Thursday 27 October 2016

uLearn: Personal Reflection

What?
As you can see below, I have recently attended the uLearn Conference in Rotorua. This was a huge affair, with so much to take in and process. Most of the workshops I chose related to Google Sites because it is a part of G Suite that I have never used much before, meaning that I sometimes have difficulty answering some questions from students when they are working on their ePortfolios. I have always found sites to be extremely clunky, which is what put me off learning more.

So what?
I am now much confident about using Google Sites. I was greatly impressed with the work done by Marc Rowlinson at Northcross Intermediate.  He runs a 1:1 digital class, where his touchpoint is a Google Site. I missed the first 10 mins due to there being no buses to get to the venue, which meant I missed how his website is structured - I'm guessing part private, part public.  The students get assignments/tasks on pages, they then upload their progress/questions /final products to the page and then also give each other high-quality feedback. I would love to know more so that I can adapt this for myself.  I particularly loved it because students were demonstrating high-level thinking and were really engaged and creative. They had a variety of devices and found a variety of apps and websites to do what they wanted to do.

Post on Marc's workshop

I also loved my first breakout, where I started to learn to code a website. I absolutely loved it, and am hoping I'll learn more at my Mindlab course, which begins next week. My main decision is to try and figure out how to use this knowledge in a practical way (ie. a purposeful use for it).

Post on coding your first website

Now what?
I would love to spend some time in Marc's class. If this is not possible, I will endeavour to pester him with emails, asking my multitude of questions.

Friday 7 October 2016

uLearn Keynote 4: Karen Spencer

Blog post copied below

“One should never bring a knife to a gun fight, nor a cookie cutter to a complex adaptive system.” — Jarche, (2013)
Educators are designers of learning. Architects of experiences. Creators of discovery. We spend our careers searching for the best way to solve the wonderful problem of how to help young people learn and grow and thrive. It is second nature to seek solutions and to do so at a fair clip! Building planes while they fly is our speciality.
And therein lies the fundamental conundrum for the modern educator.
For what we are increasingly coming to understand, through contemporary educational research related to learner-centred experiences, is that there are no swift solutions, no silver bullets and no quick fix solutions.
And there never will be.
Darn it.

To be adaptive is ‘future-focused’
8118941577_788f8969a8_zGilbert and Bull (2015) remind us that if we want to create learner-responsive experiences, and also foster flexibility and ‘processing power’ so our young people can generate their own solutions, we also need to be ready to work in this way; “a future-oriented education system must be led by teachers who are adaptive, intellectual adults, not “consumers” of ideas, or followers of models and templates developed by others” (p. 3).
The ability to adapt our expertise is one of the capabilities that defines educational fluency. Such educators “tend to spend a greater proportion of their solution time trying to understand the problem to be solved as opposed to trying out different solutions” (Hattie, 2011, p. 6).
As educators, when we identify unexpected anomalies in our data or when we hear that something is not working, we rush to solve the problem with what we believe is our best solution. It is likely to be based on our own considerable experience — and the best will in the world.
Even when we know that we do this, we still find ourselves falling back to solution-seeking. It is challenging when we are surrounded by stories of other educators who appear to have found the solution (particularly the answer to ‘the future’!). In a recent professional session with a large group of principals, we identified a plethora of ‘solutions’ happening across our schools – coding, open classrooms, inquiry learning, BYOD, beanbags – all introduced with the absolute best of intentions, based on what we could see others doing across the sector.



Think ‘theories’, not ‘solutions’


271347759_7446154195_z
And yet — what we must remind ourselves continually is that each and every one of these ideas is just a theory, an informed idea based on our own experiences and the experiences of others.  But because education – indeed, knowledge itself –  is mutable and complex, we must hold these ideas lightly, understand that what worked today may not work tomorrow, what worked for one school or student may not work for us. The minute we become wedded to a certain idea, we fail to adapt to the urgent and changing needs in our community.
As professionals it is important to not only hold ideas lightly – but hold the line around what is most likely to make a difference for our own learners and their communities. We need to adopt a robust approach to innovation and inquiry so that the introduction of new ideas is done in ways that help us stay curious about their impact. This approach might be termed ‘adaptive design’ (Bernstein & Linsky, 2016) and it offers us a way to combine deep, rigorous change leadership and innovative design processes.
So, I offer the following five notions as a way to help us all hold our ideas lightly:

1. Future focused ‘solutions’ are just someone else’s good idea
Behind every intervention is a theory of change – and that theory is “just a set of ideas about what is leading to what” (Timperley, 2011). These may often be based on years of research, but not always. It is our responsibility to understand why we think an approach will make a difference based what underpins it. Just because someone else is talking ‘growth mindset’ or ‘collaborative spaces’ doesn’t mean this will automatically suit the needs of the learners in our own community

