Introduction to OER4Schools

From OER in Education

Unit 1 - Session 4

Reflection

Reflection on your lesson activity.

  • How did the netbook familiarisation go? Have you all recorded your audio reflections?
  • ICT-based task: Log into your email, etc. Did you manage to do that?
Educator note

Make sure they have all recorded their audio reflections. (Make sure they can all use the upload script.) Make sure they have all come into the lab to practise their ICT skills. Make sure they are able to save whatever resources they have found into the “lesson_resources” folder, and then to transfer the contents onto the server.

How do you use ICT effectively?

Review of found resources.

  Discuss (11 min). Last time you were asked to come to the lab to find resources. Did you manage to find resources for an ICT-based lesson? How did you find them? What did you find? Was it easy? What do you think can be done with it?

  Small group activity (11 min). Last time you were asked to prepare a simple activity using ICT, and to develop a lesson plan around this. Share your lesson plans in your group.

Educator note

Discuss the use of ICT. Does it support interactive teaching?

If you need additional ideas for creating ICT-based lessons, here are some examples, all to do with photos:

  • Digital technology allows you to create (as well as re-use images). Some inspiration for use of Digital Photo Story Telling in different subjects can be found in the VVOB toolkit (see below):
    • History: To tell the story of a people in history, achievements or events.
    • Geography: To describe local environmental problems, to report on a fieldtrip, to illustrate a study on natural and social phenomena.
    • Literature: To describe and summarize a story (characters, context, climax, actions...).
    • Civil education: To tell stories of contemporary people in the society.
    • Biology: To present the growth process of a tree, a fieldtrip, stories about animals under water and on land.
  • Another way to use photos is to prepare a set of photos for classroom use, such as for classification tasks, such as Eness lesson on vertebrates that we watched earlier. You can reminder yourself of the video here.
Background reading

The VVOB toolkit is available on the server for reading in your own time if you are interested. The VVOB toolkit is also available online:

Introduction to an ICT-based collaborative writing activity

Educator note

The following activity uses an internet-based application called EtherPad which allows everyone to see - in real time - what others are writing, and to build on that.

  Practical activity (11 min). Choose a topic you each want your class to write about in a forthcoming lesson – it can be a factual topic (eg diseases or hobbies or weddings or buying food in the market) or a creative story. It needs to be fairly broad so children are free to write around the topic without feeling there are right and wrong answers. Discuss it with a partner if you like.

  Practical activity (11 min). Now open all the netbooks, take one per workshop participant. Go to EtherPad and try out the collaborative writing task below.


Classroom activity: Collaborative writing with EtherPad

1. Share out all the netbooks – make equal sized groups (or pairs if there are enough machines). Groups needs to have mixed reading and writing ability.

2. Learners open them and go to EtherPad. Each group makes up a group name and types it in in capitals, eg WHALES. Teacher writes the name of the topic on the board, eg. “what foods are healthiest for children to eat” or “a story about a magic stone”.

3. Each child then types their own name underneath the group name (not capitals, eg “Melvin”) so they all get a chance to practise typing, and so who the group members are is clear to others.

4. Each group brainstorms words related to the topic that they might want to use in a story or piece of writing. They type the words straight into the Etherpad under their group names (leave a blank line under the names), sharing and rotating the netbook so again everyone generates and types at least one word.

Encourage them to be imaginative! If they don’t have many ideas, ask a few open-ended questions to start them off (e.g. “What hobbies do people you know have?” “What could a magic stone be used for? What problems might arise if it could really do anything its owner wanted?”)

5. When you judge that they have written enough (a few words per group is fine), ask them to look at the other groups’ words (but not before, so they don’t copy). Show them how to scroll if necessary. Discuss with them how many words are the same across groups. Are there any particularly interesting or novel words? If so, point them out and ask the author to explain how their word fits the theme, but don’t spend too long on this. If there are spelling mistakes, ask other children to correct them.

6. Each child writes a short story or factual paragraph in their books, drawing on the words generated by the class; they should try to include as many as they can, forming proper sentences with them, and adding in any other words they want to. Ask them to try not to repeat words but to make the sentences as varied as they can, and to make sure they include some ideas from other groups as well as their own.

Learners should pay the usual attention to punctuation, grammar etc, as appropriate for their age. Teacher circulates to see how they’re doing and illustrates / reminds them of what they need to do if necessary, but lets them make their own choices about what words to use.

Differentiation: Some learners will be faster than others; allow the slower ones to write less in the time available, but encourage the faster ones to write longer pieces using more of the shared words, and to proofread carefully what they have written.

Alternative: You might want the group to write the story or paragraph together instead? So only one child writes while all of them make up sentences. Only one book will contain the writing of course, but the group may benefit from having collaborated. Or they can work together anyway and each write the same sentences down, helping each other with spelling and punctuation.

Alternative: If you found a group was particularly adept at using the computer earlier, they can try typing their story into Etherpad, working together on a single story. But if they are very slow at typing, they should write by hand instead.

You can print this content on a separate sheet here: OER4Schools/Collaborative writing with EtherPad.


To help your students type faster, before or after this lesson: play games on typing under “Edubuntu Applications > Education”, such as TuxType.

