Tuesday, September 28, 2021

Lockdown Drawing and Giving Feedback

 We are onto the drawing stage with my Y11 and Y12 classes now. Even though we are on lockdown, the show must go on. 

I have written a few blog posts about setting this up

The school has sent out sketch books, pencils and coloured pencils, So I know that the students have some basics that we can be. using to move on with.

Yesterday and today, I have had a few students through my Year 12 class, who are all working on slightly different projects so I have been drawing with them individually or in small groups, targeting their specific project ideas. 

I have been uploading my examples that I do with them online into a folder so that they have access to them and can get a better close up view rather than just seeing them on a Google Meet. Link to folder here.


When it comes to feedback, it proved to be difficult for me to see their work clearly enough when they held it up to the camera during a meet. To overcome this, the students have been photographing their work and sending it to me so I can give them more detailed feedback as I can see it clearly.

I then used my camera set up to record me drawing for them so I can give them ideas on how to improve their work. This is what I would do if we were in the class. I would sit next to them and draw on a different piece of paper and give them ideas for improvement.
I have shared this with them on a Google presentation with some notes. My initial idea was to share a Google Drawing with them so I could annotate their photograph (Google Drawing is always my first thought!!). This was not a good option, however, as you can not embed a video directly onto a drawing (please sort this out Google!). I decided to go with a Google Presentation for feedback and have decided that this is a better option anyway as I can embed videos, give annotated feedback and we are able to keep the same presentation for all drawing feedback as we do it.

Here are two examples of feedback given today. I have shared these with the individual students. 




Wednesday, September 22, 2021

Lockdown Cooking with Y9's

 I have been teaching a y9 food class this year. With the help of the fabulous Mrs Heka, TIC Food Technology, I have been having fun in the kitchen with 3 lots of Year 9 classes over the year. With being on lockdown at the moment, I met my new Year 9 class rotation while we are all at home. I have been sending them theory work to do, kitchen hygiene, safety etc and then I saw that the wonderful Mrs Heka and Mrs Hamer were doing practical lessons with their Y7 - Y10 classes. I then felt sorry for my class that I wasn't giving them that option to have a go if they were able to.

Link to the Food Tech section on my class site

With the support of Mrs Heka, I have had the confidence to try doing practical from home with the Y9 class for the last two weeks. Last week we made pasta from scratch and a nice sauce to have with it. I had one student come on with his Mum. They were all ready to go with the ingredients. I had sent the class the ingredient list a week in advance. There was another two students in the meet, but they were spectating, cheer leading. 



This week, the topic was hot cakes. I had two spectators this week. The student who was planning on coming to cook was unable to make it. I decided to do the practical anyway as I had two students in watching and I recorded it. My chef from last week can then access the video if he wants to have a go. 


Questions about Inquiry during Lockdown

  • How another lockdown period may impact the learners in your focus group?
  • Will you need to make any changes to your Inquiry?
  • How might your intervention look different if you continue through this period?
  • Do any of your intervention plans work via distance learning?
  • Is there any information about implementation of your changed practices/intervention you could collect during this time?


This lockdown has definitely affected my learners. It feels so different this time. I am not seeing many of them come online for our scheduled meets.
I am working with the students who come online to complete the work that was started before the lockdown started, in terms of documents in their drive. I had already started making help videos to go with all of this online work so this effort has been stepped up to try and help the students in between seeing me on meets and to try and help those students who I am not seeing. I am not sure many of those students who I am not seeing are doing the work though, as their documents are not changing when I check them, I can only help where I can though, so I have been trying to convince myself to stop stressing over things I have no control over.

Example of where I have been making support videos - this has definitely expanded beyond my original inquiry group of Y11 and Y12 students.
What I have also been looking at is how my Y11 and Y12 students can pick up extra credits for the work they are managing to complete. There are Generic Technology standards at NCEA 1 and 2 that are about writing a design brief. For my Year 12 students, this was quite a smooth one to slide into as they had done most of what they needed for the standards they were already entered into, so it was just a case of some specially targeted extras to make everything line up. Link to work here. I added this on the end of what they had already completed for their design brief. Two of my students have taken me up on this and have completed this extra work and have got the 4 extra credits as of writing this blog post. With my Y11 class, they had done a very basic design brief so this would mean a fair chunk of extra work to bulk it out for the new standard. I offered it to them and one of them has said yes so far, which is great. I am adding their extra support here. I have only just started this with them, so all the work is not there yet.