2. Strive for an ambitious curriculum

Our curriculum documents in Aotearoa – the New Zealand Curriculum, Te Marautanga o Aotearoa, and Te Whāriki – all offer excellent starting points for driving innovation. Comparison with OECD reports (such as The Nature of Learning, 2010) that have been published since these curricula were introduced only serve to highlight that our national guidelines are still world-leading in the way they offer us permission to innovate learning.  ERO has highlighted that our challenge now is to focus on ensuring that the future focused values and vision intended by the curriculum documents drip off the walls for our learners every day (ERO, 2016).

3. Innovate from an informed position

How can we resist jumping to conclusions about what we ‘believe’ will work? Crucially, we must remember that these beliefs drive our actions. So, learning conversations that are structured to resist making assumptions and invite views from all involved parties are vital. Double loop learning and Model 2 (Argyris and Schon, 1978) approaches can be useful to guide these co-constructed conversations.
It is useful to think of achievement or attendance data as a ‘canary in the coalmine’, offering just a first glimpse at where we might focus our attentions. Having everyone look across data, without prejudice, can serve to invite multiple theories to the table, as well as make biases visible.
For example, a Community of Learning that has identified an issue in numeracy could look to any number of theories of change to address the issue – do we change the maths curriculum? provide professional learning for teachers? introduce a ‘growth mindset’ approach to learning conversations? clarify learning goals?….each one may work – so a collaborative, co-constructed review drawing on research and expertise is needed to settle on which approach(es) might work best.

4. Define your strong signals

It is well known that we seek to find evidence to prove our strongly held values and beliefs. This ‘confirmation bias’ means that not only do we tend to read data in a certain way but we jump to solutions that reflect our own experiences and view – and then look for proof that they have worked!  How often have we inquired into our practice only to emerge convinced that what we have tried was successful? How do we know if an idea is working for our learners?
Before we test or pilot any new idea, sit down with colleagues, look at the research behind the idea and decide on two-three ‘strong signals’ that are most likely to indicate that our idea is effective. These strong signals will add a rigor to the introduction of initiatives and invite you to stay curious about your impact, to not become too wedded to an idea that might not be working.
At the heart of these signals should be what our learners are telling us. Let’s move on from ‘student voice’ as something to be done occasionally – and shift into a partnership space with young people and their communities so we can continuously strive to understand and empathise with what is or is not working for them. Test together.

5. Test lightly and collaboratively

Be courageous. Prepare to give up and walk away from interventions that are not working for your learners or fail to realise the school vision. It is useful to remember that our long held theories about ‘what works’ are definitely incomplete and possibly wrong!

Be guided by your strong signals and move through cycles of inquiry swiftly. Hold those ideas lightly and work together to innovate with rigour and curiosity.

Video Karen used:



uLearn Breakout 7: Communicating with Google Sites - Tim Harper (Mt Aspiring & Core Advisory/connected learning)


When setting up a site, decide what your permissions are (fully public, some public with some private and totally private).

1. Creating a site

a. Choose a template (go for blank, easier to work with)
b. Name your site
c. Then click 'create'

2. Sharing the website

Defines who can see it, and who can edit.
Sharing it (can make a google group and then share it with them).
If you want it part public, make the whole thing public, then later make some pages private.

You can make  more people authors.

If it is a site for a school/dept etc, then set up a master Gmail user and make them the owner. This is important if people are leaving etc.

3. Finding your website 

Make it as easy as possible for people to find, so see if you can link it to your school domain name (eg ____.school.nz).

Go into settings >manage site > map site THIS MUST BE DONE BY SCHOOL GOOGLE ADMINISTRATOR (REGISTRAR)

4. Edit site layout (in the main menu - cog)

(edit site header, sidebar item, edit system footer)

Why?
So people can use it easily

Make pages consistent

4. Editing

The page editor

Gadgets make it fun
(you can even write your own)
Slideshow maker (using google slides) is cool - automatically comes into your site with the perfect fit etc.

You can add anything stored on Google


Setting a site-specific calendar for that site (in Calendar, create new site at 'my Calendar'). Make sharing setting "Share all information and outsiders can change calendars (just administrators can change, but they may be outside your site).

uLearn Breakout 6: Enhancing thought-full classroom dialogue - Karen Boyes



1. Classroom Environment - how we set up our classroom and what goes on in it.

The fear of failure is driving most students. In NZ, students can also be scared of success (tall poppy syndrome).


