Thursday, November 15, 2012

The Paperless Classroom

Image Source: http://edc.carleton.ca
I'd like to take a little time to talk about something that has been around for several years...the paperless classroom.  This is not a new way of teaching and learning, and it certainly isn't glamorous.  It is a basic day to day task that none the less can have a profound impact on the classroom.  Not only does a paperless classroom make the trees feel better, it can help a class stay organized, safe time and communicate more effectively.  (an all of that saved energy and time can be put into creating innovative and engaging educational experiences for kids).

Let's look at sharing files with each other.

In the good old days of blue ink ditto machines (if you don't know what I am talking about, you are very young) an educator would make an activity on a piece of paper and duplicate it.  That piece of paper would get handed out and the teacher would make and keep several extra copies because he/she knew someone would loose theirs and need another copy.  After class the educator would have to walk around the room picking up the papers that were left behind and the poor janitor would have to go around the entire building that night picking up all of the papers everyone (kids and adults) left on the floor.

Fast forward twenty years.  It is the good old days of black ink copy machines.  An educator would make an activity on a piece of paper and duplicate it.  That piece of paper would get handed out and the teacher would make and keep several extra copies because he/she knew someone would loose theirs and need another copy.  After class the educator would have to walk around the room picking up the papers that were left behind and the poor janitor would have to go around the entire building that night picking up all of the papers everyone (kids and adults) left on the floor.

Fast forward to today.  Is it the good old days of "The Test".   In some schools an educator will make an activity on a piece of paper and duplicate it.  That piece of paper will get handed out and the teacher will make and keep several extra copies because he/she knows someone will loose theirs and need another copy.  After class the educator will have to walk around the room picking up the papers that were left behind and the poor janitor will have to go around the entire building at night picking up all of the papers everyone (kids and adults) leave on the floor.   (Do you see a pattern here?)

What about a paperless classroom?  (NOT a classroom using a variety of technologies to improve teaching and learning, I mean a classroom that has made their physical material into a digital format)

An educator will create an assignment on a document creation program (Google Docs, MS Word, Pages etc...) and upload that file to an online source.  Students will download that file, manipulate it in some way and digitally send it to the educator.  The basic concept has not changed.  Make worksheet, fill out worksheet, turn in worksheet.  Nothing that couldn't be done on paper, so why bother buying students expensive equipment if they are just going to do the same old thing with a computer they were doing with a pencil?

There are a few reasons (although I'll leave the strength of these reasons to you).

  1. The dog can't eat the laptop or the iPad.  (Although I have had people tell me that Google Docs ate their homework)
  2. They don't forget a digital document in their locker, in their bedroom or on the bus.
  3. They don't leave laptops or iPads lying all over the floor and all over the halls.
  4. The teacher can't loose my homework
  5. The teacher doesn't have to carry around a bunch of papers to drop into a mud puddle
  6. There doesn't need to be a "back up" copy of every assignment
  7. The time needed to hand out papers has just been reduced to less than 30 seconds
  8. The time to gather papers has just been reduced to less than 30 seconds
  9. Students don't have to carry around 10 different text books (they have them in digital format)
  10. You don't have to stand in line at the copy machine to make a pdf
These reasons are in a paperless classroom where nothing else has changed.  No pedagogy shift.  Students still read the book and annotate, they still fill out the worksheet.  If we were to include the change in pedagogy that accompanies many paperless classrooms, this list would be enormous, but this will do for todays purpose.  Let's look at some of these benefits together.

Time, time, time.  One day I was observing one of my fifth grade classrooms and the educator asked the students to turn in their homework.  (This particular homework was a journal writing done in the app Paperdesk)  The students promptly opened their iPads and digitally "turned in" the file before the teacher finished taking attendance.  Fast forward to another classroom that does not have this opportunity.  I walked into the room and there was a flurry of activity.  One student was looking for a pencil to write their name on the paper, one person was looking for the stapler, some students were passing papers one way and some passing papers the other.  In all it took almost five minutes to get all of the papers gathered and the students ready to begin learning.  That's about 4 and 1/2 minutes of unnecessarily wasted time that is precious to any teacher.  That's just getting homework turned in...nothing had been passed out.

