Thursday 7 May 2015

Reflective Synopsis


Over the past seven weeks, myself and my classmates have gone on a learning journey through digital pedagogies and what we can do to better improve our abilities using these. The purpose of this learning journey was to arrive at a point where we can create, reflect, synthesise and integrate technology into the ever evolving classroom. 

 
The technological advances we have seen in the classroom in just the last 5 years are starting to leave traditional educational methods in the dark. These technological advances have started a chain reaction where we the classroom has expanded from just the people in the room, to being able to have the opinion and knowledge of every other person on the planet

 
The past seven weeks we have worked on several different units and reflect upon them to help us be at the point we are in our understanding, and these are:

 

·         The Modern Classroom


 

·         The Mobile Phones debate using de Bono’s Six Thinking Hats


 

·         Online Spaces: Web 1.0 and 2.0

 

·         Digital Tools

 

·         Bringing it all Together: Presenting Learning

 

·         Interactive Learning

 

·         Collaborative Learning


 

Blogs and Taxonomies

My blog posts to begin with weren’t of a very high standard. I didn’t completely understand how to write it, to meet the target audience. One week I received a 1/4, and that gave me that extra push to work a little harder and longer to create more comprehensive and insightful posts. In doing this is started using a couple of models to help write the blog entries. These are:

 

·         SMAR Model

o   The Substitution, Augmentation, Modification and Redefinition model, allows for teachers to see how using different technologies in the classroom may impact teaching and learning (Schrock, 2015).

·         de Bono’s Six Thinking Hats

o   Explanation: de Bono’s Six thinking hats are six levels of critical thinking (de Bono for Schools, n.d.) to help focus on certain elements at a time. These hats are:

Ø  White hat – facts

Ø  Green hat – creativity

Ø  Yellow hat – benefits

Ø  Black hat – cautions

Ø  Red hat – feelings

Ø  Blue hat – process

 

·         Bloom’s Taxonomy

o   Explanation: According to Athertib (2015), Bloom’s Taxonomy, is used to classify the levels and forms of learning, and with further ability to apply these levels to digital curation.


At first I struggled to understand the importance and value which SMAR model, de Bono’s Six Thinking Hats and Bloom’s Taxonomy when it comes to the digital classroom and e-Learning. After engaging in the activity for the Six Thinking Hat’s in Wikispaces, I grasped the concept of what it can be effective for, and how I could use it in the future in my own learning models. My understanding of the SMAR model and Bloom’s Taxonomy came from engaging with peers in class, and in their blogs. I believe that the most effective these three is Bloom’s Taxonomy. Addressing the several levels of the pyramid, it makes the cognitive development of tasks easier.



Cyber Safety

A major part of creating lessons based on rich technology based learning, is Cyber Safety. Being cyber safe and cyber smart are two parts of being a digital citizen. Digital Citizenship according to Andrew Churches (as cited by Te Kete Ipurangi, n.d.) has six tenets:
 

1.     Respect yourself

2.     Protect yourself

3.     Respect others

4.     Protect others

5.     Respect intellectual property

6.     Protect intellectual property

 
This in sense lists exactly what cyber safety should be all about. The most important way to address this in the classroom, is by dedicating a lesson or part of a lesson, to helping the students understand these tenets.


Strung Together

My work of the last seven weeks, has been linked by a similar theme. This theme is Engagement. Successful engagement and learning outcomes of students in classroom, according to Cameron Wust (2015), starts when we as teachers stop talking. When he says this in terms of the digital classroom, it means we provide the tools, but let the students engage and develop their skills individually or collaboratively with their peers. As technology is a big part of day to day lives of students, then it’s obvious.

The best way to engage students in the classroom, is by integrating technology into the classroom. Using the digital tools we have engaged with ourselves, use them to promote successful engagement and learning outcomes.  

I believe that the use of technology in the classroom, will bring forward a new age of education. Learning all the different ways to use them in a classroom setting, has opened my eyes up to a far larger world than I had imagined, where I used to believe a PowerPoint was the only sophisticated program, and that was used only as an backup to the oral presentation. I cannot wait to use technology in my next practical, and try all of my favoured programs I have listed in my past blog entries.

 

References

Athertib, J. (2015, May 8). Bloom's Taxonomy. Retrieved from Learning and Teaching:

http://www.learningandteaching.info/learning/bloomtax.htm

 

de Bono for Schools. (2015, May 8). Six Thinking Hats. Retrieved from

http://www.debonoforschools.com/asp/six_hats.asp

 

Schrock, K. (2015, 8 May). SAMR. SAMR and Bloom's. Retrieved, from

http://www.schrockguide.net/samr.html

 

TKI: Te Kete Ipurangi,. (2015, May 8). Digital citizenship and cybersafety in the classroom. Retrieved,

from http://elearning.tki.org.nz/Professional-learning/Professional-development/Digital-

citizenship-modules/Digital-citizenship-and-cybersafety/Digital-citizenship-and-cybersafety-

in-the-classroom#secondary

2 comments:

  1. A comprehensive blog Simon. I like how you incorporated the learning theories.

    ReplyDelete
  2. It's great to see that you linked your final blog posting back to engagement!

    ReplyDelete