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Helping develop staff outside of the city 

9/3/2017

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Using Apple Teacher as a PL tool

Having  a residential campus 3.5 hours from Melbourne presents some unique PL challenges, especially when introducing iPads to a campus. The 2 major challenges are the fact that getting staff together is nearly impossible owning to the residential 24/7 nature of the campus and also providing access to solid, on demand resources to support their growth is challenging.

​So then Apple Teacher was released and things got a whole lot easier. Using their Apple ID the staff can now work through iBooks that support their understanding any time that suits them and the best thing is the courses also support them developing new ideas as they often use real classroom ideas and examples to showcase what they mean.
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Using this as a starting point we have more scope to use our face to face time to clarify their understanding and to workshop application of skills which is far more effective and beneficial. We also set up a question board where staff can post questions/ideas any time and we can all respond and help build understanding that way. It empowers those a little further ahead in their explorations  to help their peers and also provides a mechanism for staff to see and interact with what others are doing and to receive support in a timely manner. 

There is the option to take a quiz at the end of a unit to gain badges, but at this stage the resource themselves are the real gold! For future reference the quizzes require participants to apply what they know across a series of 5 questions per topic. Once you have completed 8 topics in iPad or Mac (it's the same qualification) you are awarded the Apple Teacher Badge and the Swift Units become available. 
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Why the Why matters

12/1/2017

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When integrating technology sharing the why matters more than the how 

Working with colleagues is a large part of my role. Upskilling their digital capcity and opening their minds to new uses of technoogy connected to meaningful tasks, assessment and all things education is rad fun. Especially when you see them take a risk, produce something wonderful and watch  a new world of possibilities open to them. 

Like KI. KI asked me to help her make a podcast for her Senior English students. She has seen podcasts on Youtube and wanted to make some for her learners.  So we met along with some of her collegues and I taught her how to do it very early one morning before school. We spend an hour and a half establishing what she wanted to make and with what content. this led to learning how to record the screen using Quick Time Pro and present info in Keynote - both a which were new tools for all team members. But I forgot to cover something very important at this point- why she was doing this and this becomes important down the track. 

KI went away and produced her first podcast - she scripted it, recorded it, gathered poems, visual imagery even clips and put them into this podcast. It was a solid 30 minute immersion into her wonderufl understanding. And it was good. She spoke with such clarity, real passion and connected even a poetry-phobe like myself to reading and understanding poetry. I felt priveleged to be able to listen to my learned colleague speak and to hear the passion in her voice. I got to learn something more that I usually would on my tram into the city. Her podcasts will only continue to improve as her understanding of the program does and now I know I can sit with her and show her some more tricks.  However the students did not get this same opportunity because I forgot to clarify the why with her. 

And why does the why matter? This is why. 
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KI got it. She knew the power in the podcast being accessible at point of need, targetted to multiple learning styles. She put the onus on students to autonomously front load their learning prior to turning up to class, understood that so much more can be gathered from listening to information that supports the work that occurs in class. She nailed it when she said that copying and handing out the script defeated the purpose. Not that her collegues were being deliberately malicious. They were present for the learning session but did not understand the why and power of what KI had created.  

So what now? Continue working with KI to keep producing and refining her podcasts, using feedback from students and peers to help this. And to work with her collegues and students to help them understand the why behind these podcasts and the other skills they will gain by moving their learning styles to be more like KI.

They will know why they are taking risks and growing immesely in doing so as they have an excellent role model in KI. 
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Clever collabs

12/12/2016

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What to do when you find yourself with some space and time to get organised 

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Our starting point for Tool Exploration! 
After the staff and students have left for the year I have a wonderful opportunity to get some things done! But I also know myself and know I work best when connected to others and when super busy. So I had this idea to set up a series of short, sharp collabs - that may grow to be more - over the final week of the school year with the goal of enriching what we do and how we go about it through some menanigful collaboration. 

These are some of the collabs that are in place already:
  • CNC router traning and thinking with Morand 
  • Peer Learning Network with The Peninsula School & Ivanhoe Grammar Directors of ICT and Innovation 
  • Coding, App making and game making tool exploration extravaganza 
  • Schoolbox Collab - how to engage users 
  • Reflection on Signature Project round 1 
  • CSER MOOC community task submission and reflection 
  • Junior School library - Getting 'Appy 
  • UX designer catchup, carbon fibre workshop  connected to Year 8 student projects
  • Planning with teacher in USA for 2017 Hackathon via Skype 
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The Why connecting to our LMS 

12/12/2016

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probing into why we have a LMS and developing with the school community an understanding of our LMS

Apologies for the shaky camera work, I have now learned not to record with my laptop on my lap! 

Our draft why is as follows;
We use Schoolbox as a live, evolving communication, learning and teaching support tool. We share consistent resources and information to support collaboration and understanding between all members of the Lauriston community.  
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Getting Mooc-ed

12/12/2016

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Dedicating an hour a fortnight to learning with my peers all over Australia

I'm new to MOOC's - Massive Open Online Courses. The thought of working at my pace through a series of videos, tasks that are shared with global education communities and building on the ideas of unknown peers does sound appealing. But I was wondering how I would go making the commitment to really drive my own learning. Yet when I thought about it it is often what I ask my students to do, so what better way to walk in their shoes then to try it myself!

