Η Σφαιρική Αναζήτηση για Εκπαίδευση: 7 Οι εκπαιδευτικοί 7 Ήπειροι #EdChat για #EdTech

2015-08-02-1438544362-7096992-cmrubinworldedmodocon2photo5500-thumb

“Το πιο ξεπερασμένη και καταστροφική υποτυπώδης χαρακτηριστικό στη σύγχρονη Κ-12 του χώρου είναι η έμφαση στην τυποποιημένη δοκιμή μαζί με τις αποδοχές κολλεγίων και τις διαδικασίες εγγραφής, οι οποίες βασίζονται σε αυτές τις συμβάσεις δοκιμής. Με τα ψηφιακά εργαλεία που έχουμε στη διάθεσή, θα μπορούσαμε να απελευθερώσουν τα παιδιά να βιώσουν και να καταδείξουν την μάθησή τους σε πολύ πιο σοβαρά τρόπους μέσω live τεκμηρίωση με βάση την κοινότητα ή του πραγματικού κόσμου προσπάθειες.” — Λίζα Goochee

Global classroom collaboration to share good practicedoes anyone do it on quite the same scale as Edmodo? On August 4, EdmodoCon 2015 will be streamed live from San Mateo, Καλιφόρνια. Thousands and thousands of teachers from all over the world will log on to what some call the educational collaboration event of the year in order to share the ways they are using Edmodo and other tech tools to personalize learning. Τερέζα Perles, Alfa Y Omega, Denia, Ισπανία; Bianca Hewes, Northern Beaches Secondary College, Sydney, Αυστραλία; Lisa Finch, Dubai English Speaking College, Ντουμπάι, United Arab Emirates; Josh Gaines, International School Eastern Seaboard, Chonburi, Thailand; Premanand Edward Malyakkal, Malabar Christian College, Calicut Kerala, Ινδία; Λίζα Goochee, former teacher, School of the National Brasilia, Brazil and now a Stanford Learning, Design and Technology student; and John Choins, Midway Middle School, Woodway, Τέξας, join me ahead of the big event in Η Σφαιρική Αναζήτηση για Εκπαίδευση to talk EdTech.

2015-07-27-1437963170-9597123-cmrubinworldedmodocphoto4500.jpg

Curated sites installed as Apps bring out graphic, visual and audio in them. Zite and Flipboard are a few of them. RSS feeds, news magazine capsules, dictionary.com, Elevate and Zinio rank among them. Edmodo too, with its communities and threads to understand more about how learning objectives are achieved in various parts of the globe.” — Premanand Edward Malyakkai

“Εκπαιδευτές 2015 no longer can use the excuse that they didn’t know, when there are so many places to help them be in the know.Canadian Educator Karen Lirenman encourages a global collective leadership model for teachers. σκέψεις?

Τερέζα Perles, Ισπανία: Απολύτως. Teachers should all be acquainted with technology and develop their skills further through their PLN (personal learning network), and through communication with peers in these networks, a global collective leadership model could be agreed upon.

Bianca Hewes, Αυστραλία: I absolutely agree. The benefit of nourishing a global learning community has seen me thrive as a teacherthese connections have given my students real-world audiences and purposes for their learning, and have supported me through the roller-coaster ride that is being a teacher. Those of us privileged to have already established a global professional learning network have a responsibility to encourage and support other teachers to develop their own as well.

Lisa Finch, United Arab Emirates: Edmodo is a really great example of a way in which educators can connect with each otheras part of specialized subject communities/groups and also via resource sharing such as Spotlight. It is bringing everyone closer together and is allowing education to evolve on digital platforms. Knowledge sharing is key. Social networking sites (such as Twitter) are also hubs for teachers to share, advise and innovate. Live webinars and free online MOOCs (eg: Coursera) give us opportunities to extend our existing skill sets and knowledge. I recommend all teachers to get online. Find things out, make connections and continue to learn. Be role models for students and other educators. Παίρνω ρίσκα (especially with technology), follow peers and innovators, be resilient, share ideas and go the extra mile. Never stand still.

Josh Gaines, Thailand: The best way to improve in your practice is to observe your peers and work with others who know what they’re doing.

Premanand Edward Malyakkal, Ινδία: As a teacher from South India, it is still the good old newspaper, particularly interesting when accompanied with a cup of coffee. Curated sites installed as Apps bring out graphic, visual and audio in them. Zite and Flipboard are a few of them. RSS feeds, news magazine capsules, dictionary.com, Elevate and Zinio rank among them. Edmodo too, with its communities and threads to understand more about how learning objectives are achieved in various parts of the globe.

