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Integrating and using ICT in Schools

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Title: Integrating and using ICT in Schools


1
  • Integrating and using ICT in Schools
  • An Australia Street Infants School Perspective
  • Bernard Cheng

2
Historical Perspectives informing current issues
"I think there is a world market for maybe
five computers." Thomas Watson, chairman of
IBM, 1943
3
Historical Perspectives informing current issues
There is no reason why anyone would want a
computer in their home." Ken Olson, chairman
and founder of Digital Equipment Corp, 1977
4
Historical Perspectives informing current issues
In 2001 42 of all Australian households used
or owned a personal computer. 14.2 of
Australians aged 0 19 have used a personal
computer at home. Australian Bureau of
Statistics 2001 Census
5
Historical Perspectives informing current issues
According to Moores Law Computers double
in complexity and performance every two years,
whilst also relatively halving in price. So
6
Historical Perspectives informing current issues
  • So think of the possibilities technology will
    bring a child who starts in Kindergarten today
    over the course of their Primary and Secondary
    schooling
  • This has significant and real implications in
    regard to what our role as educators and how this
    effects integration of technology in our schools.

7
What does this mean for us today?
  • Compounding this, increasingly we need to rethink
    our assumptions of what level of technical skills
    students bring to school
  • That is to say the current generation of Digital
    Natives have been born into technology and have
    high level skills but not necessarily skills in
    applying and framing these understandings
    productively.

8
What does this mean for us today?
  • This is our challenge to frame and apply
    student skills productively and appropriately
    In a context were we are presented with
  • a rapidly changing technical landscape
  • an unpredictable and changing workforce
  • increasingly dominated by new industries
  • driven by technical innovation
  • requiring skills that may not have been
    considered even five years ago

9
What does this mean for us today?
  • The key question to consider then is ..
  • What do we need to do as teachers of students to
  • ensure that students develop fundamental skills
    to adapt, change and apply ICT skills
  • as it relates to changing expectations, fields
    of study and industries
  • given that we are increasingly being presented
    with a need to forecast these skills 3 5 years
    ahead of time

10
Forecasting the future.. Some current examples
  • Examples of this is Interactive Whiteboards and
    Video Conferencing in schools.
  • Who would have predicted these would be common
    sites 5 years ago?
  • A stark example of this is at Australia Street
    Infants School where no child K-2 has ever seen a
    chalkboard or whiteboard used in their classroom

11
Forecasting the future.. Some current examples
  • Another example is the Laptops for Learning
    Program providing all students in Years 9 10
    with a laptop providing on-mass mobile
    connectivity...
  • Student access to instant information and social
    connectivity will be unparalleled when compared
    to students who completed schools only 5-10 years
    ago .
  • A practical example of this changing technical
    landscape can be seen in the well referenced
    Google example dealing with instant knowledge
  • In one day 90 million Google searches are
    performed
  • . Where were these questions directed B.G?
    (Before Google)

12
What does this mean for schools today
  • As a consequence key issues facing schools is the
    need to build capacity in teachers to be
    facilitators of purpose and context that utilises
    technology rather that the more traditional view
    of integrators of current technology.
  • We need to focus on delivering opportunities for
    students and staff that ...

13
What does this mean for schools today
  • Facilitate the affective use of current and
    emerging ICT tools within a collaborative and
    authentic learning environment with real purpose
    and that leads to demonstrated learning outcomes
    emphasising

14
What does this mean for schools today
  • Critical thinking
  • Problem solving
  • Collaboration and cooperative knowledge
    construction
  • Discrimination and application
  • Skill application and transferal
  • Sustainable and flexible practice

15
How can this be put into practice
  • Increasingly we are no longer needing to focus on
    the teaching and sequencing of ICT skill
    acquisition in primary schools as explicitly
    taught learning opportunities
  • We need to provide students with opportunities to
    apply their increasingly native understanding of
    ICT in response to authentic tasks in tandem with
    a focus on understanding meta-language and
    process.

16
How can this be put into practice
  • Supporting students in this way involves thinking
    about ICT integration a little differently as has
    been identified in the following research

17
How can this be put into practice
  • ICT can provide powerful tools which can be used
    to facilitate a variety of teaching and learning
    approaches, however technology in its self
    contains neither content or pedagogical bias.
  • (Zhao and Campbell, 1995.)