The multi modal structure that I was trying to build in this year has become especially important as trying to explain things to the students over a Google Meet is not always the easiest way to learn something new.
An example of this is with my Year 12 group who have to move on and learn about cross sectional drawing as part of their design development work. I had set myself up to be able to draw online with them and organised with Mr Dunn to have some drawing equipment sent out to their homes. - blog post here.  I have also had to come up with different ways for them to visualise what a cross section would look like. Working with Lego was one way - blog post here and putting together a multi model page on the class site is anther way - link to page on class site here. This gives them hands on examples that they can manipulate and move around, questions to answer and get instant feedback, video to watch and information to read. 

The great thing about all of this preparation work that I have been doing during this lockdown time is that non of it is wasted. It is all good stuff to be available to the students at any time. It has also cemented in my head how important my class site is as the place to go for everything so it needs to be as supportive as I can make it. Using the site in tandem with shared evidence spreadsheets and calendars has been my main structure.

Multimodal set up for Year 8 3D Design on Tinkercad

 Tinkercad is awesome at any time but during lockdown it is great. My students can do 3D design from home and they are supported by the lessons that Tinkercad make, taking you step by step through individual skills. What is also really useful is the "class" that you can set up. This makes it super easy to see the work the students are doing without them having to share it with you.

I have tried to set up my class site with step by steps and videos to help them with skills to go along with the Tinkercad ones, They can then see the steps being done on video. My Y8 group have just started learning the skills so I have been working through tasks with them as well as making them videos that they can watch in their own time. I have tried to keep my videos nice and short and to the point so they are targeted to specific tasks and skills.

Link to page on class site


Great blog post from Deborah, explaining one of her Tinkercad lessons.

Monday, September 20, 2021

Using Lego for Cross Sectional Visual Aids

Some of my Year 12 class are ready to continue with their design work. We are onto design development and they need to include details like cross sectional views. When we are on site, I get the students to make shapes in 3D with plasticine to cut in half, so they have a visual understanding of where the cut surfaces are so they can draw them on paper.

I have set up my drawing area for online teaching, Blog post here, but I needed to find a way of explaining cross sectional. views in 3D for them.


I made some blocks out of Lego. One was a solid cube, one was a solid cube made in two sections and one was a hollow cube in two sections. I made them all the same size so i could relate them back to the original one that is not cut in two.



Here is a brief section from the lesson today. It was great to hear the students drawing and then showing me their drawings on the camera so we could see that everything was being undserstood.

Sunday, September 19, 2021

Lego Algorithms

 My Year 7 coding class are learning what algorithms are. As we are on lockdown at the moment, I am thinking of things they can get stuck into at home.

As I am busy building Lego at the moment, following the instructions, I thought we could have a go at making our own Lego instructions for someone else to follow.

Here is where the work is set up on my class site.

They can choose what ever they like to build and break it down into what steps are needed to get it across clearly to someone else.

I have included a video for them so they can use remove.bg to get rid of the backgrounds in the photographs of their lego pieces.


Here is my example step by step to make yellow boy.







Setting Up for Teaching Drawing Online

 We have been on lockdown for getting on for 5 weeks now and my students need to get on with their drawing work. We have done loads of work that can be done online on Google docs etc but it is time for a few of them to move on. 

I had a chat with a couple of them last week about getting some drawing done in the next week and they are keen so it was time to get my set up sorted out.


On my desk I have arranged it so that I can draw live on a Google Meet with the students and also record my drawings for them to try in their own time.

I know being able to draw with the students next week will make me feel so much better.

Friday, September 17, 2021

Using Wordwall for Learning New Words

Today, Mr Cunard in our PE department played a game with use using the flip grip option on Wordwall. He then shared the link to the website. When I checked it out I found there was a load of options and templates to choose from.



