Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Interactive Whiteboards in the Classroom: A Primary Teacher’s Perspective Dughall McCormick Primary ICT Consultant, Kirklees Local Education Authority, UK
2
Interactive Whiteboards in the UK 2004 - IWBs accounted for a fifth of the total UK budget for ICT in Primary and Secondary schools. 2005 - Pledge by Secretary of State for Education: ‘One whiteboard per school’ 2007- 200,000 IWBs in UK schools (7.5/school) 1 in 9 Classrooms to have a board by 2010
3
Foundation Stage (Age 3-5 years) Key Features Continuous provision. Girls and boys. Inherent ICT skills. Novelty Collaboration, negotiation, turn- taking. Access issues.
4
Key Stage One (Age 6-8years) Greater emphasis on teacher-led interactive activities. Use of visualiser. Increased use of classroom response system. Wireless slate introduced.
5
Key Stage Two (Age 8-11 years) Children have increased ownership of the technology. Children prepare and deliver presentations and learning materials on a peer-tutor model.
6
Key Features of IWB Technology A high degree of interaction and collaboration. Children have a highly participatory role in their learning. Children acquire generic ICT skills through interacting with the technology It enables quick, easy display and annotation of text, pictures, artefacts, children’s work etc.
7
Problems with the Technology Practitioners relinquishing control. Training and support for practitioners. Technical issues. Availability of software. Limited collaboration. ‘Touch sensitive’ surfaces. Failure to exploit the potential.
8
The Future Bottom-up product development. Building Schools for the Future. Multiple input solutions. Greater collaboration, remote and distance learning.Use of PDAs, EDAs, UMPCs etc.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.