Educating the Dragon






         A learning journey with no fixed abode

May 30, 2007

Edcast 2:Understanding Digital Kids Part 2

 Understanding Digital Kids Part 2

(if it will not play or plays double speed try right clicking and Save Target As- apologies for this a technical problem I can’t seem to fix at this time)

Recorded: on Thursday, 17 May at Napier War Memorial Conference Centre, New Zealand.

516P86YK7KL._SS500_ Edcast 2:Understanding Digital Kids Part 2

Bio:

Ian Jukes is the Director of the InfoSavvy Group, an international consulting group that provides leadership and program development in the areas of assessment and evaluation, strategic alignment, curriculum design and publication, professional development, planning, change management, hardware and software acquisition, information services, customized research, media services, and on-line training as well as conference keynotes and workshop presentations.

Think on these as you listen:

Describe a day in the life of a student when 21st Century skills are real and rigorously in place for all students, what does learning look like and  how is it different to how learning in a traditional classroom is today?          

Describe how a teachers role would be different when 21st Century skills are real and rigorously in place for all kids, what does teaching look like and  how is it different to how to traditional teaching today?  

Links:

Click handouts for this presentation

http://www.lecturemanagement.com/speakers/mccain_ted.htm
Funny photos

The Committed Sardine - http://www.ianjukes.com

Ian Jukes - Presentations - http://www.thecommittedsardine.net

www.pbs.org – inside the teenage brain

George Lucas Educational Foundation

Producers of Edcast:

Simon Evans -email

Louise von Randow

Copyright?!

Filed under: Uncategorized — Dragon09 @ 12:17 pm

Thank you Sheryl for pointing me in the right direction with regard to copyright. This little video is informative and highly entertaining at the same time. A wonderful educational video for our Digital Age. Watch, learn and smile- all at the same time! Multi-tasking for a guy! 

May 29, 2007

Fear

Filed under: Dragon09, Durff, Ted McCain, Uncategorized, classroom management, communication, jukes — Dragon09 @ 11:55 am

 The fear of what could go wrong can’t stop me from doing what’s right…
Chris Lehman’s interview with Steve Hargadon.

Having just read Durff’s blog about this subject i was compelled to share my trying something new each week.Mr Hawkins2- Character Creation

When I listended to Ian Jukes last week he shared what Ted McCain was up to. Teaching through a project based curriculum. He wears different ‘Character’ hats to present challenges and projects to his class…. Well I thought I’d give it a go.

My class were due to start a house design and model project for technology so I entered with my hat with a “C” on it for the character and the name ‘Ted Hawkins’. Now Mr HMr Hawkins-Character Creationawkins is a developer who has bought two field on the outskirts of town and has divided it up into 20 sections for development. I divided the class into teams who are assigned to research, design and model their ‘Designer home’ for Ted to consider for his development. Now my kids are 7 and 8, they love Ted even if he is mean and project focused. I feel that even doing this for a just a week the children are beginning to apply themselves in an independent manner that surprised me for such a short period of time. Mr Evans the teacher is still around but he is only allowed to ask the teams questions and is not allowed to answer them because, as far as this project goes: “Mr Evans knows nothing and Mr Hawkins, well, he knows everything!”

My kids eagerly await the arrival of Mr Hawkins… they have lots of questions to ask him!

May 28, 2007

What a fascinating day!

Today was the day of Peter Holmes’ visit. Now Peter the teaching principal of Otford primary school, Otford being about a hour outside of Sydney as you can see in the picture. It is good to know that there ARE principals out there who ‘get it’. He shared a podcast with pictures that his year 5/6 kids have done, I want to encourage him to post it on Teachertube because it worth looking at. In fact it would be well worth viewing for classes around the world to follow the same format as his class, we could really get a comparision resouce going. Globally- How cool would that be?

I also hope that he gets a chance to share, by way of commenting here, some of the things he was able to  What a fascinating day! glean from his time a Peterhead. All I’d like to say is a huge thank you to Chrissy for her tireless work today and inputting into our discussions about Technology in school today. As always your contribution is invaluable and I appreciate you getting yourself into school for me today. Gush, gush.- And to Voyagers who sat beautifully through a chaotic session with my class today

Back to MY learning…. I am so grateful for what is essentially unlimited internet access for my class. The way my school is organised we have access to all online learning tools and we appreciated as professionals to make professional decisions about the online learning environment of our kids.
Australia, it would appear has huge limitations placed upon school access to the internet. Peter shared a great analogy with me today which illustrates to point beautifully:

“What happens when a couple of kids while playing in the part come across a discarded playboy magazine? Age dependent, obviously, (but we’re primary trained and so our minds think of our own kids in our class) the kids would probably flick through, have a giggle and, if we have brought them up right, either discard it or tell someone. Are we going to issue a blanket ban on kids going to the park on the off chance that they will stumble across a discarded magazine as they play? Of course not, neither should we blanket ban access to the internet, we should educate kids to discern for themselves what is appropriate and what is not, we’re in the business of education, let’s educate.”

Another discussion we had, or was part of the original one?… either way we were talking about the integration of technology in the classroom setting. Why use technology? We discussed how kids today do expect a educational experience to have ‘all the bells and whistles’ and how computers and their adages provide that level of engagement and interest that is required for the digital generation. Kids ‘powering down’ when they come to school may or may not be an overstatement but the reality remains that child level of engagement with technology at home, burning the CD, downloading the music, IM-ing their friends, needs to matched with the engagement on an educational level, the wiki, the blog, the digital story. Schools have access now to new technologies. Peter’s analogy was this:

“He found it interesting that we have a dishwasher in the staffroom, coming from a small 3 teacher school there is no need for one, but to think that if you had one and then expect someone to stand for 30 minutes, run a bowl of hot water and do them by hand is such a waste of a fabulous resource, of course, you’d use the dishwasher! To not would be dumb! So why are we as classroom teachers shying away from technology when its sitting right there, available to enrich, enhance and extend our kids learning?”

I learnt a lot from Peter’s visit. Much of it I am still processing and will be talking to my Principal and Senior management about where education sits with the flattening world.

Thanks Peter.

May 23, 2007

Questions of School 2.0

We had a teacher training afternoon with Ann Giles the AtoL  guru for our school yesterday afternoon. We talked about what Assessment for Learning looked like for reading and I found it quite very informative.

 

But with my web 2.0 hat on I was most interested on her report back from the International Principal’s Conference where Mark Trotsky was speaking. She filled us in a bit and then we brained stormed (or is it mind map?) some questions that we as a staff need to address. If you have thoughts about any of these please feel free to comment.

What about oral language, if the visual cortex is so much larger?DSC03611[1]

How do we manage the handling of the tools (cellphones, ipods, etc) within the school?

How are we to pay for it?

How much can we have?

How often can we access it?

How much control should students have?

Who is going to help us realise the possibilities?

What is relevant to our students?

What structures/ framework/ guidelines need to be in place?

 

Some thoughtful questions which are worth a longer discussion I feel.

 

Thoughts anyone?

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