OER4Schools/ICTs in interactive teaching: Difference between revisions

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== Summary of activities ==
{{activity summary}}


= Classroom worksheet for teachers =  
= Classroom worksheet for teachers =  


{{oinc|OER4Schools/Geogebra exercises}}
{{oinc|OER4Schools/Geogebra exercises}}

Revision as of 11:19, 22 November 2012

Reflections from your own trial

Activity icon.png Small group (11 min). Share your reflections:

  • What was the objective of the new lesson?
  • How was the lesson interactive?
  • How do you think the lesson went? In particular, how did learners respond?
  • What would you change if you taught this again?

Using ICT to support interactive teaching

Eness2.jpg

Activity icon.png Discuss (11 min). What is the role of ICT in the kinds of teaching this resource has been introducing?

See illustrations of ICT use:

First, remind yourself of Eness clip 5 – you may want to watch it again, this time looking at the ICT use.

Watch further videos:

VIDEO

Abel clip 4.m4v

The description of the video

[[]], Template:Fullurl:,[[|About this video]]. Duration: (The query description has an empty condition. watch on YouTube, local play / download options / download from dropbox)

VIDEO

12 13 Abel 2 4 rectangles

The description of the video

[[]], Template:Fullurl:,[[|About this video]]. Duration: (The query description has an empty condition. watch on YouTube, local play / download options / download from dropbox)

VIDEO

12 13 Abel 2 4 rectangles

The description of the video

[[]], Template:Fullurl:,[[|About this video]]. Duration: (The query description has an empty condition. watch on YouTube, local play / download options / download from dropbox)

Educator note
  • 19_Eness_vertebrates 5
  • Abel clip 4.m4v (teacher introduces task, followed by some small groupwork –group is confused about area vs.perimeter so Abel asks older boys to help)
  • 12 13 Abel 2 4 rectangles (group working on GeoGebra on their own; teacher interacts at end)
  • Abel_student_presentation. Groups come up to the board to explain what they found and what they learned; this brief clip shows 2 girls presenting

Look at photographs from other lessons to see more examples of interactive teaching and ICT use.

Activity icon.png Discuss (11 min).

  • When is it appropriate to use ICT?
  • What uses can you think of that promote and enhance interactive teaching and learning?


Educator note

Discussion around appropriate use and purpose: ICT engages learners but may have novelty value. How can we keep its use motivating over time?

Resources

What resources are needed for interactive teaching – in general? Where do they come from?

ICTs are one resource but non-digital tools can be powerful too. Examples of resources include:

  • mini-blackboards
  • measuring tapes or sticks
  • counters or stones
  • calculators
  • digital camera
  • digital learning resources: using these requires searching for appropriate resources, saving them for re-use with students
  • class set of netbooks (there are logistical issues to be resolved here including charging, security, rota for use etc.)
  • e-book readers (Kindle, Wikireader)
  • etc.

Activity icon.png SMALL GROUP (11 min). Think about some of the resources you might like to use in your forthcoming lessons and discuss them – with teachers of the same grade if possible – or with a small group of other participants. Think about how you would use them?

Homework

Homework in class

Introduce the class to the netbooks during one of your lessons - netbooks should be run on battery. The activity is described in a separate classroom worksheet at the end of the unit, that you should have in front of you when you run the activity.

Homework outside teaching

Plan a simple activity using digital resources in some way to support learning in a lesson you will be teaching after one week’s time; you can either plan to use the netbooks with the pupils, or just use one connected to the projector.

Don’t actually carry out the activity, just plan it using a lesson template. Use the teacher lab to search for resources before you come to the next workshop. Bring with you the lesson plan and the link to the resource(s) you have chosen.

ICT task

In addition to the lesson planning, all teachers should do an ICT task, to advance their ICT knowledge. This week you should:

  • Log into your email and send an email to the mailing list. You can just say hi, and how you are finding the workshop, or post any question that you have.
  • Make sure that you are able to transfer your audio recordings.
  • Save a page into the “lessons_resources”


Educator note

Make sure that the participants know the email address of the mailing list you are using! For the OER4Schools programme, we are using a mailing list at google groups: oer4schools (at) googlegroups.com.

Final reflection

Talk to the person next to you and/or collectively brainstorm - what can these interactive methods contribute to your teaching, especially over the next few weeks?

Educator note

Remember to reflect yourself on how this workshop went, and to audio record:

  • How did the workshop go?
  • Which parts did participants respond to best? Why?
  • Were there any parts of the material that didn’t work very well? Why?
  • Did you deviate from the plan at any point? How?
  • How long did the workshop take?
  • Were there any logistical issues? (eg latecomers/absentees, technical difficulties, etc)

Summary of activities

Educator note

At the end of each session, we provide an overview of the activities in this session, together with their suggested timings. Although this appears at the end of the session (for technical reasons), you should keep an eye on this throughout the session, to make sure that you are pacing the workshop session appropriately!

Total time: 44 (min)

Activities in this session:

  • Small group(11 min).
  • Discuss(11 min).
  • Discuss(11 min).
  • SMALL GROUP(11 min).

If you have printed this session for offline use, you may also need to download the following assets:


Classroom worksheet for teachers

This activity will orientate you to make use of GeoGebra to create basic polygons. You will need to access a computer/laptop/netbook and internet. Access a web-browser and navigate to this page: http://mathandmultimedia.com/geogebra/

We will suggest that you go through the exercises in the page in this order:

  1. GeoGebra Basic Construction 1 – Constructing an Equilateral Triangle
  2. GeoGebra Basic Construction 2 – Constructing an Isosceles Triangle
  3. GeoGebra Basic Construction 3 – Constructing a Right Triangle
  4. GeoGebra Basic Construction 4 – Constructing a Square
  5. GeoGebra Basic Construction 5 – Constructing a Rectangle
  6. GeoGebra Basic Construction 6 - Constructing a Parallelogram
  7. GeoGebra Basic Construction 7 – Constructing a Rhombus
  8. GeoGebra Basic Construction 9 – Constructing a Kite

You can print this content on a separate sheet here: OER4Schools/Geogebra exercises.