#Snowlesson

Today our school was closed due to the weather, so I decided better put my money where my mouth is and create an online lesson for the children whilst they were off. I decided to take the opportunity to try and make the lesson as ‘live’ as possible.

I know I started the wrong way round in looking at things (I should have started with what the children needed to learn rather than what tech shall I use) but come on, it’s not every day you get a snow day! I decided not to use the inbuilt chat in our learning platform, Studywiz, as I wanted to be able to try and use some of the same teaching strategies that I use on a day to day basis to see if they will transfer online. In particular, modelling the writing process through shared writing. I therefore needed a tool that would allow drawing and writing to be seen and used at the same time as audio and chat. For this purpose I decided to give Twiddla its first ever ‘work out’. Currently, you can register for educational use on the site and get a pro account for free, details at the bottom of this page.

So, I embedded a Twiddla meeting into a Studywiz discussion activity so that after all the fancy real time stuff they would be able to create their descriptive writing and post it onto the discussion. The lesson had to be very generic as I was opening it to anyone from year 1 to 6. I therefore planned to start by get them to share some descriptive language about an image then move on to discussing an existing text, shared write the start of a new one before they created their own.

So, how did it go? I’m going to keep it brief as you can click here for a replay of the lesson (starts at about 350) and there is an image of the #snowlesson twitter hash tag I used to keep track of my thoughts at the bottom of the page.

The collaboration they carried out in the chat was great, and i’m sure adding to the image and annotating at the same time was motivating for them. As for the shared writing, I had issues with audio (i.e. I couldn’t get it working!) so I could only use the chat. It was therefore pretty difficult to get the shared write going – I had to give up in the end as some other users could still see the image which was obscuring their view of the writing. However, if their had been no technical hitches then I think the shared write would have worked really really well with audio. It almost makes more sense than in a standard class setting. With all pupils able to comment and discuss in the chat the writing process that was illustrating, whilst it was occurring, it would certainly make it more overt. Finally, it is worth mentioning that this method also encourages Talk for Writing and AFL through deep questioning and peer reviews.

Here is a couple of amalgamated screen shots of the lesson mid flow – mixed with the first few replies in the discussion:

Here is a snapshot of the #snowlesson twitter hash tag. Alternatively, Click here for the latest.

TMETRU09 “Wii are learning” Mario Kart

This presentation was created for Teach Meet Ed Tech Round Up 2009. It focuses on the use of Mario Kart Wii in a year 4 classroom to enhance learning experiences.

http://www.wallwisher.com/

http://www.wordle.net/

http://earth.google.co.uk/

http://www.mindmeister.com/25819414/mario-kart

http://primarypete.net/mario-kart-theme

The Armada Theme

I’m going to be honest here… I wasn’t really looking forward to our Tudor theme during half term. We had just finished a very successful mini book theme based on ‘The Rabbits’ by John Marsden and a Mario Kart theme previous to that. The Tudors have never really captured my imagination unlike other National Curriculum History areas like Egypt or The Romans so the challenge for me was how to I try and teach an entire theme through content that I personally didn’t find inspiring and didn’t believe the children would either?!

Taking learner motivation as the starting point, I thought what would capture boy’s interest? Hmm. War and guns… sounds like The Spanish Armada! So rather than focus on Henry VIII and factual understanding as has been the tradition, we would start off the theme with an in depth study of The Armada then move on to the rest of the Tudor era. Not a massive shift I admit, but one that seemed to lead us down an altogether more exciting path.

We opened the theme with a ‘teacher in role’ session between myself as the mighty Sir Francis Drake and my parallel class teacher as Elizabeth I. It wasn’t entirely historically accurate, granted, but it grabbed the children’s attention and took us on a path of question finding, led by the children and covered many of the History skills required in the curriculum.

The main Literacy unit on which to hang the content was information texts. So using a mixture of a library loan and appropriately sources website links based on the questions posed by the children we developed out ability to skim, scan and take notes. The children loved taking notes, particular when we used some of the Battlefield Britain video – they liked the idea that they could develop ‘their own code’ and be scruffier with their writing than usual.