That darn dog.  Prior to the days of the digital classroom the dog got blamed for many misdeeds.  Once things became more digital I have noticed that the dog has been busy teaching the computer some dirty tricks.  (I have a really smart dog) The concept of "something happened and it wasn't my fault" is a constant theme in education and it probably will be for all time.  If you have a digital classroom, one way to alleviate this issue is to implement something like Google Docs.  If a student begins a Google document and shares it with you, you have instant access to that documents history.  So if Billy comes to you and says "I'm sorry Mr. Thomas, I've been working on it all week, but my work just disappeared" you can go into the document that was shared with you and say something like "I'm sorry Billy, I see that you started it a week ago, but you haven't been on it since." ... ouch...

Waiting for the copy machine can be a rough way to start your day.  Having to run across the building to make copies in the 2 minutes you have before class starts can be very stressful and is not a good way to begin a class.  If you share document digitally with your students (and you are a wee bit organized) you can send the file to the entire class in seconds.  If you only have a physical copy of what you want to share, you still have a couple of options.  Flatbed scanners are a cheap way to scan documents into a pdf format.  Another way is to use that gigantic copy machine we all love so much.  Many multi function machines (if set up for it) can scan documents and send them to you via email or save them directly to a school server without ever making a physical copy.  It's easy peasy.  If you would like to try this method to digitize your papers, ask your school secretary.  I bet they know if your machines can do this or not.

Another benefit of the paperless classroom is exposing students to the digital tools they will use when they get older.  As educators dare to embrace this new world that is so different from the one we grew up in, the last thing they need to do is stumble on a project because they or the students are unfamiliar with a specific technology.  If educators and students experience the technologies that make the paperless classroom possible, they are also experiencing the same technologies that allow them to do a wide variety of things to expand their learning.

If you would like to learn more about the paperless classroom, here are some resources for you:

http://www.paperlessclassroom.org/
http://thepaperlessclassroom.wordpress.com/
http://edudemic.com/2012/09/how-one-classroom-actually-used-ipads-to-go-paperless-part-1-research/
http://www.educationworld.com/a_tech/tech059.shtml

If you would like information on how you can use digital tools in your classroom, please see my website at http://www.technologyskills.net


Wednesday, November 7, 2012

iPad Restrictions: Parental Controls for the iPad

I had an interesting conversation with a parent this week.  Her child was using their iPad to watch funny YouTube videos and in the process ran across a video that was not appropriate for a ten year old.  She, of course, was concerned and her first consideration was to install spyware on her child's iPad.  I don't personally believe in this approach, even if I do understand the concern.  However, in order to be informed myself and able to talk to parents about this type of issue I did a little research.

There are several "spyware" programs out there that cater to the iPad.  After reviewing them I realize that many of them (if not all of them) require you jailbreak your iPad.  This is not an option for anyone that has Apple Care as the warranty would become null and void immediately if you jailbreak your iPad.  But there are ways parents can have some of the control they may need or crave.

First, if the child's iPad is WiFi only, a web filter is a great thing to use.  I have suggested that parents who have iPads contact their internet service provider in order to see is they provide this service.  There are also other web based services such as OpenDNS that could be employed in these situations.  These types of options do not require you to install software on any of your devices and anyone using the wireless at your home would be under the same restrictions as the child (although there are override codes adults could use).

Second, there is the restriction settings on the iPad that can be set by an adult.  If you go into the System Settings of the iPad and tap on "General", you will see the word restrictions on the right hand side of the screen.  Tap that in order to set up restrictions on the iPad.  See my video below for this process. Changing the restrictions on an iPad is a good way to help filter the information a child might access from the iPad.  For example: you can set the age restrictions for movies and TV shows on the iPad.  This could prevent the child(ren) from renting inappropriate movies and shows from iTunes.  You can also set music to not allow sexually explicit material and Siri to ignore explicit language.  Basically, there are a fair amount of options here.


This solution does not solve my original query about filtering YouTube  but after a little looking there is one thing you can do in order to filter YouTube videos on a computer.  This solution works on both the iPad and any other device that uses a web browser to access YouTube   The downside to this is that in order to be thorough  you would need to repeat the filter process on every browser on the device.  For example, if you turn on the filter in Safari on the iPad, but not the "Google" app (which is also a web browser).  In order for the filter to be turned on in both web browsers, you would need to go through that process on each browser individually.

