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Teacher Training and Education in a Changing World

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teacher as a coach. dynamic and rich learning environment. Unesco Seminar teacher training ... teacher training. Types of portraits (3) Personal ICT-portraits: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Teacher Training and Education in a Changing World


1
Teacher Training and Education in a Changing World
  • Pieter Hogenbirk
  • teacher (1975-1987)
  • national project and process manager ict and
    education (1987-2000)
  • inspector of education (2000-now)

2
Teacher Training and Education in a Changing World
  • Inspectorate of Education
  • Judging the educational quality of schools
    (primary, secondary, tertiary and higher)
  • thematic research
  • stimulating education (ict-portraits)

3
Overview
  • Developments in education
  • ICT-portraits
  • Model for teacher training
  • Examples
  • Strategy for change
  • Capacity building

4
Developments in Education (1)
  • preparing pupils for the information-society
  • skills rather than knowledge
  • constructivistic learning
  • collaborative learning
  • self-responsible learning
  • teacher as a coach
  • dynamic and rich learning environment

5
Developments in Education (2)
  • teachers should be
  • coaching the learners
  • arranging the learning process
  • able to use ICT in a variety of ways in a dynamic
    learning environment

6
Developments in Teacher Education
  • from supply-driven to demand-driven
  • from incidental to on-going
  • form generic to specific
  • from individual to groups
  • from exercising to experimenting
  • from training to coaching
  • from verbal to multimedial

7
Aims for the ICT-portraits
  • To describe good examples to inspire other
    schools and other inspectors
  • To develop criteria and a framework for good
    practices
  • Information for policy makers on the necessary
    conditions for schools
  • Longer term contribute to the re-definition of
    common objectives and quality standards

8
Types of portraits (1)
  • ICT-school portraits- provide insight in school
    strategyand organisation- provide good
    sometimes isolated examples
  • International portraits- give overviews on
    excellent examples - give ideas on other
    structures

9
Types of portraits (2)
  • Thematic ICT-portraits- provide an insight into
    ICT developments occurring in a certain subject
    or theme- disclose good practices in the primary
    process of several schools- give insight in the
    work of specialized expertise centres, school
    networks, publishers or school supervisory
    boards.

10
Types of portraits (3)
  • Personal ICT-portraits- What are the
    characteristics of successful school leaders?-
    What kind of teacher development leads to
    successful ICT practice?

11
Way of working (1)
  • We form teams of inspectors
  • We develop a comprehensive framework together
    with centres of expertise or individual experts
  • We use the framework to assess in terms of strong
    and weak
  • We select schools, visit them and talk to
    teachers, pupils and managers

12
Way of working (2)
  • We write the reports
  • We spread the results- to other inspectors -
    through booklets- (cd-roms)- internet (also in
    English)
  • www.onderwijsinspectie.nl/schoolportretten

13
Leadership (1)
  • First conclusions Successful administrators
  • can think conceptually and translate concepts to
    daily practise
  • give room to their teachers and stimulate
    teamwork
  • are charismatic and courageous
  • uses instruments like support, pressure and
    distributed leadership

14
Leadership and ict (2)
  • Above that successful administrators in ICT
  • think innovatively
  • are aware of the pitfalls talk about policy not
    about technology
  • have a vision on using modern media in
    educational arrangements
  • can handle this triple innovation technology,
    education and organisation, human resources

15
Professional developmenta framework
teachers characteristics
professional development
successfull ict-practice
16
Professional development (1)
  • Successful ict-practice
  • more effective
  • more motivating
  • more differentiating
  • more varied
  • more efficient
  • more collaborative
  • less costly

than before
17
Professional development (2)
  • Teacher characteristics
  • level of involvement (CBAM)
  • competencies
  • view on education
  • learning style of the teacher (!)
  • man/woman, age, history, subject, etc.

