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Languages Teachers Unite! Teaching Languages in a Global Context.

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This post is an experiment. I hope, as a result of this experiment, that two things will happen.

  1. A bunch of wonderful Languages teachers from all over the world will connect and swap ideas.
  2. We can experiment with the use of Voice thread and Audio Boo to defy Time differences

On Friday, I will be speaking to and working with the languages teachers who are attending the Lutheran Languages Day.  During that day I am hoping to inspire them to get connected. To use the network we all love to find teachers from all over the world.  If the can do that they can connect their classrooms with those of classrooms in the countryside of Australia, to classrooms where their target  language is spoken natively and to people who will help engage their students in authentic conversations.

I know that many of you have lots of followers who are language teachers. So, I was wondering if I might be able to get some help :) – imagine the smiley batting it’s eyelids.  Where every you are in the world perhaps you’d like to take part in one (or all of the below activities )

    1. If you’re a languages teacher, maybe you’d like to add your details to this Google Doc? That way I can help the South Aussie teachers to connect with you and vice versa. If you’re a South Aussie Languages teacher tweeter… ADD yourself too! :)
    2. Get yourself a Voice thread account and join in with experiment 1.  I’d love to see how many teachers from different countries / speaking different languages I can get to say hello on this Voicethread.  You’ll need to sign up and then you can comment and say g’day in your own language/ dialect ! Even if that’s in English from America, Canada, UK, Australia… It’ll be interesting to see where it travels :)   http://voicethread.com/share/3353913/
    3. Join Audioboo.com and continue my conversation with me!  http://audioboo.fm/boos/945350-languages-test-bonjour  I’ve left an audio boo comment with an idea in it.  But, the great thing about Audio boo is it will tell us where you are geographically.  Adda comment under mine. Just say g’day in your own (or a language you teach) and let’s see how far around the world we can take the conversation :)  listen to ‘Languages test! Bonjour!’ on Audioboo

I can’t wait to see if this works! :)

Tagged In: Audioboo, Australia, Canada, Classroom, Education, Google Doc, Teacher, United States | Posted on September 4th, 2012 | 2 Comments

New Growth on an old branch.... Some rights reserved by LifeSupercharger

I don’t want to ‘change’ the world anymore… I want to help ‘grow’ it instead.

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ON #CEGSA2012 – KEY LEARNING NUMBER 2…

…I told you that there would be more than one post! ;)

Some rights reserved by LifeSupercharger : http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5149/5697203141_1e21f8c871.jpg

One of the main reasons I write this blog is to share insights into how my practice has changed over the years.  I recently commented on @lordfolland’s blog, to me every educator is a thought Leader.  It’s our job to be so. When we share those thoughts, there’s a chance that thinking will accelerate learning amongst the network and great things will happen.

Up until recently, i’ve always thought of those ‘great things’ as change. I have been frustrated, on more than one occasion, with situations in which change (that I see as much needed change) has been resisted.  I’ve done so without thinking about the semantics of my expectations.  The second most powerful thing I learnt at CEGSA2012 was quite philosophical and would probably make @equilibrium (fab South Aussie teacher coach) and my own coach from the UK at BLC International say “duh!… of course!”.

I don’t, natively, come from a land down under.  I was born, trained and spent most of my career up in the UK.  In the UK teaching is a very different world to that of Australia.  Teaching there, is in my opinion, far more pressured because it’s far more measured, assessed, graded, scrutinised – yes that’s the teaching not the kids….  I’ve posted here about how we’ve are observed every year and graded.  How those grades go on our record and inform our professional development etc.  That means that it’s much easier for leadership to demand things happen.  The government demand that teachers use ICT in their lessons and we are graded on how well we do so.  Change has always been forced upon me my whole career and I’ve had to pick apart the “suggestion” and make it work to enhance learning and teaching, even when it’s seemed impossible!  Perhaps that was the training I needed to help me ‘tweek and re-purpose technology’ as I describe in my about.me profile. I’ve tried to make the best of things (Very British).

Teaching here doesn’t feel like that (phew)… but I still carry the expectation of leadership. How it can, and possibly should, insist on change to guide and inform continued professional development.  That’s (partly) why I feel sick to the stomach when someone tells me that they’re not interested because they’re retiring in x years, or they don’t have time…. because those excuses would never be tolerated in the UK. if you said something like that to a senior manager in a school in the UK they’d seriously question your professionality…  Sounds harsh I know… and it IS infuriating to work like that… it’s also challenging and that can be a very positive thing.