Here are your steps in filtering YouTube:
  1. Open the browser and go to youtube.com
  2. Log in to YouTube.com.  If you don't have a YouTube or Google account....get one.  They are very useful and required for what you are about to do.
  3. Scroll to the very bottom of the page.
  4. Change to "Desktop" mode by clicking on the word "Desktop" (blue text) in the bottom right hand corner of the page.  What we are looking for doesn't show in the default mobile view.
  5. Now that you are in "Desktop" mode, scroll back down to the bottom of the screen.  you will see several YouTube options in black lettering.
  6. Locate the option for "Safety" (you should see the word "off" next to it with a down arrow)
  7. Tap on the down arrow next to the word "off".
  8. Select the "On" radio button
  9. Tap "Save"
  10. Logout
Now that you have turned the YouTube filtering on, it cannot be turned off on that browser unless it is turned off by someone logged into YouTube as you (which is why it's important to log out when you are finished).  Don't forget, this is only good on each browser this process is completed in.  

This process does NOT work on proxy browsers such as Rover and Photon (browsers that allow you to view flash content by using a "proxy").  The YouTube browsing experience through one of these browsers isn't as nice as a standard browser, so reduces the "fun" factor for anyone choosing to view YouTube that way.

I would be interested to hear about what other people are doing to filter and secure iPads for kids.  Please feel free to leave a post with any of your ideas or you can email me at randy@technologyskills.net.  More information about iPads, including iPad video tutorials, can be found on my website at technologyskills.net.

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

An Inefficient model: An Effective PD


When implementing any kind of technology, professional development is key to its success.  What is the point of purchasing a computer if you don't learn how to use it?  Most technology projects that fail, fail because of a lack of professional development.  I have spoken to many educators and technology people over the years and I have heard this same story over and over.  People talk about how their school or district purchased a smart board for every classroom, but no one knows how to use it.  Every teacher got a laptop, but didn't get any training so it is only used for typing letters, internet and email.  Every time I hear a story like this I am frustrated and saddened.  Look at it this way.

Let's say you have a teen aged child.  It's time for that child to learn how to drive, but instead of signing the child up for Drivers Education or taking him/her out with you to learn how to drive, you just buy them a new car.  That's it....you buy the car, give them the keys and say "you are on own" or "let me know if you need any advice".  Who in their right mind would do this?  When in comes to using technology in the schools, we do it all the time.  Schools or districts purchase equipment so they can show they are using technology (or with the goal of truly integrating technology into the classroom), but don't supply professional development.  Some schools give a little bit of training on the hardware and stop there.  Some districts have Technology Coaches, but a single Technology Coach for 100 educators is simply paying lip service to a serious flaw in our current educational model.

Let me clarify one thought.  Professional development is not training.  They are not the same thing and should not be approached the same way.  When someone receives new technology equipment, they need some training to learn how to use it.  When an educator receives new equipment, they need training on how to use it, THEN they need professional development to learn how to use it in the classroom.  They need to be able to explore the technology within the confines of their curriculum and they need to be able to speak with someone about their ideas who can speak back and help the educator explore the possibilities.  Without this step, technology integration into the classroom will never reach it's full potential.  Training is easy to understand.  Training has clear and observable goals that can be seen right away.  Training can be done through simple tutorials via video or text documents.  Training, if organized well, is efficient.  Effective professional development is not.

Professional development is that extra step educators need to help them use classroom technology in the best possible way.  It can be obtained through the many wonderful conferences that are available (see this page on my website for a list) and many schools and districts offer mini conferences during the beginning of the school year.  They are good ways to encourage educators to use technology and experiment with it's limits, but is simply isn't enough.  Technology is changing very quickly and we have to keep up or get left behind.  I am not talking about "Keeping up with the Jones", I am talking about using the best modern tools to facilitate teaching and learning.  I am talking about knowing and understanding which tools are best suited for a task and leaving behind old technologies when appropriate.  I am talking about understanding the myriad of tools available and having the ability to filter through them in order to find the most appropriate one for your situation.  This kind of understanding can come through conferences, but a truly thorough understanding of a technology and how it can be used in the classroom comes from high quality professional development.