18
How can this be put into practice
  • The effectiveness of ICT relies on the quality
    of the educational outcomes of the task in which
    it will be incorporated.
  • (Dufresne et.al.,1996.)
  • An important use of technology is the capacity
    to create new opportunities for curriculum and
    instruction through facilitating collaborative
    learning environments.
  • (Brown, A.L., Cocking, R.R., Bransford, J.D.
    (Eds.), 2000.)

19
How can this be put into practice
  • The use of technology should be integrated into a
    Teaching and learning cycle as a transparent part
    of the learning experiences delivered to the
    student.

20
How can this be put into practice
Cheng (2001) Model, 2009 Revision
21
Video Conferencing across the world
22
Creating Podcasts
23
Using interactive technologies for peer
exploration
24
Publishing student products as flash animations
25
Wireless interactive response systems
26
Connected Classroom technologies
27
Some considerations to make
  • As a consequence we need to be wary of .
  • The isolated scope and sequence of ICT skills and
    applications
  • Often the default response to ICT in
    Schools
  • The creation of an unofficial 7th KLA - ICT!

28
Some considerations to make
  • From this we need to ensure that we are
  • Providing teachers with the skills to support
    students to learn effectively with appropriate
    tools, rather than simply skills to understand
    current technology which is unsustainable.

29
What does this mean for schools today
  • Most importantly however .
  • We dont fall into the trap of replicating
    current practice with with new technologies
    raising the question of

30
Does what I am doing with technology present new
and engaging opportunities for the students in
my class?
31
How does all this relate to schools in the 21st
Century
32
What is happening in schools today
  • Over the past 12 - 18 months significant
    announcement have been made in regard to the
    future of technology in schools through large
    scale infrastructure projects which include

33
What is happening in schools today
  • Digital Education Revolution encompassing the
    newly renamed project rollout Laptops 4 Learning.
  • Technology 4 Learning Program providing
    technology in schools with a commitment that no
    computer will be more than 4 years old with an
    ever increasing reduction in computer to student
    ratios.
  • Connected Classroom Project encompassing video
    conferencing technologies and Interactive
    Whiteboard technologies in schools.

34
What challenges does this bring?
  • Extremely fluid technological landscape in
    schools.
  • Discrimination of what technologies to implement
    and why?
  • Challenge of not only managing today's
    technologies but planning for what comes next?
  • Managing the impact of ICT on expectations of
    professional practice and what it really means to
    effectively integrate ICT within teaching and
    learning?
  • Unprecedented access to technology in schools is
    increasing attached to political and system
    imperatives to see tangible impacts on student
    learning.

35
What challenges does this bring?
  • Most importantly schools need to ensure that
  • Beginning and experienced teachers are supported
    in developing the capacity to effectively
    integrate current and emerging technology in
    classrooms in a way that has quality teaching as
    the core of new opportunities for students.
  • This implies a redefinition of ICT capacity
    within teachers and the emphasis placed on
    professional development

36
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37
What has this meant for Australia Street Infants
School?
38
What we wanted to achieve ..
  • Shift the focus of ICT as being an addition to
    teaching and learning to being a facilitative
    tool as ubiquitous as a pencil sharpener
  • Move away from actual manipulation of an ICT
    device as being fundamental to ICT inclusion
  • Quality teaching to define what tools ICT or
    otherwise are appropriate to implement
  • Build a sustainable community of practice
    amongst staff

39
Then we debated
  • This led to staff debating the question what is
    more effective?
  • Students learning in an ICT rich environment
    where technology is a shared facilitative tool
    used all day with reduced actual manipulation but
    greater collaborative participation via
    interactive technologies
  • Or
  • Once a week hands on one to one access outside
    of the primary teaching space completing more
    often than not retrospective tasks

40
Then we debated
  • Would it be possible to remove the traditional
    classroom ownership model to allow rooms to be
    set up for particular purposes?
  • This came from a project that we called the
    Enrichment Program in 2004 in which each
    teacher taught a specific KLA to all students
    during the afternoon sessions
  • As well as taking influence from the IBM
    Innovation Centre

41
Implementing the 21st Century Classroom
  • In 2005 Australia Street Infants School
    implemented the 21st Century classroom through
    the installation of
  • Interactive Whiteboards in every classroom within
    a site wide wireless environment supporting 20
    laptops for staff and students with a population
    of 100 students.
  • Implementation of roaming profiles via
    curriculum servers allowing for a teachers
    desktop and files To Roam with them on any
    device they logged onto in the school eliminating
    the need for a Personal Device and facilitating
    greater resource sharing and mobility.