During the note taking process we trialled the use of http://markkit.net/ with limited success. A better bet would have been http://www.ript.com/ which I came across thanks to Bev Evans, alas to late to implement for this purpose. As an assessment of our note taking we used Wordle to create a word cloud which really emphasised which words were overused/ should be shortened/ removed. It led to an interesting discussion into what the Wordle was showing and what that meant for their understanding of note taking. I found the idea for this from Tim Rylands on his hand held learning 2009 talk.

43291061

Notetaking2

During The Armada work, the children were working on becoming shipmates of Sir Francis Drake, in order to help against The Armada. We built up to creating diary entries from on board ships focusing on paragraphs, connectives and adverbs using a mixture of paper and pen and ICT techniques. For example, below average children were given a Photostory templates with images, directions and background music so they could focus on the audio and therefore the speaking skills that would help their first steps to improve their use of connectives. These worked really well, producing high quality sentences which the children involved were really proud of.

sirfrancisdrake

After all The Armada development we moved on to a resource that took a while to build, A Tudor Exploration Day, based on Ictopus 29 good practice guide. Unfortunately we were are not lucky enough to have mobile tech in school yet which would definitely have allowed for a richer experience of discovery. As it was, missions were posted on our Studywiz learning platform through the morning where groups of children had to go and explore, loot or discover from around school, intertwined with information bulletins building a Tudor time line which included text, images and videos. The children loved their missions but I couldn’t help feeling that to be really successful in terms of moving their knowledge on, the information bulletins needed to be linked to the missions more closely.

Tudor Exploration Day

To develop their understanding of chronology, I decided to trial the use of an online time line creator. I love the look of http://capzles.com/ but this is currently blocked in our LEA so I opted for Timetoast. As usual, the children loved using ICT to add their information and it was great that we could create a collaborative time line. The only issue was that due to using 1 account, a couple of times children accidentally saved work whilst another child was editing the same spot, losing their work. The children soon realised this though, and managed themselves well in their group of 6 to ensure this was minimised. The quality of the time line created was a little hit and miss. This was clearly because of the way we had approached the unit, focusing heavily on the historical enquiry skills and Literacy rather than ‘fact hunting’ which would have helped with time line details: http://www.timetoast.com/timelines/31475

With the skills the children had developed so far in the theme, they were able to follow their own lines of enquiry. Because we had entered the theme with The Armada, we had come across references to Henry VIII, Mary Queen of Scots etc along the way and the children were dying to develop their understanding of areas such as these. Some children wanted to continue to focus on The Armada, which they were given the opportunity to do. Through the Tudor Exploration Day missions and information as well as specific ‘finding out’ skills using Google (as I did not want to restrict their question paths to information I had found) the children then went about finding out what they wanted to know, examining sources of evidence along the way. In hindsight, I should have got the children to use notebooks to write questions down that occurred to them through the unit that they wanted answered so that they would have this resource to draw. This would have enhanced their lines of enquiry.

The culmination of the theme lay in 3 areas:

Firstly, the design and development of a Tudor presentation, related to their own line of enquiry. This was generally focused on The Armada, or the Tudors in general, apart from 5 or 6 girls that notably chose to focus theirs on Elizabeth I. After the moderate success of the time line I was a little apprehensive about whether they had sufficient detail following their question paths to produce a suitable presentation however this proved to be the most successful outcome from the theme. I gave the children a choice between Powerpoint and 2Create. We discussed the merits of both and with a little pushing every one of them wanted the flexibility to the user that 2Create gave (plus the fact that it could be embedded in their Studywiz blogs at the end!). They had used 2Create in Year 3 and I was impressed with their skills at working around the program which allowed me to focus on navigation structure, usability and layout with them, looking at their target audience.

Secondly, after their presentations were completed, they wrote an extended piece on the same area. It was really useful to complete the computer presentation first as it gave the structure for their paragraphs already and instead the children could concentrate on the sentence construction which had been our focus in Literacy throughout. The highlight for me was seeing the children ask for their planning documents and previous note taking to help them… for just about the first time ever pretty much everyone ‘got’ why planning is so important! In a subsequent session we used Etherpad to revise and improve their writing, which kept motivation levels high.

Thirdly, and still yet to come – The Tudor Feast! We’d watched a cut down version of Heston Blumenthal’s version a couple of weeks ago and apart from having to gloss over a couple of choice words by the adult diners it was a really useful 10 minutes as it helped the children get into the experience, or for want of a better word, the ‘wow’ factor of a Tudor Feast. Ever since then they have been dying for their own version (minus the butter beer). We are planning on combining this with a full on Tudor Day celebration where parents can drop in to see the children’s work as well as view dance performances and acted scenes from Macbeth (more on that in a later blog post!)

