Week 18 - REFLECTIVE BLOG – Emerging principles for 21st Century Education.
I will use the Gibbs reflective cycle to reflect on subtheme
1: The role of current and emerging technologies in supporting future
orientated learning and teaching.
DESCRIPTION
The context I will reflect on is my own experience over the
past 6 months where at our school we have starting a transformation to using
the G suite for education platform as a base for ICT within our school. This
was introduced towards the end of 2017 and began with making Chromebooks compulsory
for the 2018 intake of year 9 students.
FEELINGS
Initially this came as a shock to me as we had not really
been part of any talk around this concept as a staff and while we lacked
direction in this space the decision made to go down this path was made by a
small group within the school. Once I had my head around the ideas I could see
that it was a great opportunity to learn new skills, change my teaching
practise and try a different approach. I felt quite excited about the
opportunities it presented and this influenced my decision to study with the Mindlab.
I felt that our school needed to make a shift in one
direction with ICT as we had been drifting along with many teachers trying many
different approaches without anyone co-ordinating this. I could see this must
have been a little confusing for students and that hopefully this would help us
to all move together in one direction. So I felt this was a positive move.
I decided to challenge myself and my colleagues to embrace
this change and together we came up with some changes we could make initially
to start our journey. We started with a small project that allowed the students
to work collaboratively using their Chrome books and the google platform.
EVALUATION
My students reacted positively. They have enjoyed using the
technology, it has allowed them to work more collaboratively. The students have
been engaged and it has challenged them to learn new skills. I have enjoyed
working closely with my colleagues to implement change and learn new skills
myself and improve my teaching practise. A negative is that it has been time
consuming to implement and there have been problems within the school with the IT
infrastructure which has been challenging.
ANALYSIS
I begin my analysis
with a quote take from the report. “the rapid development and ubiquity of ICT
are resetting the boundaries of educational possibilities. Yet, significant
investments in digital resources have not revolutionised learning environments;
to understand how they might requires attention to the nature of learning.” (Bolstad
et al 2012)
I think this is very true and resonates with my experience.
While we now have a direction in our school and we have the tools to transform learning,
this is not enough to revolutionise what we are doing. The process will be slow
but I feel there needs to be more sharing of ideas throughout the school and
professional development needs to be ongoing.
Figure 6 below sums this up nicely. It shows the links that
need to occur for ICT to be a truly transformational tool in our school.
Pg 56 (Bolstad et al 2012)
The other model that I belief is important is the SAMR
model. We need to be using ICT tools to take our learning above the line to Modification
or redefinition if we are truly using it to engage in 21st century
learning.
CONCLUSION
While I have begun the journey I still have a long way to
go. I need to continue to change my teaching practise, engage in ongoing
professional development and try new teaching strategies that can engage my
students in 21st century education. This forms the basis for my
action plan going forward.
REFERENCES
Bolstad, R.,
Gilbert, J., McDowall, S., Bull, A., Boyd, S., & Hipkins, R. (2012).
Supporting future-oriented learning and teaching — a New Zealand perspective.
Report prepared for the Ministry of Education. Retrieved from https://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/schooling/109306
Finlay, L. (2009).
Reflecting on reflective practice. PBPL. Retrieved from http://www.open.ac.uk/opencetl/sites/www.open.ac.uk.opencetl/files/files/ecms/web-content/Finlay-(2008)-Reflecting-on-reflective-practice-PBPL-paper-52.pdf
MoE.
(n.d.).Using the SAMR model. Retrieved from http://elearning.tki.org.nz/Professional-learning/Teacher-inquiry/SAMR-model
I feel the same way Melanie about realizing and grabbing the opportunities to develop yourself as a teacher. New pedagogies should be embraced but unfortunately there are those that 'run in the opposite direction' when this is mentioned. As leaders we need to be developing ways to help these teachers become involved and support them through this. With the introduction of technology we have no choice but to get on board, we owe this to our students. You are not the only teacher who feels they have a long way to go with learning new techniques to incorporate into the learning environment, and I do believe this will be an on-going, never ending road we are on as technology is changing rapidly and just when we think we have got it we find out about something else.
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