I decided to try the Match Up template to have a go at a word game for my Y7 and Y8 coding classes.
It was easy to put the words and definitions.



You can send the link to students via their email, so they can play the game in a browser window or you can grab the embed code and put it onto your class website, which is what I've had a go at here.

I made a video to explain.

Wednesday, September 8, 2021

Prepping to Learn about Algorithms

 My two new intermediate coding classes have got to learn what an algorithm is. They have to know and show what this is both in a non digital and digital way.

Link to algorithms page on class site


I have started with them finding three things that they know about and breaking them down into input, algorithm, output. I have made an example for them to look at and made an explanation video for them to watch after the lesson to remind themselves what to do. I also found a good explanation video on YouTube.

The second activity on this page is to be done in their own time while we are in lockdown. They have to write instructions for someone else to follow. They then have to analyse how it went and write up any changes they would make to improve their instruction (debugging).

I have written these activities to line up with the tracking document linked to the Progress Outcomes. Blog post here about this tracking sheet These activities are linked directly to Progress Outcome 1.

At the top of the site page, I have included some extra reading for the students and extra activities for them to try.




Tuesday, September 7, 2021

Online / Distance Learning - Graphics with the Intermediates

 We are on lockdown at the moment, and our classes with our intermediate students are still going ahead.

My Year 8 graphics class are making a start on the clock design project. I have been working on elements in my class site for them so what is on there is more useful and supportive.

They have been coming online for our weekly lessons, so I have been making support material to help them continue when they are not with me or they need reminding about what I have just shown them. This hopefully will help the students who are unable to come online too but it will definitely help when we are all back at school as they will all be at different places in the project.


Over the last two weeks, we have been working on -

The links go to where the work is on the class site. There is instructions, templates, examples and explanation screencast videos.

Link to whole project - as of writing, the support materials have only been added to the above sections.

We are not connected as a class via the Hapara teacher dashboard, so we keep a class shared spreadsheet. This is also useful as I can put the links to everything there for them in one place so they can get to their work and support material quickly and easily.
This is the same spreadsheet from the start of todays' class to the end showing the difference in how much work they have done.



Here are a few blog posts from this work




Sunday, August 29, 2021

Lockdown teaching - using examples and videos

 As we are in the middle of a Level 4 lockdown again, I have been making sure there is more support on my class site for my students. I know I will see a few of them in class Google Meets but not all of them.

I have been making more examples and taking them through the work with more videos. I use Quick Time Player to. make my videos as I work on a Mac, but Screencastify does the job just as well.

Some examples of what I have been working on are here.

Intermediates - Clock project

Intermediates - At home coding challenges

Year 11 - Design Brief

Year 11 - Types of Seating

Year 11 - Materials

Year 12 - Design Brief

I have also been letting my students specifically know that these resources are there when I send the calendar invite out to the meet. The links take them straight to where the work is. Hopefully, this is making it easier for those students who are unable to come to the meets to keep plodding along with the work.



Monday, August 23, 2021

Online Activity - Coding Challenge a Day

 This is for my Y7 and Year 8 coding classes. I have set them up on my class site so they can work through a colour set in a week if they want, pick and choose from the sets or basically do any they want.

Link to class site

Here are the individual sets

Link to Red Google Drawing








Online Design Activity - Colour Theory

This is some preparation for my intermediate design students. We are going to look at colour. 


Link to presentation

Wednesday, August 11, 2021

How do other teachers plan?

 I am up for changing anything in my practice that needs changing. If my inquiry is indicating that something isn't working then there is no point in clinging on, it is time for change.


Part of my thinking about this is wondering how other teachers plan, what works, what doesn't work etc. I decided to put a Google Form together to ask them. This went out to the staff here at Tamaki College and I put it out into the Manaiakalani Google Plus community to try and get a wider view.

The TLDR version of highlights are ....