At the school where I work, I have made some serious changes to technology professional development.  The first thing I did was to move my personal vacation time.  Every year I get three weeks of vacation (plus the week of July 4 which is a mandatory week off).  Instead of pretending to take my time off in July (when I end up working half of it anyway) I take my time off during the school year.  During the summer, educators are invited to work with me directly for up to three days as individuals or in small groups (I limit these groups to three or four).  I work with these educators and their curricula.  I don't "train them" even if we start with a little bit of training.  I help them explore the technology and how it relates to their classroom.  My results are sometimes not what I expected.  For example:  I was working with a couple of educators on the concept of digital portfolios.  The original plan was for me to teach the basics of creating a Google Site and helping them to create a template for their students to use.  This evolved into using iPads to document work and share files.  We explored various online storage options and found a system that would work well with their specific age group and their classroom environment.    The iPad discussion led to a variety of apps that could be used to teach math and explore information.  This led to their desire to learn how to use iMovie and Comic Life on the iPad.  Which lead to... and the list continues. We did accomplish creating the digital portfolio template and planning how digital portfolios would be implemented.  We did accomplish how to use the iPads to document information and share files (I'm talking the kids doing this as well as the adults).  We did accomplish finding apps to help teach Math and all of what we accomplished is now being smoothly (for the most part) implemented into the classrooms (grades 2,3,4).  So in a total of 6 days over the summer we have made an enormous change in their classrooms and students as young as 8 years old are creating their own digital portfolios and truly reflecting on their own learning.  How cool is that!?

Let's take that same situation and place it into a more traditional model of professional development.  Let's also use the six educators referred to above.  So I have six educators who are interested in having students create and use digital portfolios.  They discuss their idea with me and I ask for some training during the week educators come back in August and are given some training.  I argue with administration to separate these educators out from the rest of the staff.  I struggle with the schedule to find the best time to help them learn how to use Google Sites and at best I get to work with the whole group of 6 for up to 3 hours (at absolute best).  In that three hours I teach them how to use Google Sites and discuss how they can implement the concept into their classrooms.  That's all, I'm done and since it's the beginning of the school year, I may not be able to approach them again about this project until late September.  At best 2 of them will have implemented the project.  They get frustrated because things didn't work as smoothly as expected (we didn't have enough time to plan and discuss how to implement).  They get frustrated because they don't remember how to do some stuff in Google Sites (they didn't get enough practice).  The students get frustrated because the teacher can't help them (the teachers didn't get enough "play time" and we didn't plan out the student training portion of the idea.  In short, we have spotty success at best.  Does this sound familiar?

If we want technology to be truly and fully integrated into the modern classroom, we MUST provide quality professional development.  The money we save by not having teachers receive this experience is paid by student learning and success.  


Friday, October 26, 2012

Just-in-time Training

When working with a 1:1 mobile device program at any school there are certain things that have to be considered, and certain things that absolutely must be available to students and staff.  The first is technical support.  If technology doesn't run smoothly in the classroom, there is a larger chance they will simply stop using it.  The second is training and understanding how to do certain things.  I work for a small school and for everything we do with technology (and we do a lot), there are only two of us in my entire department.  My helper is in charge of technical support and I cover everything else.  It isn't possible to do everything that needs to be done, but it is possible to provide tools where educators and students can help themselves.

We have provided a wide variety of tools to our students and it is my responsibility that the students and educators know how to use those tools.  I have provided training over the summer for staff and I have actively been inside the classrooms, but that will never be enough.  My people (and probably most educators and students using technology) need high quality Just-in-time Training.  They need access to tutorials (written and/or video) on how to do the specific tasks they need to do.  There are many wonderful sources for technology tutorials online.  Video tutorial sites such as Lynda.com are wonderful for professionals.  Teachers and students however, tend to need training that is a little more specific.  They need a video or written tutorial that explains to them how to get from their point A to their point B.  For exampe: Let's assume that a child is working on a project using Google Apps.  They need to insert a specific table into a document, but have no idea how to do it.  Let's also say that I am not available to help them.  They could spend time searching for tutorials on how to accomplish this.  They could find information and mentally adjust it to their situation (maybe), but this type of thing takes time, especially if they lack experience with Google Docs.  Here's my solution:

