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E-Learning Foundation Engaging and Supporting Teachers Bob Harrison

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Presentation on theme: "E-Learning Foundation Engaging and Supporting Teachers Bob Harrison"— Presentation transcript:

1 E-Learning Foundation Engaging and Supporting Teachers Bob Harrison www.setuk.co.uk bob@setuk.co.uk Twitter @bobharrisonset

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3 “ Students today cannot prepare bark to calculate their problems. They depend on their slates which are more expensive. What will they do when the slate is dropped and it is broken? They will be unable to write.” 1703 Teachers’ Conference Resistance To Innovation

4 “ Students today depend on paper too much. They do not know how to write on slate without getting chalk dust on themselves. They cannot clean a slate properly. What will they do when they run out of paper?” 1815 Principals’ Publication Resistance To Innovation

5 “ Students today depend too much on ink. They do not know how to use a penknife to sharpen a pencil. Pen and ink will never replace the pencil.” National Association 1907 Resistance To Innovation

6 “ Students today depend on store bought ink. They do not know how to make their own. When they run out of ink they will be unable to write words or ciphers until their next trip to the settlement. This is a sad commentary on modern education.” 1928 USA Teacher Resistance To Innovation

7 “ Students today depend on these expensive fountain pens. They can no longer write with a straight pen and nib. We parents must not allow them to wallow in such luxury to the detriment of learning how to cope in the real business world which is not so extravagant.” 1941 PTA Gazette Resistance To Innovation

8 “ Ball point pens will be the ruin of education in our country. Students use these devices and throw them away! The American values of thrift and frugality are being discarded. Business and banks will never allow such expensive luxuries.” 1950 Federal Teachers Resistance To Innovation

9 “ Computers give students an unfair advantage. Therefore students who use computers to analyse data or create displays will be eliminated from the Science Fair.” 1988 Science Fair Judge – Apple Classroom of Tomorrow Resistance To Innovation

10 “ Education as we know it is being reformed and for the worse. More and more schools are shuffling kids into computer labs and knowledge is being left at the door.” 2012 Huffington Post Resistance To Innovation

11 Sigmoid Curve

12 1.One 2.Thirteen 3.Thirty - one

13 1.One 2. Thirteen 3. Thirty - one

14 Are the New Millennium Learners Making the Grade? Technology use and Educational performance in Pisa Centre for Educational Research and Innovation

15 The Future of Learning: Preparing for Change The Future of Learning: Preparing for Change European Commission Joint Research Centre Institute for Prospective Technological Studies Authors: Christine Redecker, Miriam Leis, Matthijs Leendertse, Yves Punie, Govert Gijsbers, Paul Kirschner, Slavi Stoyanov and Bert Hoogveld

16 Human-Computer Interaction in 2020 Being Human – Human – Computer interaction in the Year 2020 Edited by Richard Harper, Tom Rodden, Yvonne Rogers and Abigail Sellen Published by Microsoft

17 Equipping Every Learner for the 21st Century

18 The Future of Thinking Learning Institutions in a Digital Age Cathy N. Davidson and David Thea Goldberg with the assistance of Zoe Marie Jones

19 The Learning Society

20 The Digital World Of Young Children: Impact on Emergent Literacy The Digital World Of Young Children: Impact on Emergent Literacy Jay Blanchard | Terry Moore Arizona State University College of Teacher Education and Leadership

21 Disrupting College

22 Learning In a Digital age

23 Transforming learning through mEducation

24 Education Reform For The Digital Era

25 The Digital Learning Imperative

26 Innovating Pedagogy 2012

27 System Upgrade

28 Decoding Learning

29 The Impact Of Digital Technology On Learning

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31 Innovating Pedagogy 2013

32 What it takes to learn John Dewey Jean Piaget Lev Vygotsky Jerome Bruner Paulo Freire Gordon Pask Terry Winograd Seymour Papert Lauren Resnick John Seely Brown Ference Marton Roger Säljö John Biggs Jean Lave Inquiry-based education Constructivism Mediated learning Discovery learning Learning as problematization Learning as conversation Problem-based learning Reflective practice Meta-cognition Experiential learning Learner-oriented approach Social constructivism Situated learning share a common conception of the learning process 1890. 1940. 1960. 1980. 2000. There is a common thread in our understanding of learning - the learner is an active agent in the learning process

33 33 What it takes to learn does not change Inquiry-based learning Constructivism Mediated learning Discovery learning Learning as conversation Problem-based learning Reflective practice Meta-cognition Experiential learning Learner-oriented approach Social constructivism Situated learning Books, Blackboards, Slides Broadcasts, Overhead projectors Tape-slides Interactive whiteboards, Powerpoint Web-pages, Podcasts Modelling tools Simulations Chat-rooms Online conferences Multiplayer games Wikis Blogs Learning through attention

34 Common classroom activities 52% 29% 25% 22% 17% 16% 10% 9% 8% 7% 4% 3% Copy from the board or a book Listen to a teacher talking for a long time Have a class discussion Take notes while my teacher talks Work in small groups to solve a problem Have a drink of water when I need it Work on a computer Listen to background music Have some activities that allow me to move around Create pictures or maps to help me remember Have a change of activity to help focus Q Which three of the following do you do most often in class? Spend time thinking quietly on my own Talk about my work with a teacher Learn things that relate to the real world Teach my classmates about something Base: All pupils (2,417)Source: Ipsos MORI Have people from outside to help me learn Learn outside in my school’s grounds 33%

35 Most preferred ways to learn 55% 39% 35% 31% 21% 19% 16% 14% 12% 9% 8% 5% 6% 3% 1% In groups By doing practical things With friends By using computers Alone From friends With your parents By practising By copying By thinking for yourself Other From others In which three of the following ways do you prefer to learn? From teachers By seeing things done In silence At a museum or library Base:All pupils (2,417)Source: Ipsos MORI

36 Learners of the future

37 Learners of The Future

38 Teachers of the future…?

39 “One of the clinical definitions of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting to get a different result.” John Abbott BSF

40 Learning 1908 1958 2004 2010 2012

41 Learning 1908 1958 2010 2012

42 Centre for Learning and Performance Technologies- Top Tools for Learners 2013. 1.Twitter 2.Google Drive/Docs 3.You Tube 4.Google Search 5.PowerPoint 6.Evernote 7.Dropbox 8.WordPress 9.FaceBook 10.Google+/Hangouts 11.Moodle 12.LinkedIn 13.Skype

43 The ewords framework Swap traditional practices with ICT Exchange Engage learners by using a richer mix of media Enrich Deepen learning through the use of ICT Enhance Change the content, process and location of learning Extend Enable learners to take control of their own learning Empower shallow deep Martin Blows the ewords framework

44 It’s not about the technology …. … it’s about new thinking.

45 Almost all the barriers are in our heads. We cannot change policy but we can change practice. The only barriers are in our heads!

46 Policy or Practice? "The reality is that the circumstances, rationale and representations for learning have changed....lets confront it "Richard Noss #altc2012

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