
Two years ago, I attended the BCTLA meeting (2012) and heard
a great presentation about using cameras to encourage student literacy. I felt this was a great fit for a French immersion
school where the focus is oral language.
I contacted the presenter and asked if I could share her presentation
with my school. Susan Henderson very
generously sent her PowerPoint presentation and I did a short session on one of
our Pro-d Days. This presentation resulted
collaboration with a primary teacher to video her class. We have continued again this year. Now my collaborating teacher plans to share
her videos in her grade group meeting to show how it can work in our
school. I think by seeing the ICT used
educationally with young children helped this teacher take on this challenge,
and the successful collaboration has helped her spread the success of this ICT
tool.
To encourage teachers to use ICT in their classes, just like
sharing Mrs. Hendersons presentation, I don’t have to be able to do it all by myself
but can
·
book presenters for our school and District Pro-D;
·
encourage teachers to attend ICT sessions at
both local and distance conferences, for example presentations at our upcoming
SD57 conference includes: Smartboards in elementary math classrooms and Goodbye
Google, better ways to for building learning resources (PGDTA 2014);
·
share posted online presentations;
·
share links to interactive online educational
opportunities, for example LearnNow BC webcasts;
·
share links to discussion groups using ICT, for
example our inquiry learning group shares ideas through our FirstClass community
website; and
·
you-tube tutorials for ICT’s.
Then I need to follow up these
learning opportunities by providing collaborative time to help teachers use ICT
with their classes or in library time. Providing scaffolding (Vygotsky’s theory
of proximal development) like we do with all students with new learning. If I don’t feel proficient or we cannot
schedule time, then I can ensure they take advantage of our school’s tech
teacher to work collaboratively with them and their classes. Thirdly, I can help pair up teachers that have
experience using the tools, either in my school or in other schools. I have a great PLN with other TL’s in my
School District on FirstClass who would be willing to provide me with teachers
that would be good peers for learning about ICT. I have also recently learned that our School District
Learning and Curriculum Program has money for some release time to pair
teachers that want to work on developing and sharing skills. I can encourage teachers to use this funding
to develop their skills with ICT. It is
important to “build opportunities for teachers to talk to each other about the
skills they are learning” since |much learning occurs through social
interaction” (BC MoE 2002).
Sharing learning and creating supportive peer networks are
just part of enabling ICT in classrooms, however teachers also require sufficient
access technical infrastructure to use ICT tools with students. In my school of 390 elementary students there
is only one computer lab, and 6 other student computers in the library. This arrangement limits student computer use
to scheduled blocks of computer time, with some access to either early
finishers or students who are late on assignments in the library. Another step I want to take is to be more
proactive promoting a mobile computer lab to increase computer access for
students using ICT tools. Proactive
steps include collaborating with the Tech teacher in my school; looking for
funding sources; and talking with administration. These proactive steps may
also involve a conversation with teachers and administration on where the best place to
spend the school technology budget should be, since some teachers want Smartboards. My preference is for tablets since Smartboards
are much more expensive and limit teaching to one location in the classroom. While tablets are portable and can be “connected
to video projectors, digital monitors or internet broadcasts to draw, highlight
and interact with whatever is on their screens without the aid of a Smartboard”
(Fowlkes 2013).
Anderson, M. 2013.
Little book of ICT ideas. Retrieved Feb
16, 2014 from http://www.scribd.com/doc/50091789/little-book-of-superb-sites
BC Ministy of Education, Standards Department. 2002.
Working with colleagues, a guide for ICT mentors. Retrieved Feb 16 from https://www.bced.gov.bc.ca/irp/pdfs/applied_skills/support_materials/mentors.pdf
Fowlkes, K. 2013. Why Tablets will kill Smart Boards in Classrooms. Retrieved Feb 17, 2014 from http://www.informationweek.com/mobile/why-tablets-will-kill-smart-boards-in-classrooms/d/d-id/1108091?page_number=1
Gruetzmacher, Brett. Jul 6 2013. What do you want kids to do with technology! Twitter post.
Henderson, Susan. 2013. Creating Collaborative Projects with Technology Integration. BCTLA conferencehttp://bctf.ca/bctla/conference/2012.html
Kidcode 2. Wordle tutorial. Retrieved Feb 14, 2014 from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xhL5D9nz5aI .
LearnNow BC. Retrieved Feb 17, 2014 from http://www.learnnowbc.ca/.
PGDTA. April 2014. Spring Fling conference. Retrieved Feb 16, 2014 from http://springflingconference.weebly.com/ .
Trucano, Michael. 2005. Knowledge Maps: ICTs in Education. Washington, DC: infoDev / World Bank. Retrieved Feb 16, 2014 from http://www.infodev.org/articles/teachers-teaching-and-icts
Vgotsky theory of proximal development. Retrieved Feb 17, 2014 from http://www.learningandteaching.info/learning/constructivism.htm
Hi Leisbet: I love the graphic you provided at the start of your post. Like you, I believe that we need to help build "deep thinking" around students' use of technology. I have found that I have been trying to acquire knowledge of these tools (the ones in the "wrong answers" category) without stopping to think about how these tools support (or take away from) the goals of education, as listed in the "right answers" category. Thanks for sharing your thoughts on how to move from here!
ReplyDeleteLisbet, I like how you pointed out that you would provide teachers with the resources to learn about ICT and then follow up with collaboration time or pairing teachers with others who are proficient in whatever is being learned. In one of my other classes we learned about stages that teachers go through as they change their teaching practice or adapt to a new tool. It was interesting because it reminded me that teachers need a lot of practice with new concepts before they feel comfortable using them in their classes.
ReplyDeleteGreat post that is full of supportive theory and evidence, while maintaining the most important aspect, developing relationships! When you staff trust you, are able to open up about their struggles, or challenges and allow the opportunity to collaborate, share and learn with others, then great things happen. You've got a lot of good ideas, suggestions and strategies for sharing, engaging, supporting, and encouraging others in your school. A well crafted post, labelled, full of media and well designed!
ReplyDeleteLeibet, you have offered some great ways of supporting the teachers at your school and in your district. You make an important point about following up with teachers and offer creative ways of doing this. Your graphic at the beginning of your post is an important one as it reminds us what technology should be used for.
ReplyDeleteIt really is a team effort and something that needs to be done collaboratively in order to build the confidence to use technology in the classroom so I like what you have written. It sounds like you are a very supportive teacher and someone who cares enough to genuinely follow up with your colleagues to see how things are going. I had to stop and reflect on the right and wrong answers in your graphic at the beginning. Even if you are a 21st century teacher, you have to stop and reflect on your teaching practices to ensure you are still doing them for the right reasons.
ReplyDelete