18
Professional development (3)
  • Personal development
  • technically policy-driven
  • supply-driven demand-driven
  • reproduction production
  • incidental structural
  • generic specific
  • individual collaboration
  • training coaching
  • exercising experimenting

19
Professional development
teachers characteristics
Best fit
professional development
successfull ict-practice
20
Involvement
  • level of involvement of individual teachers
    (CBAM)
  • 1 interested in ict
  • 2 some knowledge about ict
  • 3 some experience in using ict
  • 4 regularly using ict in the classroom
  • 5 creative use and leadership

21
Involvement and development (1,2)
  • information, warming-up meetings, publication of
    good practices
  • 1 interested in ict
  • basic skills in using ict,
  • computercourses
  • 2 some knowledge about ict

22
Involvement and development (3,4,5)
  • conferences, afternoon sessions for good
    practices
  • 3 some experience in using ict
  • physical and virtual networks
  • 4 regularly using ict in the classroom
  • participating in development projects
  • 5 creative use and leadership

23
Example 1 the PIT-project (1993-1997)
  • a School with PIT
  • a School with SPIRIT

!
T
P
24
Organisation in 3 rounds (1993-1997)
  • We defined 45 themes in 8 school-subjects for
    using ict in education
  • We formed 45 networks (communities) of teachers
    from more than 400 schools
  • Teachers of 15 schools in each network
  • Each network had some six hands-on sessions per
    year
  • home work between the sessions was also
    evaluated in the sessions

25
SPIRIT in Science
  • Theme 1 Demonstrations and simulations
  • the teacher as an executor
  • the pupil as processor
  • schools with little experience

26
SPIRIT in Science
  • Theme 2 Computer-assisted laboratory session
  • the teacher as a companion
  • the pupil as executor/processor
  • schools with some experience
  • not committed to specific method

27
SPIRIT in Science
  • Theme 3 Differentiation
  • teacher as a coach
  • the pupil as a researcher
  • schools with experience
  • model of differentiation depends on the school

28
Resultsict-coordinators
29
ResultsThe PIT-teachers
  • level of involvement (CBAM)
  • 5 creative use and
    5
  • leadership
  • 4 regularly using IT
    4 in the classroom
    3,73 May 95
  • 3 some experience
    3
  • in using IT Sept.93 2, 56
  • 2 some knowledge
    2
  • about IT
  • 1 interested in IT
    1

30
Example 2 iEARN-projects
  • Ict-use in classrooms
  • teacher initiated
  • international collaboration
  • natural learning
  • extremely motivating

31
The (E)STT-modelan educational approach
Strategy for Change (1)
  • (Emerging)
  • Substitution
  • Transition
  • Transformation

32

Strategy for Change (2)
  • (emerging and) substitution
  • (schools are exploring the possibilities of ict)
  • ict replaces traditional didactical methods
  • the learning process is automated
  • Examples - training vocabulary- writing an
    essay with a wordprocessor- drawing a graph with
    a computer

33

Strategy for Change (3)
  • transition
  • the teacher starts to use ict to implement new
    didactical practices
  • he/she thinks that ict can change certain parts
    of the curriculum
  • Examples - training vocabulary with feedback-
    designing an essay with a wordprocessor-
    comparing graphs with a computer

34

Strategy for Change (4)
  • transformation
  • the technology provides a whole new learning
    environment
  • the learning process is being informated
  • Examples - learning a foreign language in a
    multimedia environment- learning economics in a
    simulation environment- doing collaborative
    tasks with the internet

35

Increasing ICT-infrastructure
  • standalones
  • computer laboratory
  • internet connection
  • networked computers in classrooms
  • open learning centre

36

Educational development
  • from
  • Traditional, static learning, teacher centred
  • to
  • New, dynamic learning, pupil centred

37
transformation
Increasing ict
transition
substitution
educational development
38
Capacity Building (1)
  • define activities which meet the possibilities
    (level of involvement) and expectations of the
    teachers
  • make a critical mass of experts in the field
  • define themes in the curriculum for using ict

39
Capacity Building (2)
  • organise face-to-face meetings and build up
    professional networks
  • put emphasis on professional development and
    exchange of experiences
  • involve administrators

40
Capacity Building (3)initial training
  • involve the trainers
  • bring the students into the classrooms
  • use the development capacity of the students for
    the schools

41
Teacher Training and Education in a Changing World
  • Pieter Hogenbirk
  • Inspectorate of education
  • P.O. box 2730
  • 3500 GS Utrecht
  • The Netherlands
  • p.hogenbirk_at_owinsp.nl

42
Teacher Training and Education in a Changing World
  • www.onderwijsinspectie.nl
  • www.ictportretten.nl
  • www.kennisnet.nl
  • www.unesco.org
  • www.ifip.or.at
  • www.iearn.org
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