Λίζα Goochee, Βραζιλία: It’s less about the plethora of tools or help available and more about respecting the time educators need to rest, recover, and tend to their personal lives. We need to build products, μέθοδοι, and platforms that enhance the teaching endeavor and advance the profession, rather than detract from teacherspersonal time and strip the career of whatever nobility it still has. It is the responsibility of leaders to set a vision and pace in conversation with their staff regarding the right tools for their school(s) and the schedule for integration and ongoing revision of these tools.

John Choins, Τέξας: Through the worldwide connections available via Edmodo, one can collaborate, and even have students collaborate with others. This opens doors for teachers and students to expand their knowledge in ways one cannot, just by reading a book.

2015-07-27-1437963235-6914907-cmrubinworldedmodocphoto3500.jpg

“Μακριά εξηγήσεις στον πίνακα έχουν σίγουρα να είναι ξεπερασμένες στο σχολείο μας. Σήμερα, Όλες οι αίθουσες έχουν μια οθόνη στην οποία μπορούμε να προβάλει τις παρουσιάσεις που έχουμε δημιουργήσει ή επιλέξει εκ των προτέρων, και στη συνέχεια να τα μοιραστείτε με τους μαθητές; ή θα εφαρμόσουν γυρίσει διδασκαλίας.” — Τερέζα Perles

Share one recent story that illustrates how the Edmodo technology has enhanced the ways in which teachers, φοιτητές, administrators or parents communicate in your community.

Τερέζα Perles, Ισπανία: I teach English as a foreign language. I had a new student who came with a poor level of English, and our school has an advanced standard for this subject. With the support of his mother, he received intensive intervention via Edmodo and was able to reach the minimum objectives in just under three months!

Bianca Hewes, Αυστραλία: I have started working at a new school in the role of professional learning coordinator. The first thing I did was create new Edmodo groups for my new classes, and introduced them to a range of new ways to use it such as silent conversations, small group collaborations and completing class tasks digitally. I have also established staff PLC (επαγγελματική κοινότητα μάθησης) teams who are working on action research projects examining their practice. To support this process, I have created a PLC Edmodo group, and added a range of useful resources to folders that each teacher can access anytime, οπουδήποτε.

Lisa Finch, United Arab Emirates: I’ve set up a project called TechPreneur that uses Edmodo as a communication tool between schools. Two students from my school team up with a pair from another, located elsewhere in the world. They work collaboratively, over a period of weeks, to create an idea for a new tech startup. All design work and project management takes place via Edmodo. The students gain a real sense of how a new product would be innovated in the real world, where project team members could be scattered across the globe. It stimulates creative problem solving and provides students with the chance to interact with peers from another country/culture.

Josh Gaines, Thailand: Many of my students are English Language Learners and very shy to use English. For many of them Edmodo is a safe way to communicate with a teacher.

Premanand Edward Malyakkal, Ινδία: An assignment was given via Edmodo in 2012 to a group of tertiary learners. One student came up with the topic, Merits and Demerits of the Internet. After evaluation, this was posted on the class blog. Within a few days, this particular article received numerous comments from various parts of the world.

Λίζα Goochee, Βραζιλία: I attended a student leadership conference at the American School (Lincoln School) of Buenos Aires. It is called the Global Issues Network Conference and focuses on global improvement projects from school-based student groups from each region of the world. My 4th grade students and I were working on our own small-scale project-based learning units at the time centered around questions of school citizenship and character values. I went to the conference to learn what the older students were doing. While I was at this conference, I detailed stories about these student teams from around the South American continent, specifically their work and their impact, back to my Brazil kids via Edmodo. My students were so inspired by the stories that they created a small team of students to research unfair child labor practices and made a small awareness campaign in our community to advocate conscious consumer practices before the holiday shopping season. They filmed their work and posted some of their flyers on Edmodo. This was done outside of school time.

John Choins, Τέξας: I created educational videos and posted the link to those videos on Edmodo. Students watched the videos, completed the practice problems included in the videos, and sent those problems back to me through the EdmodoAssignmentfeature. I evaluated their work, and then designed the class time to meet the needs of the students, based on their practice problems. Through Edmodo, the students were also able to communicate with me and other students about the videos and ask me questions to clarify something they saw in the video. The most fun thing students did, αν και, was notify me when they found a mistake in one of the videos.