So have I been converted to liking the Tudors? Er.. No. But the feedback from children and parents has been tremendous and that is all that matters! I plan to do some evaluation with the children to find out exactly what they have enjoyed so much – was it the approach to the unit? Was it the chance to create their own lines of enquiry? Was it the (moderate) use of technology to support them? Or was it just that unlike me, they love The Tudors?! Time will tell!

Mario Kart Theme

Below is an overview of our first theme in Year 4 this year, Mario Kart. It shows how we blended learning platform activities and free websites with established teaching techniques.

Initial Medium Term Planning using MindMeister:

We started by playing Mario Kart on the Wii, the class were clearly enthusiastic and it gave a chance for some learners to instantly change their hierarchy as some were already familiar with the game and others that they would usually look up to were asking them for help. They were instructed to consider the levels in which they were racing (with direction towards Bowser’s Castle and other fantasy, fiery style levels). This led to our shared writing and guided writing on fantasy settings.

As part of the learner’s planning they used Wordle to create a record of their vocabulary suggestions, which were used during the other writing focused sessions.

During this time learner’s use of graphics was also developed by creating a collage of Mario Kart images which were then manipulated using selection tools, subsequently focusing on layout. At this point we introduced our new learning platform, Studywiz. This allowed learners to learn about file types (Photoshop Elements files having a different purpose to jpeg files) and uploading. Using Studywiz’s gallery tool, learner’s then viewed each others work, rating and leaving comments on them.

Moving from setting to character, we then continued to develop vocabulary skills starting by the learner’s creating their own new characters in line drawings, pastels and paint. As with the settings, through shared writing and guided writing their character descriptions were then developed. Learners were asked to create a description of an existing character which they created through a discussion forum on Studywiz, partially at home.
The theme had just started to drag and enthusiasm was waning so we introduced a fictional character that could have been through drama but it was decided to use a Studywiz chat room to introduce the character (the CEO of Nintendo, ‘Winston Baracass’). He managed to single handedly invigorate the entire class to continue and push forward in their learning. In the conversation Winston explained to the class that he wanted to create a Mario Theme Park and needed their help. Together Winston and the class decided they needed to create a map of the park, a new Kart design to feature on the main rollercoaster and a press release persuading people to visit. Whilst the learners were suspicious it was me who was actually Winston, they completely went with it (slightly helped by me having IE and Firefox open and part of the chat, with me being in the chat in one, Winston in the other – so they had a brief conversation between each other). After the learner’s ideas were shared the chat ended and the class decided on the success criterea for each of the items Winston wanted to see (e.g. overhead perspective, a key for the map).

A fresh approach at this point was also sought in improving existing writing rather than more of the same shared and guided writing. Etherpad was therefore used to create groups of learner’s developing and improving each other’s character descriptions.  It was expected that there would be disagreements and ‘fallings out’ between groups as their work got deleted by each other. This was discussed before hand and there were only one or two isolated incidents which were completely plausible as learners started to improve the improvements. There were also a couple of technical issues with disconnections, so it was important that these issues were overcome by learners in the classroom. Now that this tool has been introduced to the class it would probably be best used as a tool outside the classroom, allowing opportunities to work collaboratively on a piece of writing that they could then use or take further in school.

Science could have also run alongside these objectives/activities but it was decided to block this towards the end of the theme and it will tie in well due to its focus on forces.

Overall, the theme has been extremely successful at introducing Year 4 in a fun and interesting way to learners. There has been several comments by parents on the enthusiasm of their children, homework and additional effort has been high (learners saying they are going to create their own maps or character descriptions at home on top of what is being asked from school). The use of Wordle, Etherpad and Studywiz has allowed for several collaborative opportunities that would not have been possible using traditional methods alone. The level of vocabulary learners have come out with in general has been thoughtful and imaginative, however a small minority have missed the focus and objectives, instead focusing on Kart racing and character speech, despite repeated discussions. If the unit is going to be used again it is important to gain the focus of these few learners and also push others further in their understanding of why they should develop their use of adverbs and other word choice (i.e. author intent and adding reader interest). This would further enhance word choice and effectiveness in their writing.