42
What we implemented
  • Implementation of wireless keyboards and mice for
    staff and students allowing teaching and learning
    to be separated from the computer location.
  • Centralised printing and scanning functionality
    in the school via a network photocopier.
  • Support for Blackberry devices.

43
What we implemented
  • In doing so we created teaching and learning
    spaces that are able to be configured according
    to intended purpose.
  • Removed the traditional teacher room ownership
    concept as resources roamed with the teacher.
  • Ensured that ICT facilitated best practice rather
    dictate where it could happen!
  • In doing all of this we became the first school
    in New South Wales to embark on such a project
    which only now is being rolled out into schools.

44
One aspect of the program Implementing
Interactive Whiteboards
45
Implementation of Interactive Whiteboards
  • The decision for the implementation for
    Interactive Whiteboards was made for the
    following reasons
  • Identified as a facilitative tool that allowed us
    to do more with an audience of more than one.
  • The technology did not explicitly alter teaching
    practice rather augmented it with enhanced
    opportunities.
  • Is hands on and tactile.
  • Allows for purposeful dialogue and practical
    collaboration.

46
Implementation of Interactive Whiteboards
  • Had a very low technical entry point for new
    users.
  • Relied on Quality Teaching and planning to be
    successful!
  • Removed the emphasis away from the
    technologically savvy and allowed for teachers
    with considerable best practice teaching to
    become key implementers.

47
Implementation of Interactive Whiteboards
  • Brought technology into an authentic context for
    both teachers and students.
  • As a result .
  • Normalised the presence of technology as being an
    everyday part of teaching and learning in the
    classroom.

48
How was it implemented
  • Bit of a big bang effect to be honest
  • Staff were presented with a real need to change
    through a demonstrated and clear link to their
    professional practice.
  • A mentor model of teacher training was
    established based on a pressure and support model
    linked to authentic contexts.

49
Professional Development Process
  • A community of practice valuing contextual skill
    sharing was set up as a fundamental aspect of the
    project.
  • Whole staff ICT training was avoided, in place of
    in-class support, content sharing, deconstruction
    and collaborative resource development.
  • This is because in my experience
  • Teachers are not always able to apply technical
    skills learnt out of context to their teaching
    practice effectively or can be lost in
    translation.

50
What has been achieved
  • Creation of flexible learning environments that
    continually presents ICT enhanced learning
    opportunities to students as one example
    demonstrates ..
  • Why is the sky blue? . Hmmm Lets google that!
  • Reduction of about 75 in individual computer
    usage having a flow on effect of increasing the
    effectiveness and access to technology for all
    students.
  • Students have been supported to develop enhanced
    discrimination of ICT for particular purposes and
    understanding that technology is a tool to
    complete a task with a purpose as devices such as
    cameras, and laptops are only used on demand

51
What has been achieved
  • Australia Street Infants Schools implementation
    of Interactive Whiteboards directly influenced
    State Policy to roll out the technology to all
    schools as part of the connected classroom
    project
  • Australia Street Infants School has featured
    internationally as a centre of innovation and
    best practice in the use of interactive
    technologies

52
What has been achieved
  • Since the implementation of Interactive
    Whiteboards, Student literacy numeracy
    achievement has dramatically improved through
    higher rates of student engagement and more
    dynamic and multi-modal delivery of content.

53
Finally Some points to consider
  • The challenge now is to consider and reflect upon
    what might come next, at what pace and how we
    manage it?

54
Finally Some points to consider
  • The presence of technology in schools should
  • compliment the learning process through providing
    opportunities to extend the possibilities of
    traditional instruction,
  • offering new opportunities for learners to engage
    and manipulate traditional materials and ICT in
    new and powerful ways
  • Utilise material and digital technologies
    transparently within the design, development and
    presentation modes of the planned teaching and
    learning tasks delivered to students.

55
Finally Some questions to reflect on
  • Despite the challenges and opportunities that ICT
    Brings to the classroom we need to consider
    carefully
  • Are there any REAL learning gains to be made
    using technology?
  • Does the use of ICT provide a more meaningful or
    engaging dimension to the intended learning
    outcomes?
  • Remember that despite the promises and potential
    of ICT, it is still the quality of your teaching
    and learning experiences and quality of planning
    which will determine the outcomes students will
    achieve with ICT.

56
Finally Some questions to reflect on
  • This presentation is available to download at
  • www.australiastreetschoolcom/downloads
  • Then follow the links to
  • school publications gt USYD Presentation
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