Tri-Une Brain (three in one brain)

Develops in order (red, blue, and then green)
We also react to things in that order (1st panic, then reason). Can happen in reverse (eg unlocking your front door when the phone rings inside - suddenly panic and you fall apart trying to unlock the door).

25yrs old is when empathy develops (also
deteriorates with age).


Turning fear into fun - students who laugh more, lern more, Dr David Sousa.

If students take risks, thank them for taking the risk (whether right or wrong). Don't play 'guess the answer in the teacher's head'. Too stressful for students. When everyoe tries, say 'thank you' to each of them. Even after you've had the right answer, keep going, then when they've stopped say, 'let's go back an look at...' (with the answer you wanted).

2. Teacher Technique

Managing impulsivity (getting students to think before the event/answering).

Wait time:
The average teacher waits one second afte asking a question - not long enough to think. After one second, the teacher either calls on a student, moves on to another question or answers it themselves. Recommendation is to wait 8 - 10 seconds. Think, pair, share is good here.

3. Listening Sequence

Pause
Paraphrase
Probe
    - Inquire
    - Clarify

In activity, the music was put on loud - it made it harder to concentrate. We needed to adjust how we spoke (leaning forward, raising our voices, gestures, looking at the person); we need to teach students those strategies.

4. The Power of Langauge

Be aware of language - when we use good vocab, students use great language too.

Labeling thinking skills and processes (eg what is the meaning of compare and contrast (a lot of students don't know the differnce between the two words).

Teach the thingking words in from the curriculum document (eg verify, observe etc)

5. Thinking (metacognition): monitoring our thinking

Think Aloud Problem Solving:


6. Questioning and Problem Posing

Test for Mensa gets changed ever 10 years, because peope are becoming more intelligent

Questioning with intention

Unproductive questions:
seek verification,
are closed,
are rhetorical questions,
are defensive (why didn't you complete your homework?),
agreement questions

Productive questions:
Invitational questions (women lover tone, men quieten)
Plurals (eg. What are some of your goals? - easier to answer than what is one of your goals?)
Tentatives - what might be some factors that would cause....? What could...? What hunches....
Invitational stems - given what you know about....
Limiting presuppositions - why were you unsuccessful (assumes that you were unsuccessful)
Empowering presuppositions

Compose a question intended to invite thoughtful dialogue about a topic you may be teaching next week...
Criteria:
Invitation stems
Plurals
Tentative language
+ve presuppositions

As you reflect on this year, what are some of the ways you could approve your Berkley experience?



Thursday 6 October 2016

uLearn Breakout 3: Making eLearning Powerful with Google Sites

David Kinane and Marc Rowlinson

Re-mixing eLearning
What works from UK?
Where are you in the loop?



Anatomy of an eLearning task on a Google site


We looked at David's House Challenge

Students explained and reflected verbally

Next looked at character description







Decision tree programming






Each year, start a folder called 'Learning' and share all the children into it (with full editing rights)

Google Site - set up. Students have complete editing rights to the site (otherwise they can't give feedback etc).

Students call anything they do with just their name (eg. Sarah, not Sarah's...., so that you can do a search for anything they do.).







Tools to capture student voice:






Students come up with success criteria, (max 4 things) and this is used to create a rubric. This rubric is used for their commenting.

Here's a basic rubric for primary school (for getting students to read aloud then self-reflect):



Here's instructions - put a slideshow together. Instructions on the first page, text (as pdf) on the second slide etc.






Remember:


Youtube tutorials...youtube.com/user/dakinane

Hard to get parent interest

uLearn Breakout 3: Making eLearning Powerful with Google Sites

David Kinane and Marc Rowlinson

Re-mixing eLearning
What works from UK?
Where are you in the loop?



Anatomy of an eLearning task on a Google site


We looked at David's House Challenge

Students explained and reflected verbally

Next looked at character description







Decision tree programming






Each year, start a folder called 'Learning' and share all the children into it (with full editing rights)

Google Site - set up. Students have complete editing rights to the site (otherwise they can't give feedback etc).

Students call anything they do with just their name (eg. Sarah, not Sarah's...., so that you can do a search for anything they do.).







Tools to capture student voice:






Students come up with success criteria, (max 4 things) and this is used to create a rubric. This rubric is used for their commenting.

Here's a basic rubric for primary school (for getting students to read aloud then self-reflect):



Here's instructions - put a slideshow together. Instructions on the first page, text (as pdf) on the second slide etc.






