEGSA conference went very well - all sorts of interesting workshops and presentations.
A standout for me was a double act from Graham Wegner and Al Upton - both ICT facilitators from schools in the Adelaide area. Their presentation dealt with their experiences in using blogs - both personally and with teachers, focusing on the value of blogs as a professional learning tool.

I was particularly impressed with what Graeme had to say, and with the way he illustrated how his use of a blog had enabled him to become a part of a much wider and more diverse range of professional learning communities - communicating with people he'd never otherwise have had the opportunity to do so. He used a simple network map created in TouchGraph to illustrate the extent of these networks. I appreciated the thought Graham had put into getting his message across in such a clear and concise manner, thoughtfully reflecting on his own actions and decisions throughout the process of creating and maintaining his blog, and his approach to becoming an activie participant in the 'blogosphere'. This sort of reflection can be noted in the entries he makes in his blog.

Graham has posted his network map, along with his powerpoint show and some other useful links and diagrams on his Teaching Generation Z blog.
Al Upton has also posted some useful references from this sesson on his Al Upton and the MiniLegends blog. Both of these are worth a look at to get some more understanding of the use of blogs from a practitioner point of view.

July 20, 2006

CEGSA conference, Adelaide

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I'm enjoying the sunshine in Adelaide a the moment, having just presented the opening keynote at the Computers in Education Group of South Australia (CEGSA) annual conference, being held at the Technology School of the Future . A great range of workshops and presentations on the agenda - with a heavy focus on social software applications (blogs, wikis etc) that reflects where a lot of the innovation and thinking is currently at among the teachers who attend these sorts of conferences.

July 4, 2006

DEANZ Award to LearnNow project

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At the DEANZ conference today the biennial DEANZ award was awarded to Jo Gison for her work with the LearnNow project. I've been privileged to be associated with Jo and her work on this project for some years now, and congratulate her on this achievement, which is due recognition for what I consider to be an outstanding example of a learner-centred, online learning programme. The judges expressed such sentiments in the presentation speech that was read by the newly elected DEANZ president, Carol Cooper, who is pictured above presenting the award to Jo.

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