Below is an overview of our first theme in Year 4 this year, Mario Kart. It shows how we blended learning platform activities and free websites with established teaching techniques.

Initial Medium Term Planning using MindMeister:

We started by playing Mario Kart on the Wii, the class were clearly enthusiastic and it gave a chance for some learners to instantly change their hierarchy as some were already familiar with the game and others that they would usually look up to were asking them for help. They were instructed to consider the levels in which they were racing (with direction towards Bowser’s Castle and other fantasy, fiery style levels). This led to our shared writing and guided writing on fantasy settings.

As part of the learner’s planning they used Wordle to create a record of their vocabulary suggestions, which were used during the other writing focused sessions.

During this time learner’s use of graphics was also developed by creating a collage of Mario Kart images which were then manipulated using selection tools, subsequently focusing on layout. At this point we introduced our new learning platform, Studywiz. This allowed learners to learn about file types (Photoshop Elements files having a different purpose to jpeg files) and uploading. Using Studywiz’s gallery tool, learner’s then viewed each others work, rating and leaving comments on them.

Moving from setting to character, we then continued to develop vocabulary skills starting by the learner’s creating their own new characters in line drawings, pastels and paint. As with the settings, through shared writing and guided writing their character descriptions were then developed. Learners were asked to create a description of an existing character which they created through a discussion forum on Studywiz, partially at home.

The theme had just started to drag and enthusiasm was waning so we introduced a fictional character that could have been through drama but it was decided to use a Studywiz chat room to introduce the character (the CEO of Nintendo, ‘Winston Baracass’). He managed to single handedly invigorate the entire class to continue and push forward in their learning. In the conversation Winston explained to the class that he wanted to create a Mario Theme Park and needed their help. Together Winston and the class decided they needed to create a map of the park, a new Kart design to feature on the main rollercoaster and a press release persuading people to visit. Whilst the learners were suspicious it was me who was actually Winston, they completely went with it (slightly helped by me having IE and Firefox open and part of the chat, with me being in the chat in one, Winston in the other – so they had a brief conversation between each other). After the learner’s ideas were shared the chat ended and the class decided on the success criterea for each of the items Winston wanted to see (e.g. overhead perspective, a key for the map).

A fresh approach at this point was also sought in improving existing writing rather than more of the same shared and guided writing. Etherpad was therefore used to create groups of learner’s developing and improving each other’s character descriptions.  It was expected that there would be disagreements and ‘fallings out’ between groups as their work got deleted by each other. This was discussed before hand and there were only one or two isolated incidents which were completely plausible as learners started to improve the improvements. There were also a couple of technical issues with disconnections, so it was important that these issues were overcome by learners in the classroom. Now that this tool has been introduced to the class it would probably be best used as a tool outside the classroom, allowing opportunities to work collaboratively on a piece of writing that they could then use or take further in school.

Science could have also run alongside these objectives/activities but it was decided to block this towards the end of the theme and it will tie in well due to its focus on forces.

Overall, the theme has been extremely successful at introducing Year 4 in a fun and interesting way to learners. There has been several comments by parents on the enthusiasm of their children, homework and additional effort has been high (learners saying they are going to create their own maps or character descriptions at home on top of what is being asked from school). The use of Wordle, Etherpad and Studywiz has allowed for several collaborative opportunities that would not have been possible using traditional methods alone. The level of vocabulary learners have come out with in general has been thoughtful and imaginative, however a small minority have missed the focus and objectives, instead focusing on Kart racing and character speech, despite repeated discussions. If the unit is going to be used again it is important to gain the focus of these few learners and also push others further in their understanding of why they should develop their use of adverbs and other word choice (i.e. author intent and adding reader interest). This would further enhance word choice and effectiveness in their writing.

Edmodo

Think twitter could be useful but concerned about safety/security? Then Edmodo is for you – it’s a free educational version of Twitter basically – as a teacher you can add student accounts without an email address. Possible uses – pupil peer support, general discussion and file sharing etc.

FireShot capture #002 - 'Education 2_0 - Edmodo - Free Private Microblogging For Education' - www_edmodo_com__logged=out

Sumopaint

Sumopaint is a free online paint package similar in style to Photoshop Elements or another high level painting and image manipulation package. It’s completely online. A great free tool for KS2 to use.

sumopaint