  • The most popular way of sharing work is from the class website, with emails and direct sharing from drive very popular.
  • Pen and paper are still very popular, used in conjunction with online.
  • Everything being in one place is popular.
  • Different methods are used fro different year groups depending on their needs.
  • Youtube videos about a topic is the most used method, with follow up work added on.
  • Using documents  / presentations as templates are well used to set students up with what to do and how to do it.
  • Screencasts are very popular, especially since lockdowns and working from home.
  • Whatever methods that are chosen, they are used to enhance sharing and collaboration.
  • Exemplars to push higher expectations.
  • Lots of willingness to find the way that fits for the students in front of you, no one size fits all approach.



Below here are the full questions and answers that I received. Any indication of identity or class set that came through has been altered or deleted.

___________________________________________________________

What are the main ways that you get the work to the students for them to work on. Click on more than one option if you like

Forms response chart. Question title: What are the main ways that you get the work to the students for them to work on. Click on more than one option if you like.. Number of responses: 24 responses.


Can you please explain why you have found this to be the best way for you to work with your students?
Device is always an issue. If it's not flat its something else. There is always an excuse so a variety of options works best for me even paper sometimes
It's direct and easier for all students to access. Hardcopy as sometimes they need a break from technology and most times students work best without the added distraction of technology.
Easier for students to have paper copies. However, this term I'm trying to use our Chromebooks more.
It's easier for me to track in real time and mark out of school hours
I like using my website as the main resource. The place with all of the information easily accessible. If we are mainly using devices for a lesson or section of a project I will send calendar invites to each student with links to the resources on my site for ease of access. I always have to prepare for students who don't have devices though and this is where the photocopies and printouts come in handy. We also spend a lot of time drawing and off-screen.
Children can access all areas of the curriculum, all timetables, notices and it’s all rewindable and can be accessed from home so kids don’t get behind if they are sick
All our class work are on the class site. If there is something urgent such as a survey that needs to be done urgently then I would email the link to the students.
Doesn't get lost, is archived.
We are 1:1 chromebooks - easiest and most efficient way to get the info out to them
It is what the students are used to doing and all teachers in our hub of 4 classes do the same. All work is accessed via our learning site.
If they got a device I work online otherwise paper copy.
We haven’t got our website up and running yet so this seems to be the easiest at the moment for me.
I find it gives them a variety of digital and tangible hard copy. It prepares them for a range of scenarios.
Everything in one place. Means I need to keep the site updated too
Class Site is the easiest way for my students to access their learning.
By having it accessible on the site, it teaches the learners to default towards going to the site to access learning and follow the instructions/links. Otherwise it takes teacher time, or they expect to be spoon-fed all their information.
It varies by class - Year 9 and 10 classes I have been emphasising the class sites and class blog but need to send a link via email to them, they also use ed perfect and the links are different for different students, so I share links directly with them using Hapara to open the tabs relevant to them (sometimes even the specific doc url for the ones who just can't get themselves to the right place. Year 13 - I use workspace for assessments, class website for resources and slideshows they make copies XXXXXXX class - use a lot more paper and games with this group, blog tells them specific tasks and has links to class site docs for them self regulation, level of differentiation ion the group and assessment demands mean i vary what i do My year 9, 10 and 11 are a mixed class with subject specific focus so huge differentiation, services academy are year 11-13 so same issue, year 13 stats are easier
It’s not best it’s a process of moving from old to new ways of doing things
Through Hapara I can put their work in the correct folder in their Drive. I find a lot of students fail to file their work if I provide just the link (just putting it in their Drive). If I do give a link I always go through where to file and check that it actually there. These guys are 8/9 years old
Through surveys, kōrero and observation students have expressed how they prefer to engage with their work. Some prefer online, while some prefer hard copy. I will always have both readily available. Both soft and hard copies have their pros and cons and we know what they are.
Email link: I've found this the best way as I think the kids are used to working from and in their google drive and email for me are the best way to get the same message out to the whole class where I can link work. And also, I can't get the hang of workspaces so I don't use them. Class sites for me are good for storing everything in one easy space for the eye and for visibility for everyone. Photocopies are good for students without a netbook but also for looking at exemplars and highlighting key words and facts needed for learning. Photocopies are also great for getting everyone to do the same thing at the same time for example at the start of a lesson and you want them to start afresh on something. Printing student assessments, then giving kids written feedback on their assessment also has been positive because kids like the way the feedback and work is presented in one space/place.
It is more effective in that I can load all the work onto a Workspace into modules and I am able to see student progress and I am able to give effective and targeted feedback. Students still prefer to handwrite so a mixture of online and workbooks cater to students needs.
I like a mix of digital learning, conversational and formatively extracted work and prepared, online accessible material. I'm super focused on memorable, large and well-scaffolded teaching and learning and use digital with that in mind. Video transcripts, for example, are often a focus so there is a lens on languaging learning as well as catching ideas from a video. Conversational teaching and learning is optimal in my view.
All my students have a device so it is easily accessible to them.