Needless to say, change has never been an option.  It’s something that I am used to having thrust upon me. I guess I brought that mind set with me.  Perhaps, this is what I might have been thinking….

Change is not an option! It has to happen! How else can education be relevant, effective and meaningful for our kids?  How else can we produce the “thought leaders of the future”                                                                             yada, yada, yada,

I still believe in the revolution, that we should #startamovement. How else can all we ‘thought leaders’  (that’s you too by the way.. yes you, reading this) band together, accelerate our learning and pave the way? What I hadn’t realised was …. I was using the wrong language.

It was @edusum  who mentioned something that she had heard/learnt during ISTE this year.  She pointed out to me that the word change can infer that the thing you’re currently doing is in some way incorrect.  That if you use the word ‘change’, ears can hear criticism.  That the people you are trying to lead, to inspire to move in a new direction might hear a criticism, rather than a shared call to action.  I’d never considered that word like that.  I wish I had of done sooner.  Language, and its power, has always fascinated me and, do you know what, She really opened my eyes… She’s totally right.

I’ve been in situations during my career where I have spent ages creating curriculum documents only to have an advisor come in and “change” things….  How upsetting!  How dare they!  …..

ahhhh…. *penny drops*

So…  if we go into schools, our schools and we ask for change what message are sending?  Are we saying everything you’ve been doing for the past 30 years is WRONG! STOP THAT! I KNOW BETTER!  ….  their reaction to that?   …. is that going to help?

“Tweak to Transform”

Mr Bernard O’Connell – St Thomas Aquinas School, Birmingham

This was the motto of a Deputy Headteacher at a school I worked at in 2006.  I always had deep respect for this senior manager… he got it…. I forgot to follow his example.

In truth, it’s growth we want… It’s not that we’re doing things wrong… it’s that we need to build upon what we’re doing, to grow with the world we live in.  During this conversation @gcouros pointed out that we are more likely to inspire that transformation if we help our colleagues connect what they are already doing with that transformation.  I’m going to “change” (ironic eh?) my vocabulary.  From now on, my aim is to inspire growth instead :)

Let’s grow together South Australia! 

#CEGSA2012 has produced many growth ‘buds’ for me that I am excited to explore with my expanded network. I am sure it has for many of us.  In fact, I know it has.  Three days after the conference has ended, the hash tag #cegsa2012 is still going strong as we reflect upon, and digest, the inches we’ve grown over the past few days.   The challenge for all of us is to continue that growth well beyond #cegsa2012.  The conference twitter feed already has members making suggestions for #cegsa2013.

Tweet 1

What if these students were able to tell stories about the progress they had achieved as learners as a direct result of the growth their teachers experienced, perserved with and actioned after the conference?  How amazing would that be?  That is, after all, what we’re all about!  We’ve built a new, expanding network to save us time (because there never is enough of it), to encourage us, to support us.  Don’t forget @gcouros‘ offer to retweet your requests to his 15,541 (and growing!) followers.  Surely we can not fail!?

Sardines steer the ship!

Thanks Tony Bryant for that lovely metaphor

If you consider that metaphorical ship to be South Australia’s Education system, we’d only need 15-20% of us to get the message to the helm…  Then, we can steer this ship. Together.

So, I’m going to leave you with a final thought (Jerry Springer Style) and I’d love to hear your answers.

  • What buds of learning are you hoping to take forward this term?
  • Which direction are you swimming in now the conference is over? How can I/we help you?

 

Tagged In: Australia, Education, FACEBOOK, george corous, Learning, South Australia, Tony Bryant, Twitter | Posted on July 15th, 2012 | 5 Comments

TPACKMashup

Putting TPACK into Practice @CEGSA2012

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This afternoon I will be delivering the second of my sessions to the CEGSA State Conference.  Following on from yesterday’s discussion on what’s changed in the Aussie Classroom, we will be exploring how TPACK can help us plan lessons which enable us to:

 

National Professional Standard for Teachers (AUS) 3.4

and

National Professional Standard for Teachers (AUS) 2.6

As Easiteach Next Generation’s licensing agreement allows me to use the software on any Interactive device, this session will be delivered using Easiteach Next Generation.  A PDF of the notes used in the session is available for download from here.  This notes are shared as part of this post and, as such, are held under the same Creative Commons license (see the bottom of the post).