Activities you could do with Etherpad when your students can type faster:

  • Writing a story together (each student in each group writes a sentence that follows on from the previous sentence)
  • Students type a question they are curious about, and other students respond. (eg “Why is the moon only out at night?”)

  Whole group discussion (11 min). Discuss the issues and any pitfalls you anticipate. What are the outcomes you would like – what should the students be writing? Change the plan a bit if necessary, to suit your own learners.

Background text

Educator note

This section summarises some principles of interactive teaching. They are here for information and reference for the workshop participants. Ask them to look through the list and see if they have any comments? Print the list and ask them to file it in their folders.

Background reading

What is interactive teaching?

The principles of interactive teaching include

  • recognising children as individuals actively engaged in interacting with the world, rather than passive recipients of knowledge,
  • assessing learning needs and tailoring teaching to the child’s current level of knowledge and understanding (“scaffolding” or “child-centred” approach,
  • “multimodal” interaction and expression – using different modes of presenting material and expressing ideas (drawing, video, audio as well as conventional texts) to engage learners,
  • higher-order thinking – encouraging skills like analysis, synthesis, evaluation, sorting and categorising,
  • improvable ideas – providing an environment where ideas can be critiqued and refined,
  • diversity of ideas – exploring ideas and related/contrasting ideas, encouraging different ideas,
  • building directly on others’ ideas to create joint knowledge products,
  • democracy in knowledge building – everybody participates and is a legitimate contributor to knowledge, and
  • learner agency and peer support – encouraging students to take responsibility for their own and one another’s learning.

You can print this content on a separate sheet here: OER4Schools/Principles of interactive teaching.

Where are we going?

Overview of the resource topics

The present resource intends to cover a number of units. You have now come to the end of Unit 1.

Unit 1: Introduction to interactive teaching and the use of ICT. The unit covers an introduction to interactive teaching and ICT. It introduces the idea of “plan-teach-reflect”, as well as lesson planning to include interactive activity.

Unit 2: Whole class dialogue & effective questioning. This unit covers how to promote and manage discussion, how to engage students in activity at the blackboard, suggestions for school-based activities, as well as a “talking toolkit” with questions you can ask in class.

Unit 3: Effective group work and collaborative learning. This unit introduces group work, how to agree on ground rules, and what sort of resources support group work (such as “talking points” and digital resources).

Unit 4: Assessment of learning and lesson pacing. The unit introduces how to find out what your pupils have learnt, and where they need more help, allowing you to use time in lessons effectively, while making sure that your students are learning.

Unit 5: Enquiry-based learning and supporting co-enquiry. The unit introduces how to work in an “enquiry-based” way, for instance learning through project work and in-depth, open-ended investigations.

Unit 6: Sharing the vision. This unit introduces how to communicate with other teachers at the school, with parents, head teachers, as well as officials who might seek to assess your new teaching practices. It also includes some material to support school leaders in providing a conducive learning environment.

Educator note

Go through the above text (not spending too much time), making sure that everybody understands.

What is the most significant change?

Educator note

In this section, we introduce the workshop participants to the “Most Significant Change technique”. We would like participants to formulate the goals of the workshops, and to find out what change they would like to make.

Background reading

The most significant change (MSC) technique

MSC is a form of participatory monitoring and evaluation. It is participatory because many project stakeholders are involved both in deciding the sorts of change to be recorded and in analysing the data. It is a form of monitoring because it occurs throughout the program cycle and provides information to help people manage the program. It contributes to evaluation because it provides data on impact and outcomes that can be used to help assess the performance of the program as a whole.

Essentially, the process involves ‘searching’ for project impact through:

  • collection of significant change (SC) stories emanating from the field level
  • systematic selection of the most significant of these stories by panels of designated stakeholders or staff
  • collective reading of the stories aloud and regular and often in-depth discussions about the value of reported changes

When the technique is implemented successfully, whole teams of people begin to focus their attention on program impact. You can find out more about the MSC technique here: http://www.mande.co.uk/docs/MSCGuide.pdf

We now consider what the biggest changes might be as a consequence of being involved in this programme - for yourselves, for your teaching, for your students, for the school, or in whatever other area!

  Brainstorm (11 min). Think about how a newspaper works. A newspaper presents news stories about interesting events. Newspapers are structured into different sections (subject areas, such as foreign news, domestic news, financial news, sport, leisure). The most important stories go on the front page and the most important of these is usually at the top of the front page.

  Whole group discussion (11 min). Now imagine that later on you will be putting together a whole newspaper issue about how this whole programme affects your thinking and classroom practice: What kinds of stories will be the most important? Who and what will the stories be about? Who will be affected by those stories, who would listen, and who will be they of interest to? What different sections would the newspaper have? What kind of change would you like to make?

Educator note

Do the participants agree on how things might be different as a result of the programme? How will we know when these significant changes have happened? What kinds of evidence do our stories need to refer to? They can also be revised as time goes on.

Record what participants say in a permanent form - in writing or electronically so we can refer to them later on. Make sure it is recorded on video / audio.

Homework

Teacher lab activity

  1. Come to the teacher lab at least once this week to learn more ICT skills.
  2. Familiarise yourself with “EtherPad” on the netbooks.

Classroom activity

Do the collaborative writing activity - the classroom activity sheet is available below. Please print it, and use it during the lesson

homework

Read the principles of interactive teaching - do you have any questions or comments?