Sunday, December 15, 2013

Global Education Highlights (weekly)

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Friday, December 13, 2013

Eight NEW Global Collaborative ideas to Flatten Your Learning!


Celebrations and sharing well considered ideas for future collaborations have been part of the  exciting culmination to the Flat Classroom Certified Teacher Cohort 13-2 this past week.

This professional learning course started 3 months ago, and together we have journeyed through the '7 Steps to Flatten your Classroom' into 'Global Project Design and Management'. Cohort members came from Australia, USA, Vietnam, Singapore, USA and New Zealand. We met most weeks for a synchronous meeting (you can appreciate the time zone challenges!) and connected asynchronously through our wiki portal and through the Flat Connections teacher community (which is open for anyone to come and join!)

What is significant about this course and this cohort is the diversity of teaching positions and experience and individual place on the global collaborative learning pathway, however as a community of learners we have thrived - learning with and from each other at each turn of the road.

Let me briefly introduce and describe each teacher and each project.

Session #1 - Recording 
Avylon Magarey - Agents of Change
Avylon is from Australia, she teaches gifted students at the middle school level. She wants her students to think global and act local and uses the Art Costa Habits of Mind method as a basis for student researching.
Her project involves students in cross-school teams meeting in Edmodo, brainstorm issues in their community, take these ideas global, survey an expert in the field of the topic chosen (an interesting idea, putting a survey together is hard work and a good skill to have!), make a collaborative video around the devised solution the team comes up with to raise awareness, and share final presentations via Skype.

Maureen Tumenas - Scratch Coding Connections
Maureen is from the USA and has been involved with Flat Classroom for many semesters, also as a project manager recently. She raised our awareness about the use of Scratch (coding, creating animations) to form a collaborative project. Such wonderful ideas once again! The Scratch community is apparently already very close and responsive and provides lots of global support. The idea of this project is for a cross-curricula, three ability levels approach.  Students from 8-14 years will meet in Edmodo and follow the design cycle to create products using Scratch. The project will take 10 weeks, and 6 classes are needed for it to run effectively. Students will interact and collaborate and keep mandatory journals of their experiences. 
Maureen shares her work here, and links to the design planning doc.


Session #2 - Recording
Cameron Paterson - What I saw in the War
Cameron is a history teacher from Australia. He has a great passion for sharing a broader view of history and connecting students with primary sources - people in fact! who have experienced first or second hand the 'textbook' events we learn about as 'history'. He presented to us ideas for going beyond the patriotic, jingoistic approach to teaching history through his focus on WWII for his project idea. This is a project he has run in the past but is now redesigning with new determination. Students will form teams and interview someone who remembers WWII and compare primary source recollections across countries. It is that simple - but so powerful! He described a past project where students from Australia and Turkey connected and how stories and understanding went far beyond what a text book can provide.

 
Penny O'Brien - Building Communities

Penny is a Principal in a small elementary school in New Zealand. She shared with us ideas for ensuring teachers are future focused, and for cutting through the isolation of teaching to start building relationships to share new ideas, new ways of thinking and common understandings. She has developed an approach to professional learning that leverages Web 2.0 tools and provides a pathway into connected learning. Through this process of collaboration teachers will come to realise the importance of communication, new ideas and new opportunities. Penny is aiming to build a community with her current teachers and expand that globally! It is exciting to see a school leader develop this to support their own community and as a plan to bring new learning experiences  into the school.

Chuck Pawlik - The Open Art Class
Chuck is an international teacher currently in Singapore. He is an art teacher and has designed this project idea to join art students across the world. He wants to harness Google hangouts and other collaborative asynchronous spaces to share art, do field trips and expand cultural ideas. He compares the 'brick and mortar' classroom with the global classroom - and shares his ideas for students to get outside views and make alliances to support creative work. This is a refreshing set of ideas leading to a global collaborative opportunity for other art students.

Session #3 - Recording
Jennifer Simon - FCP Tech Toolkit (Techy Teachers) 
Jennifer is a technology integrator in an international school in Vietnam. She has developed this 4-week course around skills and tools needed to collaborate globally. She takes the objectives of connection, communication, citizenship, creation and has created a pathway for educators to learn together and become more confident knowing how to use the essential tools. This concept could be implemented within a school or, as it is originally designed, for teachers globally as a virtual course. There is a great need for this focus - 4 weeks of tools related to global collaborative projects and objectives.


Tina Schmidt - Edmodo Penpal Project
Tina is a Grade 3 teacher from the USA and is a very experienced global collaborator already. She has redesigned her Penpal project to tighten up the structure and provide a supportive environment to encourage more classrooms to join. Her wiki page on the Global Classroom wiki is an excellent writeup of what is a great opportunity for entry level teachers to join a global project. The goals are for students, Grade 4-8, to engage in collaborative discussions with others in teams and explore diverse topics. One aim is for young students to learn how to communicate in a formal way - not text-speak - while online. A feature of this project is the reflection at the end, the 'eye-opener' as Tina calls it. A 12-week timeline, starting next in February 2014!

Dorothy - Global Wanderings 

Dorothy is a Grade 1 teacher in the USA. Her project is literature based, with weekly discussion questions posted to a wiki. Partners are invited to join the wiki and add their details and share their school. She has a lot of 'flat' connections and collaborations going on with her class already and this project idea is a way to collect those together and build towards more extended collaborations.