Useful Links From the Workshop

Our Collaborative Popplet!

All of the TTF PD training sessions are available from SCOOTLE or via the TTF site.  You will need to have access to SCOOTLE to view them. The lesson featured in today’s workshop was based on a Year 5 History Lesson.

TPACK – The Official Website

The Revised Blooms Taxonomy Wheel that’s great for sticking into your student’s books is available from this blog post.

The Year level Statements shown were from the Australian Curriculum Online

The History Images shown were taken from the online searchable catalogue of the National Library of Australia

The National Professional Standards for Teachers as a downloadable PDF.

Web Based Resources we Experimented With:

dipity logoDipity

 

audioboo logo

AudioBoo (Web) –   iPad  – Also available from Android Marketplace

 

VoicethreadVoicethread (web)  iPad

 

 Also try:

Popplet  (web)  (ipad)

 

The Popplet we used….

 

 

Tagged In: Australia, Creative Commons, Education, iPad, Technology | Posted on July 12th, 2012 | Comments Off

badgethumb

Got TPACK? – Meeting the TPACK Kings

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As part of my role as ICT Pedagogical Officer I was invited to a two day conference in Sydney so that all the institutions involved across Australia (and that’s about 40) could share what they’d been learning, discovering and doing, to help pre-service teachers and those who work with them gain a better understanding of the Australian Curriculum, the National Professional Standards for Teachers and the use of ICT in any classroom.

It was a fantastic two days celebrating both the significance and the success of a very ambitious project on a tight deadline. 12 months to change the world! – or at least long standing cultures in institutions across a very large continent. Those who had worked with us all (ESA, AITSL, ACARA, ACDE – ohh we had lots of acronyms) as well as those who had provided us with a framework to help us to explain the place of technology in the classroom were all in attendance.  We were even treated to 30 mins of the minister himself!

For some, the opportunity to be in the same room as the lead singer from Midnight Oil was pretty special.  Being from the U.K. I have to admit to having never heard of them… (ducks for cover) and so for me, the highlight was meeting, listening to and still learning from Mr Matt Khoeler and Mr Punya Mishra; the authors of the TPACK framework.  During the course of the last 10 months I’ve watched numerous Keynotes, Read TPACK Handbooks, written workshops, lectures and assessments which require knowledge of this wonderful framework and have begun to shape a lot of my own practices around its principals.  My husband was teasing me in the lead up to the conference, concerned that I would be a little star struck by the two academics  who were working – with us – in person – for the 2 days – but I managed to hold myself together ;)

From left - right: The minister, Mishra and Khoeler. All in the same room!

Challenging the job title I often give myself  of “Educational Technology Specialist” Mishra told us that  there is no such thing as educational technologies.  He urged us to stop looking for them, to stop limiting ourselves to specific things that are perceived to be “educational technologies” and to start being more creative. One of the main points of the TPACK framework is to be creative so, at our schools and institutions we shouldn’t limit ourselves to what has already been labelled as ‘educational technology’.

Upon reflection, that’s the kind of thing I do a lot of.  Take this post in which I use the advertising tool Aurasma, for instance.  That was never presented as an educational technology – in fact, I found out about it through a fabulous online marketing tweeter!  However, I saw an opportunity.  I asked myself “can i use this (Technology) to differentiate and scaffold (Pedagogy) a task on Romeo and Juliet (Content)? I quickly discovered the answer was YES and it was all very exciting!

Redefining things is what humans do.  It’s how we’ve progressed as far as we have.  I’m sure that the rock that a cave person decided to turn into an axe didn’t whisper it’s re-purpose into the cave person’s ear… we were creative and look where it got us!

To demonstrate this, Mishra asked the simple question “How many of you have ever emailed yourself?”.  When you consider the original purpose of emails  ”a method of exchanging digital messages from an author to one or more recipients” (Wikipedia)  and then you consider the idea of emailing yourself – for that purpose – you might begin to worry.

Well…. I email myself all the time.  Not because I’m lonely or and have only myself to chat to… but because I want to store a file somewhere online so that I can get to it anywhere, because I’m moving documents from one computer to the other and I don’t have my USB stick with me.  Thanks to Gmail’s generous server sizes, I have been able to re-purpose email so that it becomes a storage and file transfer service and suits my needs better.

