Showing posts with label Teaching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Teaching. Show all posts

Saturday, 5 March 2011

Jog the Web-Guided Research

 The first time I had used Jog the Web was with staff to try and guide them through a series of Moodle resources for a CPD session I was running. With staff it did not work as well as I had hoped as I they did not seem to 'get it'.

Jog the Web allows you to visit a number of sites in a structured order. It embeds the sites within a different page on which you can add titles and instruction. Staff members seemed to be confused by this, and the learning stumbled. Maybe due to my own explanation, lack of differentiation or the wrong choice of tool. I really just did not work.

However...In the last few weeks I gave it another go.

With my BTEC Graphics students I was struggling to find a way to structure a research task in a guided and supportive way. I decided the learning need suited trying this tool again.

The students are currently redesigning logos and the look of the colleges own Moodle site and they needed to become more aware of how to visually analyse design and what sort of questions to ask. Jog the web was ideally suited to this.

To create the jog:
  • I found a range of exemplar Moodles and opened them up on seperate browser tabs 
  • Signed into Jog The Web (It is free to sign up though there is a premium option)
  • Clicked to create a new jog
  • Add title and details to categorise your jog 
  • Then it is you simply add the pages to your jog
  • A more recent feature is that you can also add your own content to a range of templates. These could be used to punctuate your jog or possibly extension tasks.
  • Make sure you save each page at the bottom.
  • You can easily change the page order at any stage or edit any parts.

This tool definitely supported the learning of less-able students in the class but was not overly intrusive and allowed more-able students to work more independently.  I it used to focus class discussion of Moodle sites as well as individually; where the questions along the top were used to help focus on what type of annotation might be appropriate for different sites. 
Visual Identity
Students 'got this' and on the whole annotation has improved because of the individual support using this allows. One student said "When you look at something you make judgements in your head but I only realised this when what my head said matched the questions at the top".

Saturday, 24 April 2010

I can do it too...

As a teacher I find you spend a lot of time showing students new techniques and other artists work and they rarely see what YOU can do. They often seem to forget that teachers have talents apart from the ability to 'Teach'.

I have brought work I have done in, in the past as examples for the students. I try to continue to be an Artist alongside being a teacher though this is not often possible.

Last weekend I spent some time producing some web graphics and vectors on Illustrator. When I went in on Monday I showed a couple of my students what I had created. They were really surprised at what I had achieved and it provoked analysis and debate on a level I had never experienced from these particular students. They were very inquisitive and questioned me for a long time about how I used the various tools achieve the overall effect.


 
This weekend I decided to dust off the paint brushes for the same reason. This weeks effort has turned into a very traditional style painting though I plan to develop this further over the next week, so it is very much a work in progress.


What the last week has very much reminded me is that students benefit form seeing the talents of their teachers it makes us more three dimensional to them and can often be used to stimulate inquiry, as they are tangible artifacts not just images in a book/website produced by a faceless artist.

Sunday, 28 March 2010

Digital...art?


Walking by Hannah Taylor
I am finding that as an Art teacher many assumptions are made about you and what goes on in the classroom; you either spend all you time teaching Photoshop on Mac's and that everything you do is digital or your teaching is described as "Arty Farty" through lack of understanding.
Teaching for an art teacher is really no different to any other subject. As a teacher you:
  • Share your enthusiasm to encourage students to be inquisitive, investigate and develop their skills.
  • Use examples from history and current culture to make learning relevant to their lives.
  • Employ everything in your arsenal of tools, materials and techniques  to make teaching and learning possible.
Yes I do teach very traditional drawing and painting but I also teach Photoshop. I teach collage yet I also teach stop frame animation. I am struggling to put into words what a 21st century Art Teacher is, all I know is that we can no longer be pigeon holed the way we once were.

Sunday, 21 March 2010

Presentation-e Curriculum Group

www.wordle.net

Leaving staff development day part of me was really excited as it had brought out so much positivity and enthusiasm. I spent the weekend mulling over these my thoughts as I really wanted to find a way to encourage build upon and promote this positivity. This is what I have come up with:

The college could benefit from developing a pedagogy on how Moodle, the Internet and social media can be used within the new build to develop teaching and learning.

A good focus for this would be how to motivate, engage and enthuse students to ultimately facilitate them becoming more independent learners through the inclusion of Moodle, the Internet and social media.

How a potential pedagogy and exemplar materials can be developed:
  • The creation an "e Curriculum" group which meets to drive the development of Moodle. This allows us to harness some of the enthusiasm for this area and people to work in collaboration across curriculum areas rather than isolated departments.
  • Regular publishing of an "e newsletter" that showcases best practice and highlights articles of interest from around the web. This could also encourage the development of "PLN"s (Personal Learning Network) amongst staff.
  • A collaborative project which encourages all staff to contribute ideas.  This could address an area of the curriculum all teachers teach i.e. year 1 tutorials.  Teachers could be asked to contribute ideas for tutorial topics they think should be covered, and the scheme of work developed collaboratively online.  "Crowd source a topic".