If I know students (or educators) are going to do something that may be difficult for them, I will usually make a quick video tutorial or (upon request) a written tutorial on how to do a very specific task.  This way the learner does not need to go hunting for help and I know they will have help from their own individual starting point to their own individual ending point.  For example: A group of students or teachers need to connect a printer to their iPad.  There are tutorials on generally doing this, but they will be more successful if I take the 5 minutes to make a quick video tutorial (ipad screen casting resouces listed below) showing them how using their app and our printers.  Also, this way they can hear my voice and we know each others idosyncricies.  They are all more likely to understand what I am saying, even if a complete stranger uses the same words.  I also know exactly what the student/teacher heard and can adjust any trainings as necessary to improve student/teacher learning.  This is not something any third party can do.

Another version of Just-in-time Training that is important for technology integration success is having someone in the classroom to offer advice when needed.  Of course, it would be impossible to be in every classroom every day, but classroom observations could help.  Providing regular visitations to classrooms in order to observe and offer ideas can provide an amazing amount of help to staff and students.  Instructional Technologists must be given the time and encouragement to go into classrooms and provide another point of view.  Classroom teachers must be given the time and encouragement to allow someone to come into their classroom, in a non judgemental fashion, and give them another point of view.  This is a collaborative approach, not an evaluative one.  This is not about teacher performance or evaluation, it is about student learning and engagement.

If you find yourself in a situation where your school or district is interested in integrating technology into your classrooms and curriculum, encourage them to deeply consider the important of professional development for teachers.  Too many schools and districts have purchased large amounts of technology equipment only to have it sit in a room or unused in a classroom simply because they did not provide the necessary professional development.  Equipment alone is simply equipment.  Equipment plus training equals potential.  For an example of the effects of professional development on integrating technology, see my post titled "The Importance of Professional Development".

If you are an administrator and would like help teaching teachers how to use and integrate technology, please feel free to email me at randy@technologyskills.net or you can contact me through my website at technologyskills.net

A note about screen casting on the iPad:  I am not aware of any app that allows you to screencast directly from the iPad, however there is a nice work around.  I use AirServer to project my iPad onto my computer screen and then Camtasia for Mac in order to record what I am doing.  This allows me to make quick and easy video tutorials on doing different things on the iPad.  Some of my tutorials are listed on my website. If you don't want to play for a screencast software, Screencast-O-Matic and Jing are both nice alternatives.






Thursday, October 18, 2012

Taking Concepts for Granted

Organizing your email on your iPad
So far my fifth grade teachers and myself have worked very hard to create this new blended learning environment where students are competent  in creating, manipulating and understanding digital files.  To date, the kids have done some amazing stuff with their journaling app (PaperDesk) and their pdf annotator (DocAS).  They have done so well and understand digital learning environments enough that we have decided to move into "phase 2".  Of course, we aren't quite sure what phase 2 is yet, but we do know that it involves teaching these students some modern digital concepts that we sometimes take for granted.

Many times over the years I have heard educators or technology people say that the teacher didn't need to know the technology as well as the students, the teacher needed to know how to guide students.  I used to make this statement myself.  I am beginning to think that this was partially a mistake.  Maybe we have taken this concept to a point where we do not feel responsible for teaching our students some basic modern skills.  We take time out of our days to teach students how to do things like organize their locker, organize their binder or organize a paper, but we don't take the time  to teach them how to organize themselves in a modern way.  If you were write down all of the resources available to students today, the list would be staggering.  We are using all of these resources in schools, but instead of teaching the students how to organize their digital lives, we essentially allow them to "stuff it in the closet".  This is unacceptable and we need a solution.

This discussion with my fifth grade staff started because of an email.  We provided our students with email and just assumed they would know how to use it.  We talked about being polite, but not how to double check email addresses, using the CC feature or organizing their inbox.  We hadn't even considered teaching them how to use email signatures or the more "adult" features of email.  On the one hand, the kids did know how to use email, even those who had never used it before were taught in seconds by their peers.  But...