Instead of looking for educational technologies, find a tool and ask yourself this question:

 How do the tools allow us to Break out of the box? (Mishra 2012)

Use your skills as a teacher to re-purpose the tool into something that is connected to the learning needs of the children (or adults) that you are working with.  Take your multi-function technological devices, your iPads, your smart phones etc and find new ways to make them function pedagogically to help students to understand and explore the content they need to learn.

Being Brave

Mishra also touched on the idea of control.  He discussed how aware he was that teachers worry that they will lose control if they let kids use these technologies.  That true loss of control would be when a student finds a theory that you didn’t know that you might  not be able to hold the title of “the sage on the stage”. Honestly, if I pit my knowledge of the things I’m trained in  - whether that be the art form of English or my skills in using technologies in the classroom against the plethora of knowledge available out there  on the internet – I KNOW that there will be someone out there with another view, another theory… In fact.. I WANT that to happen. 

As an English teacher, one of the things I love about my job is how many different ways a poem or a story can be read and interpreted.  (Yes… Mr R Barthes… You were right) Every time I teach the poems I am asked to teach each year I learn something new from my students.  They re-purpose that literature to fit their world.  We then have opportunities to discuss the different interpretations and come to some consensus together. My subject specialism has no right or wrong answer and I love that about it.   Those skills we practice, the ability to interpret, to analyse, to judge and way up information, to provide evidence (or reasons) why I feel that way about it, those are the same skills I use when I come across some new technology for my classroom.  

Just because I give my students ways to find “theories {i} didn’t know” doesn’t mean I can’t teach.  That I am not the expert in the room. Instead, in my view, it means that I am helping them to become “sages of their own stages” I am teaching them the skills needed to evaluate the vast amount of information that they have access to. To explore content, to make shared decisions and judgements so that they too can be creative and begin to re-purpose and shape the knowledge to fit the fast paced, ever changing world they’re growing up in.   In my experience, telling my students not to expect me to be the fountain of knowledge, in asking them not to expect me to give them the answer I believe to be true, we all get a lot more out of the task we’re undertaking together.

Breaking Things

I think the overwhelming message I took away with me was the idea of taking risks. That it is important to accept that you are a learner – that it’s even more important to share that knowledge with your students.  I have come across so many teachers who are terrified of doing that and I would urge them to consider this list of these “facebookisms”, shared with us by Matt and Punya.  They’ve certainly worked for them for me and, more importantly, for my students!

Facebookisms

'Facebookisms' from Mishra and Khoeler's presentation.

 1) Done is better than perfect –  Even Mary Poppins was only Practically Perfect in every way…  Give it a go and then get better at it each time.  If you don’t start somewhere how will you make progress?

2) Code wins arguments – I guess in Facebook’s case – having someone present the written code for the new idea will win arguments. As teachers i think we can have licence to interpret this as Just Do It (Nike style?) Don’t spend hours talking about it, just give it a go and see what happens!

3)Move fast and Break things – Obviously, not literally… that would be a OHS nightmare for all principals.  But being afraid of breaking things is a barrier.  I had a massive poster above my IWB for years – it told my students that I loved mistakes because by showing me they had made them they gave themselves the opportunity to show me how they’d learnt from them

4) The riskiest thing is to take no risks – Self explanatory I reckon ;)

5) This journey is 1% finished – Thank god for that! If i thought I was 100% cooked – that I knew everything I needed to know about everything I do then I’d stop doing it and find something else. How boring would that be? ;)

Now, for the most important question…. Do I win a “Got TPACK Badge”?  I desperately want one…!

Do you deserve one too?

Useful Links:

  • As many of the Tweets from the day that I could preserve in a Twub.
  • TPACK.org -The main site for everything TPACK.
  • Matt Bower’s Blog - He was typing away ever so fast  - a ‘super blogger’
  • iPads for education – See TPACK in Action.

Tagged In: Aurasma, Australia, Education, Educational technology, iPad, Learning, Midnight Oil, Mishra, TPACK, TTF | Posted on March 28th, 2012 | Comments Off

blogrecommendation

Recommendations for your Teacher PD Library

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As part of my role at Flinders I have been asked to look in to the Teacher Resource Center – that’s the library that pre-service teachers have their disposal to help them on prac.  As a result I’ve been reading through and requesting the purchase of a number of excellent books that I thought I might share with you here. I have to point out that these will be my opinions not the Unis! I’ll do a couple of texts a week and tell you what they are, why I like them and how they might help as you introduce more technologies into your curriculum.  Of course, I won’t be able to do so without mentioning National Professional Standards and potential curriculum links either ;)  In return, If you have these books and have opions to share about them please use the comments below to let us know your thoughts.  In addition, if you have any other recommendations that might be useful to us (both here at Flinders and to the readers of this blog) please share those too :)

The first two books I’m going to write about come from  Curriculum Press.edu.au and are in a series called  ”Action Stations“.  The books are accompanied by a companion website which you can access right now.  On it you’ll find sample pages of the content I’m about to describe that might help you to see what I do – an outstanding resource!