2015-07-27-1437963277-7833554-cmrubinworldedmodocphoto2500.jpg

Hard copies of textbooks have become unnecessary because of technology. In today’s classrooms, teaching students how to learn, where to find valid information online, as well as how to use that information, has become more important. Teachers must adapt to become facilitators who help students learn, instead of ones who just give students information, expecting them to learn it.” — John Choins

Όταν τα βιβλία ήρθε μαζί, προφορικές ιστορίες έγινε λιγότερο σημαντικό. Let’s talk about other examples of traditional education that have become outmoded because of technology. What’s become much more important in today’s classroom because of technology, and conversely what do you believe should be significantly de-emphasized.

Τερέζα Perles, Ισπανία: Μακριά εξηγήσεις στον πίνακα έχουν σίγουρα να είναι ξεπερασμένες στο σχολείο μας. Σήμερα, Όλες οι αίθουσες έχουν μια οθόνη στην οποία μπορούμε να προβάλει τις παρουσιάσεις που έχουμε δημιουργήσει ή επιλέξει εκ των προτέρων, και στη συνέχεια να τα μοιραστείτε με τους μαθητές; or we implement flipped teaching.

Bianca Hewes, Αυστραλία: There are obvious practices that are less necessary, such as creating title pages, ruling margins and answering comprehension questions in workbooks. Collaboration skills are far more essential in a global world than being able to work independently in a closed environment. Digital technologies such as Edmodo are really powerful in facilitating the development of essential skills required of young people entering today’s workforce. Communicating online with peers teaches them the importance of etiquette, and the subtleties of the written word versus the spoken.

Lisa Finch, United Arab Emirates: The 21st century classroom is now open 24/7. Tools such as Edmodo make education accessible at times when learning may be more convenient. Parents can also access resources and lesson contentallowing them to get a fuller flavor of what their children are engaging with. Learners are not isolated. Teachers are less restricted. This triad creates a powerful learning community that is supported, flexible and transparent.

Josh Gaines, Thailand: Students are now able to turn in work to me, and receive feedback and grades directly through Edmodo. One area that is becoming much more important for students is online portfolios, or any online space available for students. Students need a place on the web they can call their own and tools that allow them to shape the internet to meet their own needs.

Premanand Edward Malyakkal, Ινδία: Projecting notes via PowerPoint is the order of the day. Ωστόσο,, the sad thing is that no major changes are incorporated/updated into these notes. The ‘library habitof a teacher has been substituted with an iPad and the teacher walks with an air of assumption that ‘everythingis at beck and call. Teachers need to introspect themselves, learn new technologies suitable for their classrooms, update their skills and benefit from the information overflow.

Λίζα Goochee, Βραζιλία: Το πιο ξεπερασμένη και καταστροφική υποτυπώδης χαρακτηριστικό στη σύγχρονη Κ-12 του χώρου είναι η έμφαση στην τυποποιημένη δοκιμή μαζί με τις αποδοχές κολλεγίων και τις διαδικασίες εγγραφής, οι οποίες βασίζονται σε αυτές τις συμβάσεις δοκιμής. Με τα ψηφιακά εργαλεία που έχουμε στη διάθεσή, we could liberate children to experience and demonstrate their learning in far more compelling ways via live documentation of community-based or real-world endeavors. We need to align school learning to the real-world we are all inheriting. As students can find out most any information for themselves, the values and purpose of our education needs to be discussed in open forums on all scales of family to society. Without more conversations about our educational values and purpose in the wake of this new age of open learning, we will surely struggle to set realistic boundaries for safety and clear goals to support all students to their individual successes. We are likely to continue disrupting studentsnatural curiosities when it has never been easier to avoid, all for the sake of maintaining an outdated status-quo of educating. We should de-emphasize content standards and emphasize skill-building, competency-building, and character education to build a healthier world.

John Choins, Τέξας: Hard copies of textbooks have become unnecessary because of technology. In today’s classrooms, teaching students how to learn, where to find valid information online, as well as how to use that information, has become more important. Teachers must adapt to become facilitators who help students learn, instead of ones who just give students information, expecting them to learn it.

2015-07-27-1437963120-404224-cmrubinworld7teachersheadbutt500.jpg

Κορυφαία Σειρά: L έως R: C. M. Rubin, Λίζα Goochee, Premanand Edward Malyakkai, Josh Gaines

Κάτω σειρά: L έως R: Τερέζα Perles, John Choins, Lisa Finch, Bianca Hewes

(Photos are courtesy of Lisa Goochee, Premanand Edward Malyakkai, Teresa Perles and John Choins)

Για περισσότερες πληροφορίες.