I had a parent come to me complaining about a grade her child received.  The child was to email the teacher, but the teacher said that the email never arrived so the child got a 0.  I explained that the child probably had mistyped the teachers email address (which I had just spoken to the students about a few day previous) and at this point there was no leniency on that issue, but to double check my guess I would like to see his email.  This is when I realized our mistake.  This child, this 10 year old child, had been deleting his sent email right after sending them because he wanted to keep his email organized.  He had been deleting emails from his inbox after reading them (including instructions from teachers) because he wanted to keep his inbox clean.  We taught this child how to send and receive messages, but we didn't really teach him how to effectively use email.

This has been troubling me ever since I realized what was going on.  I approached the fifth grade educators about my "phase 2" idea and will now be meeting regularly.  Our first order of business is to teach students how to effectively use email.  How to make decisions on what to delete and what to keep.  How to make folders and sub folders so information can stay organized and how to search their email to find information they need.  These are basic 21st century concepts and they are just as important as organizing their binders, lockers or anything else in their lives.  As adults, it is our responsibility to understand these basic concepts as well, just as we would understand they other types of organization.  It is our responsibility to know enough about these concepts that we can instantly offer suggestions to students without having to stop and think about it or having to ask someone else "Is it possible to make folders in email?".

They are the digital natives, but we are the guides.  We are not absolved of our responsibility to join the 21st century.  It is not ok to sit back and allow the students to learn new technologies in our classroom without learning that technology ourselves.  In order to be good educators, we must be good learners.  I think that is the main difference between and educator and a teacher.  A teacher helps students learn a specific subject.  An educator helps students prepare for life.  Which one are you?

Below are some resources for students and the 21st century.

Partnership for 21st Century Skills
National Education Technology Standards for Students
The Center for Public Education


Sunday, October 14, 2012

The Importance of Professional Development



Mobile learning is a huge topic in education today. Some people want to run to it and others want to run away. I don't usually get on band wagons, but I did get on this one. I had been waiting for something like the iPad for years before it was released. I had seen the potential and benefit of cell phones in the classroom, but they didn't have quite enough features and those screens were just too small....then came the iPad.

The iPad changed how we view education and truly revolutionized the possibility of the learning environment. The cost of the iPads made schools rethink computers in education and suddenly everyone is purchasing iPads for their schools, but many of them are missing the point. One day I was driving down the road and I noticed a sign in front of a school that read "This fall each child will receive an iPad." And I thought, so what? Tell me something important, like what are you going to do with those iPads? Although the right equipment is important, the pedagogy behind how we use the technology in our classrooms is much more so.

Studies have shown that purchasing equipment for classrooms, but not providing the proper professional development is a great way to ensure the program fails. No amount of computers, smart boards, iPads or classroom performance systems in the world will change the classroom if the educators don't have certain things in place. The first is educator buy-in. Successful technology integration cannot be forced on people, but people can be persuaded to try certain things and hopefully that will make the difference. Consider this scenario:

I was working with a group of educators in using the iPad in the classroom. As a part of this training, I had them creating comics in Comic LIfe, a video using iMovie and a video using Explain Everything. One of the educators in this group fought me every inch of the way through this process. She didn't want to make a video (in either iMovie or Explain Everything) and luke warm to the idea of Comic Life. After a lot of gentle nudging I finally got her to create a video on classroom expectations. I doubt this educator will ever make another video, but now that she has had this experience, her students are allowed to create videos using iMovie or Explain Everything or comic using the Comic Life iPad app for class projects. They have never had this option before.

Let's compare this to another group of educators. Another group of educators were implementing a 1:1 iPad program and only accepted two hours of training. They wanted their technology trainer to show them how to use a couple of apps and then they wanted a small amount of training to show the students a couple of apps and that was all. To my knowledge, this group of educators and students are struggling with the iPads and how they can change the classroom. They don't have the base knowledge necessary to smoothly use this technology in their classrooms and have have no vision for what a truly modern classroom should look like. They struggle with simple tasks such as digitally sharing files and cloud storage, not to mention web 2.0 tools.

