Thursday, 28 May 2015

Learning From Others Online

I've chatted with a few people about the power of Twitter as an ongoing personalised PD platform, and the incredible network of inspiring educators you can connect & share with on there.

I've compiled an annotated list of resources to help you get started if it's something you're keen to explore.

Find the list here.

Thursday, 12 March 2015

"Dear Web User, Please Upgrade Your Browser."

I just wrote a post of my own about customising your web browser.  This link here goes into far more eloquent detail than I could attempt to rehash.  Lots of great tips about extensions & how to make them work for you.

Dear Web User: Please Upgrade Your Browser

Customised Technology Part II - Your Browser

I wrote a post last week on some web-based tools to help you tie a digital learning environment together and provide some structure and continuity to the things you can do in your classroom with technology.

Today we're going to look at getting the web browser on your computer set up so that it works like your digital butler, not like a fast-food drive-thru attendant.
By that, I mean your browser should remember the things you like, where you like to store things, and how to get you where you need to go, rather than being there simply to serve you in quick grabs.  Continuity, personalisation.

To get yourself started, I'd recommend picking a browser, and sticking with it.  If you're using Windows, Firefox or Chrome are both fast, reliable, secure, and have active collections of extensions to give you some extra tricks.  If you're using a Mac, Safari's an option for that list too.  I've missed Internet Explorer from that list because it simply doesn't measure up.

Personalise It!

Bookmarks & Shortcuts
Use the Bookmarks or Favourites Toolbar at the top of the browser!  If you've got it always visible, it can be a simple quick launch to the things you might need to visit regularly.  Things like your DoE Portal, YouTube, your online account spaces (if you're using something like Padlet, Canva, or an online bookmarking site like Bitly, Diigo, Delicious, or Annotary) all belong here, because you want to access them instantly and easily.  They're your online spaces.  Carve yourself a shortcut to them.

Buttons
Sometimes those shortcuts and links on your bookmarks toolbar can serve a functional purpose as well.  The online bookmarking tools all have toolbar buttons to help you add websites to your collection with one click.

An incredibly useful one is Viewpure's "Purify" button.  Drag it from Viewpure to your toolbar, open a video on YouTube then click the button.  It'll show your video without ads or related videos.

Leave it OPEN

Always Online.  A new tab is like clean window on the world, and you don't lose where you've been.

Ultimately, your tech should work for you, rather than the other way around.  Taking control & customising it helps you to really take the reins, turning it into a powerful digital assistant.

Launching a Class Blog

It sounds like a big deal, but it's not.

It sounds like it'll require a ton of new skills to learn, but it won't.

Every class I walk past is already doing a pile of things that could very easily move on to a class blog, meaning the habits & behaviours to support it already exist.

The key things to remember before you even begin to think about the tools & techniques are the simple ones that come naturally to us as educators.

People, and communication.

With that as our focus, where to begin?  The platform's easy - both major blog platforms (Blogger and Wordpress) work more or less the same way, and they're free to join.  If you've ever written text on a computer before, you've already learned the controls.  We can catch up after school early in the term and lock it down in a few minutes.  We'll look at organisation in a minute, but let's look at the more important part first.

People.

This blog can become the online extension of your classroom.  It has the power to eliminate that single most frustrating conversation between children and their parents - "what did you do at school today?" "...nothing."
It's a place where you can document classroom activity, and share ideas & resources with your students.  It's also (and probably more importantly) somewhere to allow students to interact online.  This is important because they are going to interact online anyway.  If their first experience of it is lying about their age around Year 4 to create a Facebook account, we've all seen how well that usually turns out.
What if their first experience of it was documenting a science project in Kindy?  A wise voice guiding how they word their posts together?  An actual face-to-face conversation about how to choose photos to accompany the post?  Photos that show what they'd created, rather than just what the kids themselves look like?  Opportunities to share their own little voices, but in a supervised, moderated way that contributes to an online community that's very deliberately positive, constructive, and purposeful?  How are those children going to approach independent online activity as they get older?  Will they be as hot-headed and haphazard as the first group of kids I described?

This is where they need structure and guidance.  Being social and interactive in electronic places is 99.9% ethics, critical thinking & social skills.  What's left is the technology.  Ignore it, it gets easier to use all the time.  This post here by educator Kim Cofino when she was the Digital Literacies Facilitator at the International School of Bangkok is a brilliant starting point for some guidelines for blog use in schools - both for posting and commenting.  Take it, share it, tip your hat to Kim, and modify it to best suit your school and your class.

Communication.

Think about the amount of communication you do daily.  Communication with your students - verbally, visually, and through sharing.  Communication with parents.  Pragmatic stuff, purpose-driven stuff, interesting stuff, fun stuff.  Why not bring that all to one central channel?  Organise what you post into little categories to keep it neat, but otherwise it's a one-stop shop.  It'll time and date stamp everything for you, which makes record keeping much easier.