GSE-logo-RylBlu

Έλα μαζί μου και παγκοσμίως γνωστή ηγέτες σκέψης συμπεριλαμβανομένου του Sir Michael Barber (Ηνωμένο Βασίλειο), Ο Δρ. Michael Block (ΗΠΑ), Ο Δρ. Leon Botstein (ΗΠΑ), Καθηγητής Clay Christensen (ΗΠΑ), Ο Δρ. Linda Ντάρλινγκ-Hammond (ΗΠΑ), Ο Δρ. MadhavChavan (Ινδία), Ο καθηγητής Michael Fullan (Καναδάς), Ο καθηγητής Howard Gardner (ΗΠΑ), Ο καθηγητής Andy Hargreaves (ΗΠΑ), Ο καθηγητής Yvonne Hellman (Η Ολλανδία), Ο καθηγητής Kristin Helstad (Νορβηγία), Jean Hendrickson (ΗΠΑ), Καθηγητής Rose Hipkins (Νέα Ζηλανδία), Καθηγητής Cornelia Hoogland (Καναδάς), Αξιότιμο Jeff Johnson (Καναδάς), Η κ. Chantal Kaufmann (Βέλγιο), Ο Δρ. EijaKauppinen (Φινλανδία), Υφυπουργός TapioKosunen (Φινλανδία), Ο καθηγητής Dominique Λαφοντέν (Βέλγιο), Ο καθηγητής Hugh Lauder (Ηνωμένο Βασίλειο), Lord Ken Macdonald (Ηνωμένο Βασίλειο), Ο καθηγητής Geoff Masters (Αυστραλία), Καθηγητής Barry McGaw (Αυστραλία), Shiv Nadar (Ινδία), Καθηγητής R. Natarajan (Ινδία), Ο Δρ. PAK NG (Σιγκαπούρη), Ο Δρ. Denise Πάπα (ΗΠΑ), Sridhar Rajagopalan (Ινδία), Ο Δρ. Diane Ravitch (ΗΠΑ), Richard Wilson Riley (ΗΠΑ), Sir Ken Robinson (Ηνωμένο Βασίλειο), Καθηγητής Pasi Sahlberg (Φινλανδία), Καθηγητής Manabu Sato (Ιαπωνία), Andreas Schleicher (PISA, ΟΟΣΑ), Ο Δρ. Anthony Seldon (Ηνωμένο Βασίλειο), Ο Δρ. David Shaffer (ΗΠΑ), Ο Δρ. Kirsten Μοναδική Are (Νορβηγία), Στήβεν Spahn (ΗΠΑ), Yves Theze (LyceeFrancais ΗΠΑ), Ο καθηγητής Charles Ungerleider (Καναδάς), Ο καθηγητής Tony Wagner (ΗΠΑ), Sir David Watson (Ηνωμένο Βασίλειο), Καθηγητής Dylan Γουίλιαμ (Ηνωμένο Βασίλειο), Ο Δρ. Mark Wormald (Ηνωμένο Βασίλειο), Ο καθηγητής Theo Wubbels (Η Ολλανδία), Ο καθηγητής Michael Young (Ηνωμένο Βασίλειο), και ο καθηγητής Minxuan Zhang (Κίνα) καθώς εξερευνούν τα μεγάλα ζητήματα της εκπαίδευσης εικόνα που όλα τα έθνη αντιμετωπίζουν σήμερα.
Η Παγκόσμια αναζήτηση για την Εκπαίδευση της Κοινότητας Σελίδα

C. M. Rubin είναι ο συγγραφέας των δύο πολυδιαβασμένα online σειρά για την οποία έλαβε ένα 2011 Βραβείο Upton Sinclair, “Η Σφαιρική Αναζήτηση για Εκπαίδευση” και “Πώς θα μας Διαβάστε?” Είναι επίσης ο συγγραφέας του μπεστ σέλερ τρία βιβλία, Συμπεριλαμβανομένων Η Ρεάλ Αλίκη στη Χώρα των Θαυμάτων, Είναι ο εκδότης του CMRubinWorld, και είναι ένα Ίδρυμα Fellow δι'υπερήχων.

Συγγραφέας: C. M. Rubin

Μοιραστείτε αυτήν την θέση On