Digital Storytelling - Adam Brice and Richard LambertDigital Storytelling by Adam Price and Richard Lambert

This, in my opinion, is an incredibly practical book.  It contains a brief introduction to Digital Story Telling, explaining why and when you could use it in your classroom to enhance learning and teaching and also briefly addresses the question of how you can “make time” to do so.  The learning outcomes listed on Page 5 of the book are not linked to the Australian Curriculum but talk in more general terms.  They point out the “Social and Personal Learning” as well as the “Discipline based Skills” that can be met using this medium.

When you line up the process of Digital Storytelling to the Australian Curriculum you will find that it becomes an invaluable tool to meet several skills and content areas.  For example, it helps students to fulfil the ICT cross capability in any subject as well as the following areas I have quickly identified from the 4 Aus Curric subjects we are working with (there will be more I’m sure!):

English History Maths Science

Language:

Text structure and Organization

Any of the content descriptions involving: Understanding concepts about print and screen, including how books, film and simple digital textswork, and know some features of print, for example directionality
(This starts at F level)

 

History Skills:

Explanation and communication

Use the digital story as a way for your students to construct a “narrative about the past” Get them to incorporate source materials as you move up the years.

 

How about using the digital story to ask students to locate numeracy in everyday life? Here are some examples from students at Flinders University Share observations and ideasWouldn’t a digital story be great for that?

Literature

Responding to Literature.  

Digital story telling or VodCasts (as we sometimes like to call them at Seconary level) are another medium through which students can share what they have discovered about a text in an interesting way.

Use a range of communication forms (oral, graphic, written) and digital technologiesIt’s there in black and white… How easy would Digital Stories help you here? Ask your students to create stories of their knowledge of shape, algebra or any other concept.  These can then be evaluated by others in the group and used for Assessment for Learning. Ask students to create a story about how Science is affecting our every day lives

Literacy

Creating Texts

Students are asked to create texts using software right from the foundation stage, they then have to show the capacity to edit and modify these texts

Chronology, terms and concepts

Why not use the digital story to get things in order?  Have them explain their choices as they go.

 

Ask them to create a documentary explaining a scientific concept.

Cool Tools for the Connected Classroom by Anne Mirtschin

Now this book, in my opinion, is an even better resource as it spends just over 20 pages going through what it describes as the “Teacher Essentials”.  These are a fantastic place to start if you’re new or a little nervous about using ICT in the classroom.  These essentials include information on:

            • What does a 21st Century Classroom look, Feel and Sound like?
            • Getting Started with Cool Tools
            • Types of Tools: An overview of learning networks (some great info here about Twitter and PLNs)
            • The importance of Global Education and Global Projects
            • The Virtual Classroom
            • Digital Citizenship (V. Important!)
            • Copyright ( helping you to make sure you’re working inside the law)
            • Cyber Safety
            • Critical Literacies of the 21st Century

After these fantastic overviews and insights – which will really help build your confidence in operating in the world we really need to  in our classrooms you are given  a further 4 chapters on tools.  There are plenty of them, all free and available online and they come with lesson ideas ready prepared!  They are divided into sections such as Tools for Connecting, Tools for Communicating, Tools for Creating and Assessment. Each section pointing you at new tools to help you achieve each area.  Included are lessons and tips which involve tools like:

  • Wikis
  • Voicethread
  • Slideshare
  • Blogs
  • Blabberize
  • Bubbk.us
  • Online Polling
  • Wordle and
  • Ellumiate

A really fantastic resource for someone who is new to using educational technology in their classroom, wants to learn more about how to do safely or is looking for ideas to get those tools to work effectively in their classroom.

 

Tagged In: Adam Price, Australia, Curriculum, Digital storytelling, Education, Flinders University, Professional development | Posted on February 22nd, 2012 | 1 Comment

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