The best place to begin is to decide on how you want the people around you to communicate.  Pick something that you can do by habit.  Maybe you'll post your class plan for the following day with relevant materials linked every afternoon so kids and parents can be prepared every day.  Maybe you'll take some time at the end of every week to reflect on what you've learned as a class.  Maybe you'll share & follow an important news story each week, and open it to discussion.
Also pick a project to document.  Something that can evolve over time, and that will benefit from being visible.  Growing something in science?  Building something in Art?  Shaping & forming narrative?

At the end of the day, what this can do for you is make the learning in your class visible, enable communication & collaboration, and save you time.  The trick is using it to replace things you're already doing, rather than add them on top.

Attach Yourself to People, Not Apps

A quick share today.

I've chatted a little bit with the staff I'm working with directly about the power and importance of building a professional network online.  It broadens and diversifies the expertise you can access, and is a brilliant way to find colleagues with similar professional interests worldwide.

Rebekah Madrid (@ndbekah) from the Yokohama International School posted a wonderful little article this week about the importance of focusing on those human connections, not the apps we use in the between-spaces.

If you missed it in-line above, here's the link.

Thursday, 26 February 2015

Customised Technology

Having a few tools up your sleeve that let you make something useful or set something up to use in your classroom with very little effort & fuss makes learning tech integration a much more rewarding experience.  The Internet is also getting better at this by the day.
The best thing about this is that you're no longer limited to the amount of software you can have installed on your computer.

Shared Digital Pinup Board

Padlet allows you to set up a board online that can be as private or as open as you like.  It's also easy to switch editing access off and on if you want to run class contributions to a time limit.  It'll take text, images, and links.  Really nice way to brainstorm & gather ideas quickly.

Easy Graphic Design Studio

Borders & clipart as we know them in Word & Publisher simply do not exist in the contemporary graphic design we see everywhere outside of the classroom.
Canva is a brilliant simple solution.  Copyright free image search, beautiful templates, classy contemporary fonts, and an extensive library of shapes & elements to help you make classroom resources that look like they have a design budget.
There's also the Canva Design School blog - practical, bite-sized lessons on how to set up, organise & lay out your own designs.

Today's Always Up-to-Date Atlas

Google has recently made their pro version of Google Earth free (it used to be $400!).  It allows you to  mark up, bookmark, and annotate a perpetually updated globe that works from solar system scale all the way down to building-level maps.

Thursday, 12 February 2015

Managing Classroom Tech

There's a few basic tricks you can keep up your sleeve in the classroom management space when working with mobile tech in students' hands.  They're all really useful for smoothing out your own routines, and for building some positive habits in the kids that they can carry from year to year, and build a really positive, constructive culture of tech use across the entire school.


Purpose

Kids of this generation take connected, handheld tech for granted, the same way we look at the TV or the telephone.  Every single student in your school was born after Facebook launched.  Tech is part of the furniture for them.  Treat it like this in the classroom.

It's not "History with iPads," it's history.  It's not "Literacy with iPads," it's literacy.  It's not.. you get the idea.

We can safely assume that our classrooms are not the first places our students have laid their hands on a digital device of some kind.  We can probably also take a punt that in most cases they've not been expected to use technology for a constructive, rigorous purpose outside of our classrooms.
 For lack of a more elegant way of saying it, technology in our classrooms needs to be put in its place.  Keep that purpose right out front.


Attention

The big one.  Colourful interactive screens are brilliant at grabbing kids' attention, and they have a way of overriding kids' own self-control & willpower.  The simple technique?

Lids closed.

Break your lesson down into sections (the way you would anyway), and when you need all their faces pointed in the same direction at the same time, get them to close their device cases.  Lids down on laptops, cases closed on tablets.  They won't lose anything, and they won't be tempted.  You can also build in some gradual release with older kids & ask them to manage their own attention with a "hands off, eyes up" approach to get them to take charge of their own attention.

Continuity

Since you've got a lot of iPads here, you need to do some workarounds in order to get the same kind of continuity you could expect from a more traditional networked computers scenario.  The simplest way to work around this is to always have the same kids go back to the same devices.  Class list, iPad number next to each student's name, and you immediately have the capacity for kids to pick up where they left off.

The other side to this is accountability.  Apps get moved around, folders get renamed or the background gets changed?  Check your lists.  Someone's work gets deleted?  Check your lists.  Something untoward ends up in the search history?  Check your lists.


Transparency

It sounds small and petty, but the angle at which a student's device sits on their desk makes a massive difference to how your whole school culture for learning technology develops.

An iPads is not a laptop.

The whole thing happens on the screen.  From a purely physical perspective looking only at balance and ergonomics, they don't work very well propped up like laptop screens.  Flip the case around to that shallow angle, and you'll get a much better productive flow.

Where it impacts culture is transparency.  A screen propped up like a laptop is a visual barrier.  Screens laid on a shallow angle are much more open.  If the kids form this habit from a young age and it's understood that open & transparent are how we do things at school, you expose yourselves to far fewer problems that arise as a result of secrecy in digital spaces as the kids get older.