January, 2010


22
Jan 10

MoodleMoot UK 2010

Hamble College

I am really pleased to ‘re-announce’ that website for MoodleMoot UK 2010 is now LIVE. Also its worth mentioning that that programme committee have issued a call for papers. Now, with the timeframe a little tight, I urge you to consider contributing. As a school we researched LPs for nearly half a year, planned for Moodle (Skoogle ) for 9 months and we are currently only 5 months into our marriage. So pleased don’t think that you need years of experience before considering sharing. We are thinking of preparing a proposal ‘Getting to the starting line.’ Our finishing line is a long way off in the distance. Marathon Moodle? Keep up to date on Twitter #mootuk10.

Popularity: 1% [?]


22
Jan 10

Tough Decisions

‘Dont grow a wish bone where you back bone should be.’

Now I appreciate that this is rather a aggressive message, but I think that for middle leaders an important one. Some of the most difficult situations we find ourselves in, is of our own making. Situations arising, not from the decisions we made, but decisions we didn’t.

Popularity: 1% [?]


16
Jan 10

Missing the Point

Netbooks have impacted on the learning of our students at Hamble College, no doubt, but what could tablet pcs  or ’slate’ devices bring to the classroom (or outside the classroom for that matter) that a netbook can not.

Technology reporting (hyped by the highly anticipated almost mythical  Apple tablet or iSlate) has understandably focused on the mass markets and not merely education and as the iSlate myth gathered steam, so beating Apple to market seemed more of a coup and a slew of devices and prototypes were announced at world trade show CES . Since then, the conversation has mainly focused on consumption and whether or not there truly is a place for such devices. The jury is out. On the one hand you have Hewlett Packard’s chief technology officer, Phil McKinney saying

People are enjoying more and more content from the web. And the real challenge is there aren’t any good consumption-designed devices.

Whilst on the other hand you have Stuart Miles, editor of the technology blog Pocket Lint , saying

If I want to surf the internet around my home I have my phone for that, I’ve got my netbook, my laptop, or my PC. There are lots of options already.

So the jury is out in the consumer marketplace but is there room and a reason for such devices in education?

There are four/five key questions consistently  raised by parents / guardians when presenting school Laptops for Learning (L4L) programmes. Not always asked in the same order or with the same passion, but variants of;

Cost? When / how often will they use them in lessons? What about their hand writing? E-safety concerns of one nature or another? And, can they access the internet at home? Slate devices, only addresses one of these questions more proactively than netbooks. A touch screens permits the development of hand writing and swype skills but also means that when it comes to typing, it must be shared with the keyboard. Slates may also handle e-reading a little more proficiently, comfortably with an accelerometer, so watch out e-readers. Another interim device for the consumer, maybe, but I am not confident that education is in a position to accommodate nearly double their costs for mobile learning.

Popularity: 1% [?]


14
Jan 10

There is a Lesson in Here Somewhere – series.

Yesterday I posted a Youtube Nike advert video that highlighted the misuse of excuses , typically Nike. The post was titled,

There is a Lesson in Here Somewhere. (LIHS)

At the time of watching the video, I didn’t quite know what the lesson was, but by morning, I had an idea. Sometimes inspiration reveals itself more slowly than at other times. Sometimes you have to listenly carefully to your instincts. Idea often just needs a reason, a context or a little creative license.

The excuses video became my lesson starter this afternoon. Instead of the too frequent requests moans for late homework/coursework, met with the all too frequent students excuses, I played the video. The Nike message hit a home run, the student had not excuses left to offer, and a very productive lesson followed. I am confident that I will use the video again sometime soon – especially to that student we all know, that always has a pre-prepared excuse for doing little about nothing.

Next, thanks to Ewan McIntosh , I stumbled upon this gem, very clever, the inspiration follows the half way point.


A post he titled ‘A Perfect Palendrome’. Now, I know there is a lesson in there somewhere. Ideas please?

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14
Jan 10

LftM Learning Focus

Part of the LftM Learning Journey, is a ‘Focus’ document. In making the paper decision, I have tried to reflect on the advice from my LftM coach yet be realistic about the time I wish to invest in Lftm (given I spent over 5hrs completing the online content for the course of xmas) yet ensure that I demonstrate boths leadership and management within the topic.

I feel that the developmented of improved E-resources (L4L, VLE and website) at Hamble College has required vision, strategy and both vertical and horizontal management. The project has involved students / parents and teachers. I think it therefore represents a good case for a learning focus. Now in the second year, our team needs to reflect on our successes, manage our failures and adopt/refine practices to improve our success rate. Documentation is being revised and brought forward to coincide with a visit from colleagues for another school – so there is noe dual motivation to get this focus paper written, professional review and to provide a professional service to our visiting colleagues.

1. Outline the development of the Laptops for Learning Programme – the context.
2. Reflect on the success / challenges and failures of yr 1.
3. Action plan the revisions.
4. Strategy to re-present to parents – what have we learnt.
5. Wireless development

I hope to share this document here at a later date…. some time just before it needs to be completed no doubt. If 1-2-1 netbooks, laptops, learning interests you, or you yourselves are managing a 1-2-1 project, I would love to hear from you.

Popularity: 5% [?]