As I near the end of this MOOC https://csermoocs.appspot.com/nextsteps/ focussing on the Digital Technologies Curriculum in Years 7 & 8, I thought it may be timely to make a list of the things that helped me get through the course and take from it what I needed. See below for this list. ​
  1. Set aside a regular time in the fortnight to work on it. This meant I had a regular set aside time and headspace to work on it. 
  2. Avoid submitting things you have already developed - I enjoyed applying myself to a task that I may have already had developed resources for  but looking at it in new ways. And it meant that hour I had set aside could be used to work on it as well - developing resources and learning in the MOOC = winning. 
  3. The videos are handy for explaining concepts for both peers and students. You can access the links for every video on Youtube. The one on the left is simple yet accessible for students and staff about which graph, when. 
4. I found sharing one thing I had learned in the fortnight with a buddy held me accountable - whether it was sharing a resource, having a quick chat about an idea or commenting on a MOOC particpants idea/activity made me feel more connected. 
Ted Talk by Anant Agarwal - Why massively open courses still matter 
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PLanning curriculum with the core users - students

23/11/2016

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When 3 teachers get together and start looking at framing and developing a new week long immersive task connected to digital media it's exciting. We throw around ideas, build a concept and essential question and generally leave over- stimulated and with a unit that if it came to fruition would probably be a year long full time endeavour! 
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So when we started down this track a colleague noted and important step - lets invite the students to join us as planners. So we did. We visited all Year 7 and 8 classes and called for students who were either keen to have a say on what and how we learn in the case of the Year 7's and what they liked and wanted to improve on in the case of the Year 8's. The Year 8's had just completed a task connected to Social Media and the Year 7's were about to start.  

​Our 4 Years 7's and 5 Year 8's turned up and we were blown away! Their ideas were articulate and sophisticated, they knew what they wanted to know, where they felt they had gaps and wanted to know what was possible from us. To hear a student ask "Can I really make an App, like my own App?" and to watch them get excited when you reply yes is exciting for all of us. To discover their are adults, and girls who are gamers is eye opening for them - and this surprised me too. Questions like "Can we build a real game" and " It would be good if we could talk with real people who work in the field" and statements such as "It would be good to have to share our work with someone who can give us real feedback" and "I want my friends to be able to pick what we make, but still have to get better at something - so they can't pick making  a poster! My sister in Grade 4 can code and I want to!" were particularly resonant.


The best part was when they gave us such an important insight into what its like to be a teenager using social media when one student suggested " We don't want to feel bad for using social media, we just want to use it well" And thus our focus question and program outline was born - from the minds of 9, 13 - 14 students!  

We took a risk, they tok a risk and we now have an amazing starting point. Stay tuned to see how the unit develops. 
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Music Week Workshop

23/11/2016

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A quick reflection via video. You can see a short article here 
View here
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Failing and liking it... almost

9/11/2016

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Being in a new role, in a new school, with an existing staff and student cohort that don't know you is like most new jobs - exciting, confusing and likely to end some days with you questioning what you are doing.

Like today. I had to think about why what I was trying to do was not working. And I came to the realisation that I, leading others, need to do a few things before we get students onboard with making.  Let me explain. 

I wanted to work with Year 7 & 8 girls outside the curriculum to introduce them to making - exploring new technology and fabrication connected to projects that are real world, interesting to them and will push their thinking and collaboration skills.  So I bought 2 succulents. 
I had the idea that I could have a series of communications with the students in their learning space on brown paper, introducing my plants, allowing them to name them and then inviting them to build them a home. So I placed up the first banner and 2 days later I went to check on it. 
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Winning! We had names. So up went the next poster naming the succulents inviting them to join me the following week to build them a home - the plan being to get onto Pinterest and to find a skill or two to hack and to get started making. In theory it was so simple and I was hoping the unique brown paper conversations would draw some attention. This was the turnout to my first session. 
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You could call it a fail. It was. But this is not a bad thing. Upon reflection these students have no idea who I am, what I planned to do and even if this is something they would be interested in. I misread my audience and neglected to bring them along through actual interaction, rapport and sharing what is possible. It was too soon to try something as obscure and enigmatic with students who may not be used to taking risks like this, being provoked like this. And I'm glad I got to experience this. Just like when I ask my students, my colleagues to take a risk and try something new it's good to be reminded how it feels when it does not work and to take stock of what needs to change next time - what I need to change next time. Because there will be a next time.  

Made with Padlet
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A session with John Hendry

10/10/2016

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John Hendry, OAM
What a way to start at a new school - a couple of hours with the fabulous John Hendry to remind myself why teaching matters and why the headspace of the people entrusted in our care matters so much. 

Most resonating was his call to action to build relationships ​on the following factors
Trust
Forgiveness 
Integrity
Hope 
Compassion
What this means moving into a new role, in a new school with new staff and students to get to know is that to embody this my relationships could look like this;

Trust through giving myself to others, acknowledging my gaps and trusting staff will help me grow  and trusting in my own capacity as I navigate new experiences. Forgiveness of myself as I make mistakes and to making a process of change. Integrity as I establish relationships and integrate into a well established, experienced staff who bring a wealth of knowledge and understanding  to what they do. Hope through action rather than relying on optimism and compassion as I start to work with people in an area that may be uncomfortable or not of interest to them. One way to establish this compassion is to look for and explore the skills and experiences of those I work with. 
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    Shelly Casey
    FabLab Integrator & Digital Technologies Coach

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