In the long run this path could reap a large variety of rewards:
  • Build on good practice from recent staff developments
  • Treat all staff as valued 'experts' with opportunities to contribute.
  • All staff would become 'collaborators'
  • Develop moodle into a learning environment not just a resource deposit.
  • Develop a core set of lesson plans for use in tutorials, specifically with a social media/interactive slant which teachers can use, regardless of their knowledge of these areas, eventually multi-skilling staff in e-technology which may raise their confidence to apply this to their own specialisms.

To fully embrace an "e Curriculum" the institution should address our approach to the internet, especially in light of recent research and this particular Ofsted report; 'The safe use of new technologies'

The OfSTED report shows, putting blocks on multiple websites is detrimental to students long-term Internet safety; students increasingly spend their lives with an unblocked Internet in their pockets.  They embrace social media as a communication and collaboration tool.  The college has recently began to leverage social media's promotional opportunities, yet we see this as an inappropriate medium for students to use within the college?
This makes students view the medium as forbidden, rather than something to be embraced as part of their daily life and to build upon this cultural change.  If we embrace this change it gives the college the opportunity to show students how social media can be used safely and responsibly and  how they can use these tools within their own development as a learner.

Facebook has a number of educational applications in the classroom, research, sharing course content (none of these mean 'friending' students). Not only this but it is:
  • No. 1 photo sharing application on the Web
  • More of our students have an account than do not
  • We can use it to show the true power of the web and develop student use for the positive rather than negative reasons.

Twitter has even more applications for teachers and can be used to improve sharing and motivation and even has a wide variety of classroom uses. Some of theses uses are:
  • Following news
  • Sharing information
  • Providing a back channel to a lesson
  • Broadcasting information
  • Sharing objectives
  • Live discussions
  • Following and taking part in backchannels to events.

In the world today it is not acceptable to block websites to manage classrooms, especially with the age group which we educate; we are trying to prepare students for university and work where no such barriers exist. We should not completely lift all barriers but we need to loosen our grip of the Internet to allow teachers and students to be more spontaneous in what they do and fully exploit some of the powers of social media, allowing us to educate students how to responsibly use social media and protect themselves.
We can not lift barriers without addressing our AUP (Acceptable usage policy) for staff and students that clearly outline:
  • Sanctions (possible use of white list)
  • Responsibilities ' 
  • What is 'Inappropriate
    Becta in conjunction with many other agencies (including Ofsted) have guidance we could access to help us do this.

    I feel if we can teach students to use technology to create, innovate, research, communicate, collaborate and learn we are preparing them for their 21st century future as none of us know what they will face.

    Wednesday, 17 March 2010

    Do I Tool-Belt it?



    I have been thinking about this all day, mainly due to a conversation on the way in to work...

    Why do I choose to use specific pieces of software and not others? (In my planning, learning,teaching of lessons and 1 to 1 with students)

    What are my criteria to decide value?

    As teachers we all seem to have favorites; these are almost 'go to' pieces of software/online tools, yet  we also try the new things that we find.

    Today I have been trying to discover how I decide if it goes on to my "tool-belt" or it remains bookmarked for that rainy day.

    To end up on my "tool-belt" it must meet the following criteria:
    1. Be accessible to the students; easy to use, quick to pick up, add value to their lesson and be safe
    2. Have a usable interface for me; save time (or use time effectively)
    3. Be free to use
    Examples of these tools I use daily if not weekly are:
    Even though I have decided upon these criteria I must admit, occasionally for a bit of a sensory WOW  now and then I resort to:
    what do you think? what do you use on your "tool-belt"?

    Sunday, 14 March 2010

    Continue to learn


    This week we had a staff training day on Friday. Volunteers were asked for to contribute ad share what they do in their classrooms that others might find useful, I had suggested earlier in the week we share our continuous learning which I must admit at the time provoked a puzzled look. I explained that I felt what we do well as a department is continue to learn; about our subject and other areas of interest we each hold, but we also share these things with each other. I chose this as I think it is the most important thing we have.

    I believe that there are people out there who teach that do take their knowledge for granted and do not actively seek fresh new knowledge  (if you feel I am wrong I apologize) and I think they do this for a number of reasons but mainly because something has made them loose enthusiasm.

    Fridays presentations/sharing went well and seemed to encourage some people but most of all I will take away this thought...

    "Keep your enthusiasm, hold on to it tight and don't let anyone take it away from you."