 Dorothy also shared this short video with us of her students talking about what they liked best about reaching out beyond the classroom walls to learn about the world.




What happens next? Well I know the above ideas for projects and collaborations will go ahead and be implemented. Some have run in the past and now will run with an updated structure and clearer focus. Others will run as pilots and be tweaked and evaluated for future improvement, once again building a better collaborative experience each time.

 
The main point is that these educators are out there doing it - they are 'teacherpreneurs' in their schools - probably the only ones. They are leading the way, taking steps to embed collaborative practice and global learning into their curriculum, planning to provide rich multicultural and technology-infused experiences for their students.

 
Bravo! Please support them, join our teacher network and interact with them, join their global project, be a part of their plans and dreams for a better education that joins the world for global understanding. 


Are you interested in joining a supportive cohort of global learners to embed global collaborative practices into your classroom or school? There are TWO opportunities offered in early 2014. These are shared via the Flat Connections, Flat Professional Learning website.
  • Flat Connections Global Educator - a 2-graduate credit course (this is what the cohort above have just completed!) (Cohort starting February)
  • Global Collaboration Primer - 4 weeks - for those who think they may want to go global but need help - and for leaders and administrators to learn what 'going global' may mean for them and their schools  (Cohort starting January)
Consider joining us in the new year - it is possible to take your classroom and your learning global and create wonderful opportunities for your students and colleagues.

Julie Lindsay

 

Sunday, December 08, 2013

Global Education Highlights (weekly)

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Tuesday, December 03, 2013

Creating conditions for change - Learning Frontiers

Today was no ordinary day. As someone who works from home, and travels quite a bit outside of Australia, it is refreshing to be in a workshop with other Australian educators and learning more about their challenges and successes and needs. Being a Melbourne girl from way back I am also excited to hear more about the Queensland system - especially pockets of excellent. 

Today was no ordinary workshop. Organised by AITSL and their Learning Frontiers initiative a small group of us gathered at St Aiden's School just south west of Brisbane. Come from Ocean Shores it took me nearly 3 hours to get there via car and train - but I am always up for an adventure! The workshop was co-led by David Price, OBE from the Engaged Learning and Summer Howarth. David has a new book, which I purchased as a kindle version last night, called "Open: How we'll work live and learn in the future".

The aim of the workshop was to work in teams and determine design principles and match them with learning practices for the new HUBS of learning being created now. Four principles of engagement were the focus: personal, connected, co-created, integrated. 



 Needless to say we had energized discussions, and although experienced educators we all found it challenging to come up with a set of principles that were unique and that no other school could say they were already doing them all. Our team chose 'authentic learning' and 'global collaboration' as well as 'community partners'. I did not take a pic of our writing, but I believe it is being shared via the AITSL website soon. 

We then worked on what our version of a learning HUB would look like. This could include schools as well as extended community people and organisations. Learning Frontiers aim to put together these learning hubs for next year and are currently working through logistics of what this will look like, including leadership and management structures and breadth of stakeholders. We decided the online community was the real core of the HUB, and that through this everyone could and in fact must be connected to everyone else. We also thought that students should be part of this structure as active leaders and have a voice in the community.

I see this as a real opportunity to do something different in education in Australia. It is important for stakeholders in the learning process talk to each other. Technology can provide the conduit for this. However, after more than 10 years of building online communities I know that creating a virtual hub to support the physical hub will mean a lot of work to monitor, cajole contributions and develop a community of practice. 'Build it and they will come' is not guaranteed. The 90, 9, 1 principle applies here - 90% will lurk or not even join in most cases, 9% will be reasonably active and 1% will be very active and drive the community. What is needed is experienced online teachers and community builders to help build and monitor the online community. This task will be made doubly hard by the inclusion of community members who may or may not be familiar with online learning and responsibilities of belonging to a community. Not impossible, just challenging. I do see this online community as the core of the learning HUB. There is no other way to do it. It must be transparent, open to the world and freely share ideas, plans, actions, successes and more. Yes! I said 'open to the world'. Enough hiding behind a wall - what are we hiding from? Best practice in learning must be shared to the world. The learning hub could be monitored for membership and of course moderated membership is always needed to avoid spammers, but I would suggest the idea is also to let outside interested learners in as well to further proliferate the diversity of the community.

One aspect of today was the general lack of 'global' thinking. Discussion was very localised and pertinent to individual school situations. Wonderful stories were shared about engagement in learning, however to me one of the key engaging factors in the schools and with the teachers and students I work with is the fact they are taking their learning global, they are building rich collaborative curriculum and embedding interactions that support cultural understanding and global mindedness across grade levels. This is something I believe these learning HUBS could be working towards - as they build their community and develop good practices based on the design and engagement principles.

Creating the conditions for change is challenging but necessary. Preparing schools for change in terms of leadership, learning and pedagogy, school structure (timetable, disciplines, curricula and co-curricula), and technology infusion is even more challenging today with the connected, mobile and ubiquitous generation coming through. We need to make schools relevant, provide more diverse personalized learning choices and connect learners locally as well as globally. I know teachers in Australia are ready for this....well the colleagues at the workshop today certainly are - so the next step is to get out of the way of the learning and make this happen! Forge new Learning Frontiers!

Sunday, December 01, 2013

Global Education Highlights (weekly)

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.