Sunday, 25 September 2011

King Penguin Sarah

Yo, check out the Voki that I created. Looking forward to telling everyone more during our seminar presentations.

                                                

Wednesday, 21 September 2011

audacious, dude

Learned a little about using the audio program Audacity yesterday. It's a nice little program, straightforward and a bit of fun to use. Can't say I'd spend a whole lot of time manipulating a tune (or using this program for any reason really) for use in the English classroom when if I wanted sound I'd probably just play a track straight up BUT it did get me thinking ..... We hear a lot, for obvious and well-founded reasons, about the benefits of using visual aids to improve learning, but what of hearing aids (which is what what you get when you have unprotected phone sex. Thanks for that one, Duncan.)? It would be interesting to see what the research says about the use of audio for improving retention of new knowledge, engagement with content, and its role in developing understanding.

Someone look that up for me will you?

Monday, 19 September 2011

internet resources

I really like what Mad Dog Mallorie has to say about both the teacher and student using internet-based resources in the History classroom, and the ways in which these resources can enhance students experiences and understandings of events and ideas. The possibilities spread far beyond the History classroom. For example: English students might watch Barack Obama's inauguration speech as a powerful example of persuasive language, and be able to sense the impact of the speech far better than a dry reading in class would ever allow; ESL students can watch or search for video of speakers with different Australian accents in order to better understand social and geographical variations in Australian-English, a far better option than a teacher's poor attempts at impersonating Bill Hunter or Ernie Dingo; and Music students can watch and listen to all manner of amazing clips, like this incredible improv from Wynton Marsalis, in order to analyse, compare or simply appreciate.


Given all of this, I think it's worth thinking about what 'experiential learning' or 'immersive education' might look like in twenty years as we move from not just passively receiving or locating these resources to manipulating them and participating in their creation. Check out the latest Horizon Report, below, to get you excited about the possibilities!!

Friday, 16 September 2011

ICT and the VELS

"Through the selection and application of appropriate equipment, techniques and procedures, students learn to process data and information to create solutions to problems and information products that demonstrate their knowledge and understandings of the concepts, issues, relationships and processes related to all areas of learning" (Department of Education and Early Childhood Development (2009). Information and Communications Technology, Department of Education and Early Childhood Development: Canberra)


This statement is central to the (sometimes quite complex) relationship between education and ICT, and the manner in which teachers are planning for and students are engaging with ICT in the classroom. It anticipates that students will – must? – learn to employ digital technologies as tools with which to build and demonstrate their learning. It’s looks really quite simple. The statement does not come without one primary source of controversy, however: are teachers (and students to a degree) focused on promoting deep learning through the use of these tools or are they more interested in promoting efficiency of action and ease of delivery?


David Nettelbeck states that “[teachers] tend to think that because computers can do amazing things, they must be good. Some teachers are easily seduced by the 'wow' factor, the more attractive presentations and the speed with which students can now do simple tasks, but we rarely stop to ask whether this new technology will actually encourage complex, critical, creative thinking. Are students also being seduced by the glamour or are their higher order thinking skills actually being challenged? (Nettelbeck, D. (2002). English in Australia, Vol. 134, pp78-85).


Nettelbeck’s concerns are real and valid. We must not ask that students simply use the tools available to present and process data in better, faster, prettier ways. Digital technologies provide great affordances, but the affordance that should be number one on our list is the opportunity for improved student learning.

Take the example of the book trailer task that I have set for the students in my Year 8 English classes (see previous post). This task directly responds to the requirements in the VELS statement quoted above: students are to learn, through the application of “appropriate equipment, techniques and procedures” (in this case: storyboarding; Windows MediaPlayer and Powerpoint; videorecorders etc), how to “create information products that demonstrate their knowledge and understanding of the concepts, issues, relationships and processes” related to this area of study in their English course.

I would argue that with this task, and through their use of digital technologies as tools, the students are being encouraged to develop ‘complex, critical, creative thinking’, and have been engaged in a number of higher order thinking skills. Yes, this task requires that students learn and demonstrate comprehension of the novel (i.e. through recall and description of the characters, plot events, settings, and relationships). But they are also being asked to evaluate the book (in order to pitch it effectively in their trailer), identify the themes (in order to give their trailer an overarching idea), analyse the characters’ relationships, evaluate and make choices about the most important elements or themes of the book (in order to know what to include and omit in their book trailers) and, of course, they are being asked to create an original product in order to synthesise their understandings.

Taxonomy that! 

Problem is, student work revolving around ICT isn’t always organised in this way. Certainly, the student work I have set hasn’t always been organised in this way. Often, I have seen (or planned) lessons where ICT has been utilised by teachers to have students respond to lower order thinking skills in a whizz bang way. Or where students have never explored the higher order questions asked of them because of their wonderment with answering the simple questions in the most complex, overdone way possible (because they can, and because many students – just like many adults – can’t help themselves when let loose with a search engine and an unlimited download capacity).

Finally, then (for today's post anyway) it must be remembered, I think, that while, yes, we have some great tools at hand for using in the classroom, these tools must not be viewed merely as jumped-up textbooks, or expensive Filofaxes. Rather teachers must be able to see how they  can be used to enable deeper learning and greater engagement. As Deborah Cohen puts it: “to truly harness what technology has to offer to education…teachers need to understand and utilise the new evolving languages (written, spoken and visual), technology's capacity for engagement and creativity, [and] its multi-dimensional modes of delivery” (Cohen, (2007). ‘Cyberspace communication: the virtual worlds of teenagers’. In Idiom, Vol. 43(2), pp39-43).

The usual problem

The familiar knock of technological difficulties has been heard at my door this week. Problems abound, grievances continue, and immense frustration ensues. It's enough to make you wanna put an iPad in a blender.

And if you like that  - which I know you did - check out the magic the good doctor weaves with Justin Bieber. Yes, I wore a white shirt. Yes, I ordered spaghetti.

Tuesday, 6 September 2011

The block round

Some of the interesting ICT things I did with my English classes during the block:
(1) while I was away sick, my English mentor got the kids started on making (hard-copy) posters about the themes present in the text we are studying. When I got back, I decided to have the students spend a lesson on reapplying and repeating those skills using Glogster. It was an interesting experiment, in a way, to see how the students responded to the different modes of creation. Many of the students who were reluctant to put together a hard-copy poster, and to fulfil the requirements of the task, were really excited to put together a Glog and were very happy to include quotes, images, examples and ideas. Certainly it was a more exciting task to my mind, and I would have responded as the students did, I think. Particularly for those of us who are not good at drawing etc., a program like a Glog is great as you can be creative, but by using and manipulating others' work.
(2) I have set an assessment task for the students to create a book trailer in response to the text we are reading. This is a quite a complex task, I think, in that it calls for students to collaborate, create, evaluate, and analyse. Hopefully though, the mode of presentation (and the fact that I have developed very clear criteria for the students) will encourage students to be excited and focused about this task. Looking forward to seeing the end results!