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November 7, 2007

Online Global Classroom Projects

Interactivity.jpg This week I finished teaching my Global Classroom course which is part of the University of Canterbury's Graduate Diploma of ICT course. I've had (another) fabulous group of teachers who undertook projects including an intercultural study with a class in Malaysia, planning a virtual camp with another class in NZ, participating in a virtual field trip to Antarctica and using ePals to connect with students in the US.

I'm always on the lookout for projects that these teachers can link into for their Global Classroom experience, and so was interested today to come across the Interactivity Center, from Education World, which features collaborative projects, virtual field trips, educational games, and other interactive activities. Most of these are free or very low cost, and illustrate the incredible imagination and creativity of teachers in making use of the opportunities now available in the online world and with the emergence of many creative applications in the Web2.0 world.

If there's not something here that you feel you can participate in, then there are heaps of ideas for projects that you could begin yourself, using some of the online environments and applications that are freely available.

April 11, 2007

Teachers as reflective practitioners

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I'm back in Ipoh, Malaysia, for a couple of weeks to work on the KPEC project. The photo above shows Jedd Bartlett, the NZ facilitator for the project, and his wife, Jenny, working with local teachers at a workshop at one of the local schools. It's encouraging to see the progress that has been made, albeit in small steps, since I was last here - with teachers sharing what they are doing in classrooms with students to integrate ICTs into their teaching and learning. The KPEC programme is based on teachers planning their own "ICT Challenge", and, supported by local facilitators and mentors, working through the challenge, all the time maintaining a log of their personal reflections and 'learnings' from what they've been doing. These are shared within the online environment which, at this stage, is available only to other participants in the programme - thus creating a community of practice where teachers are learning from each other's experiences as well as from their own.

The focus on teachers as reflective practitioners has been a passion of mine for some years now, based in the belief that the most powerful learning we can do as professionals comes from the time we take to reflect and 'unpack' the daily experiences we have in our own classrooms.

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I was interested to discover recently the Making Teaching Public project (courtesy of Teacher's College Record).

The websites in Making Teaching Public bring together videos, interviews, written reflections, curriculum materials, student work and other resources that enable viewers to examine many aspects of teaching and learning. An exhibition overview, slideshow, and invited commentaries explore some of the opportunities and issues of documentation and representation raised by the use of multimedia and new technologies in making teaching public.

These are well told stories that each of us can learn from. Take for instance the story of Martha Andrews' 5th grade classroom at the Bronx New School. The following extract from Martha's web entry summarises the approach:

Rather than highlighting "best practices", the site seeks to provide an authentic slice of life of a teacher who is continually inquiring about her practice and using what she learns from her inquiry to deepen, develop, and refine her work. While the site captures many aspects of teaching and learning in Andrew's classroom, it focuses on the way that Andrews adjusts, adapts and expands her initial curriculum plan in order to meet her students' needs. It also provides a glimpse of how Andrews' adjustments are informed by formal and informal efforts to assess what her students are learning and to reflect on the progress of the project.
Sharing stories like this, "warts and all", provides an honest and empowering insight into the way teachers can shape and improve their classroom practice.

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Similarly, the experiences of the New Zealand eFellows over the past four years provides some in-depth insights into ways in which ICT can contribute in powerful ways to achieving the goals and outcomes for learners. Each of the eFellows have used an action-research process to reflect on and document the research focus that they had for the year of their fellowship.

Stories like this encourage me with what we're doing here in Perak, and I look forward to similar stories being shared from among the teachers in this programme.

March 19, 2007

Virtual Schooling Community

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I've finally decided to begin my own community in Ning, and have chosen the theme of Virtual Schooling which is an area that I've had a particular interest in since the early 1990s when I worked alongside the CANTAtech cluster. I'm impressed so far with Ning's features and usability - I've easily been able to include the RSS feed from Michael Barbour's Virtual High School Meanderings for instance.

Anyone with an interest in this area is welcome to share their thoughts and experiences! Please pass it on to others who may be interested.

March 18, 2007

Broadband and Business

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I've just listened to an interesting programme on Radio New Zealand's "Insight" programme titled "Business and Broadband". I'd recommend it to anyone who is interested in the current situation regarding New Zealand's broadband connectivity.

Compared with other countries in the world, New Zealand is definitely behind the eight-ball in terms of the bandwidth available to us. This is exacerbated in rural areas where weather conditions, electric fences and simple geography make the issue of connectivity even more of a problem. As a result, the ability of New Zealand businesses to participate in what Thomas Friedman calls the 'flat world' is becoming increasingly limited.

There are some developments that provide a sense of light at the end of the tunnel, in particular, the development of urban fibre networks in several major centres supported by funding from the Broadband Challenge, and the development of the KAREN network, providing a !0Gb high speed backbone across the whole if New Zealand.

These and other issues and ideas are canvassed in the documentary which is available to download as a podcast from Radio New Zealand's website at http://www.radionz.co.nz/podcasts/insight.rss

January 20, 2006

The Nodal Network

Blog entry
I was re-reading some of George Siemens ideas on Learning as Network Creation and his theory of connectivism recently and was struck by the quotes below:

    "The beauty of networks is their inherent simplicity. A network requires at minimum two elements: nodes and connections. Nodes carry different names in other disciplines (vertices, elements, or entities). Regardless of name, a node is any element that can be connected to any other element. A connection is any type of link between nodes. "

    "Nodes are characterized by a general sense of autonomy. A node may exist within a network, even if it is not strongly connected. Each node has the capacity to function in its own manner. The network itself is the aggregation of nodes, but can only exert limited influence on the nature of each node in the network."

    "Networks can combine to form still larger networks (each node in a larger network can be a network of nodes itself). A community, for example is a rich learning network of individuals who in themselves are completed learning networks."

These statements are entirely consistent with ideas that I??ve tried to incorporate into work I??ve been doing over the past few years, and the idea I??ve described as ??the Nodal Network?? which I promote as an alternative way of thinking about how our education system may be structured and operate in the future.