Remember:


Youtube tutorials...youtube.com/user/dakinane

Hard to get parent interest

uLearn Breakout 3: Most memorable learning experience - Larry Rosenstock

We started by individually writing about our most memorable learning experience. Here's mine:

In Standard 3 (Y5), we were learning about 'The Great Depression'. At the end of the unit, we had a 'Great Depression Day' where we were encouraged to come to school dressed in the appropriate clothing. The teachers were dressed up and very severe all day, adopting that style of teaching (a total contrast from what they usually were) and we learnt in that style and at lunch, we also had to drink milk and eat dripping sandwiches. I loved that day.

Another thing I remember is being ahead of my peers, so they teachers used to give me my own projects to go on with which I really enjoyed (they'd get books for it from the National Library, which was so exciting).

I also remember my lovely Standard 4 (Y6) teacher taking us to sit outside under a tree, where she told us that she and her husband were getting divorced, so she was leaving to get herself back to a good place. This was huge for me because I didn't know anyone divorced and it was a lesson about teachers being real people with their classes.

As a table (5 or 6 people) we shared our experience and why we chose to share that experience.

What were the commonalities?
  • Relationships between teachers and pupils (connection)
  • Achievable yet stimulating and challenging work
  • Sense of belonging
  • Opportunities and space to trial things
  • Learning from mistakes our teachers made (the negatives)
  • Teachers being real/open

We then shared with the whole workshop and these extra ideas came out:
  • Meets a need
  • Meaningful & relevant
  • Independence
  • Being trusted
  • Not inhibited by external sources
  • Group work
  • Fun
  • Nothing to do with assessments or grades
  • Learnings outside of what was being explicitly taught
  • Experiential learning
  • EOTC
  • Safe environment
  • Social
Next, we looked at task cards, results, and student or teacher reflections from High Tech High. Do any of the ideas from earlier fit in with these?

uLearn Keynote 3: Michael Fullan

Transforming Pedagogy


NPDL = New Pedagogies for Deep Learning
New = meaning the new knowledge and relationships between the teacher, student and whānau


We are wired to connect
We are wired to create
We are wired to help others


Whole system change strategies
  • Accountability (history of failure)
  • Standards (insufficient)
  • System Culture (promising success)


Breakthrough leadership
  • Respect and reject the status quo
  • Be an expert and an apprentice at the same time
  • Experiment and commit (commit to getting it right)


Dynamic Duo
  • New Developments in Neuroscience
  • New Development in Learning Environment


Seventh Sense, Ramo  2016
The young are the most connected and the least committed to the status quo


TALK THE WALK




Education as a societal change agents

-       Students as agents of change

-       Teachers as agents of change

-       Schools as clusters as agents

-       States Provinces and Countries as Agents

-       Above depends on knowledge and capacity to do/act

Deeper Learning: 10 Ways You Can Die


Big Idea
  1. Students as agents of change
  2.   Professional Capital of Teachers
  3. Coherence

Wednesday 5 October 2016

uLearn Keynote 2: John Couch, Vice President of Education at Apple

“New dimensions in learning”


Leadership model


  • Think about your vision - WHY are you going to something, not just what you’re going to do
  • Apple’s Model: technology as a mental bicycle - technology enables us to create, innovate and explore
    • Vision (inspiration) - mental bicycle
    • Mission (practical) - one computer, one person
    • Directions - strategic (consumer, education)
    • Steps - tactical (creative)
    • People - companions, not competitors
    • Guidelines - think differently
  • Education vs Learning


Education
Learning
Overall paradigm
delivery
discovery
Social structure
hierarchy
community
context
classroom
world
environment
simulated
real
content
fixed
open
assignments
recipes
frameworks
activities
Consumption and repetition
Construction & creation
infrastructure
Administrative focus
Empowerment focus
assessment
Teacher driven
community-driven
process
standardised
personalised
motivation
extrinsic
intrinsic
expectation
Grades & certification
Skills & experience

Vision is inspirational and mission is measurable
How are we creating a learning environment around technology?


All books, learning materials, and assessments should be digital and interactive, tailored to each student and providing feedback in real time - Steve Jobs


  • Vision (inspiration) - Unique Genius
  • Mission (practical) - Personal Learning Environment
  • Directions - Institution and Individual
  • Steps - iBooks Author, iTunes U, Classroom, Swift
  • People - Evangelists
  • Guidelines - Thinking Ahead ? missed this one?


Content is already available, so what are we doing to make it relevant? If nothing, then we are obsolete.

“Knowledge isn’t a commodity that’s delivered from teacher to student but something that emerges from the students’ own curiosity-fueled exploration.” Joshua Davis A Radical Way of Unleashing a Generation of Geniuses


What do you feel?
What do you imagine?
Now, do it.
Share it.

End of average Book by Todd Rose

Access, Build, Code

Everyone can code