Compare this scenario to the group mentioned previously. The students of the first set of educators (younger than the second set) can create pdf documents, manipulate files and create comics and videos as well as move files around online and use email with ease. Although they can print, they have done so on rare occasions since they have felt it was unnecessary to print papers to turn in when you can simply use Google Drive to turn in papers digitally.

There is no fundamental difference between the two group of educators or their teaching situations. There were people in both groups who were not thrilled to start a new adventure and who needed to see the benefit of infusing technology into the classroom before being willing to look at things with new eyes. The largest difference is the time allotted to each group. Four days vs. two hours. A group of ten year olds who can manipulate, create and communicate easily using the iPad versus a group of fourteen year old students who get frustrated and cannot seem to figure out what to do.

So what is the cost of a four day staff training compared to two hours? The cost is student learning. The cost is the ability to provide a high quality modern educational environment for students. The cost is the ability of educators to understand the possibilities of effectively using technology in the classroom. The cost of not providing an adequate amount of professional development is simply too high.

I would love to hear stories about your experience with teacher professional development. What has worked, what has not? Please feel free to post to this blog or send me an email to randy@technologyskills.net

Thursday, October 4, 2012

iPads in the Electives Classrooms

Many times, when there is a new implementation of technology or a new way of thinking, people usually consider core subject educators.  They don't often consider the non-core subject educator, especially when it comes to funding.  When I taught music in a public elementary school, I was very fortunate to work with a principal that saw the potential of the arts and recognized how the non-core educators could help his school reach its potential.  He made sure that music, art and physical education educators were considered in any school plan and he listened to our opinions as strongly as he listened to the opinions of core subject educators.  Since I have left the music classroom and entered the world of education technology, I have attempt to take the same approach.

When my school decided to implement a 1:1 iPad program, I immediately considered the music and art educators.  I knew they could do amazing things with iPads, but I also knew they had a different way of looking at the world.  They would need a different type of support and a different type of professional development.  There were several things to consider in this approach, and which apps to use was the least of it.  I had to consider how technology could enhance their respective subjects and how I could help them manage classroom behavior in a way that having the physical equipment in the room would not get in the way or become distracting to the students.  I also had to find a way to integrate the arts into our classroom management system that allowed them to participate in digital learning without them feeling like they were trying to fit a square peg into a round hole.  The solution was simple.  Patience, patience and more patience.

First let's talk about the professional development.  The electives educators were encouraged to go to the introductory training given to all of the core educators.  After the initial training (how to use the iPad, find and request apps, share files etc....) they were given the option of staying to learn more, or going off to experiment on their own and working with me directly at a later date.  They chose the latter and that's what we did.  I worked with the art teacher in using a variety of apps and using her Apple TV to project her iPad to the front of the room.  I then encouraged her to record videos of herself completing class warmups (using the app Explain Everything) and posting them online to share with students and parents. That involved learning how to use the schools classroom management system.

Classroom management systems are built with a set of tools such as discussion boards, file sharing, quiz modules and grade books.  These all fit well within the confines of a traditional classroom, but not necessarily in a forward thinking arts program.  The trick was to use the tools that were a natural fit to the arts, encourage the arts educators to be open minded to new ideas on some tools and ignore other tools that are simply inappropriate to an art program.  To date, my art and music people are using file sharing, links (to youtube videos) and discussion boards.  They are using a variety of apps on the iPads as well.

In music, students are using audio recording, a digital metronome and Garage Band to compose music. The art teacher is using apps like Brushes and Doodle Buddy for two dimensional drawing and Cast Drawing and 123D Sculpt for three dimensional drawing, and it doesn't stop there.   She uses a variety of other apps such as National Geographic in order to allow students to experience photography.  The last time I walked into her room, she had the fifth grade students looking at an image on their iPad (from National Geographic) and recreating that image using nothing but a black ink pen.  I'm no art critic (I can barely draw a stick figure) but those students were doing some really neat stuff!


For your further reading, here are some interesting website about the iPad and the arts.

http://kentwired.com/school-of-art-launches-ipad-initiative/
http://blog.cia.edu/digitalcanvas/2012/02/28/ipad-art-education-not-just-college-anymore/
http://theteachingpalette.com/2012/02/24/theres-an-app-for-that-ipads-in-the-art-room/