Which of these have you tried? (please feel free to choose more than one)
Forms response chart. Question title: Which of these have you tried? (please feel free to choose more than one). Number of responses: 24 responses.

Can you please explain your previous answer in terms of what made you decide to use those methods and what effect they had on the students and their work.
Students are familiar with the sharing doc and plus they always ask if i have shared a doc Step by step instructions are for students who need that extra support should they forget the first time around Students enjoy surfing the net particularly youtube so its already a forum that they are familiar and can relate to easily
Younger students need detailed instructions with visual example and teacher voice over. Have used documents filled with instructions and they switch off. I mean anyone would especially if you are a visual, tactile or auditory learner.
I've us d it in the past, and all students learn different. I also try and include digital technology in my students learning. That way I know I've cover the visual learners, copy and the auditory learners.
Covering all bases of learning styles
I am still very much in the process of figuring out what works well for my students and what works well at different stages of projects. I find that having multiple points of entry into an activity best assures that all students understand and produce strong outcomes.
We use a lot of YouTube clips particularly in writing to model aspects like narrative structure, or topic sentences in a paragraph then follow it up with a teachers snd students completing a modelled scaffold before the students independently complete the scaffold/plan We have many of our struggling writers refer back to our group plan as they are working through their own
It is dependent on the task and also the topic we are working on. Ubiquitous learning is also another reason why.
For NCEA assessments students specifically ask for exemplars. For some instructional topics (eg how to use Sheets- Loom is good)
Templates easy for them to fill out, step by step is also good for them to do in their own time. Have attempted to make videos - however, they don't tend to watch them, prefer to talk to the teacher.
What we choose depends on the task and subject area and how much scaffolding the students require.
Internal is different from external prep.
I discuss first with students and some students need to walk through steps on their own time.
We have tried all of these with varying success but it really depends on the task. Sometimes a fully loaded slide deck where they just type in answers is best, sometimes even that is too complicated. Other times we set up links to all sorts of resources that never get looked at or they go back to constantly. Doesn't seem to be a rule for why they check or not
I have seen the different teachers use all these strategies with teaching. During covid being able to film myself was perfect! I enjoy getting the kids to screencastify to share their learning.
My students have recently asked for more explicit descriptions of the step by step instructions delivered in class, to be more rewindable. This is due to the higher absenteeism with the uncertainty of covid and being firmer about staying home if sick. The learners find it easier to catch up on what they missed, by going about it on their own, rather than having to make a big deal about it openly.
our school is dominated by workspaces, this means if you do anything different it takes some training. I have moved away form workspaces as it appears that students have heaps of documents but often most of the material is teacher created and little student work. It depends if you are thinking of sharing the learning - which is much of what I share, rather than the docs, slides, drawings where they work/create and hopefully I am working towards them making these and then they file/share.
Process to work through - I may change the more I learn
I try to give information in multiple modalities to cater for all levels of learning. In a multi level/ability class it is important that all students can access the tasks and material that will support them in their learning.
I like to use templates as I see that they help students to organise their thoughts and ideas better.
Document/ppt: Doc gives whole page instructions that students can fill as a template for example/Ppt, definitely use them as templates to complete inquiries ready to present in front of a class - effect, docs give is that i think kids use this the most so don't need much thinking about when/why/how to use the doc, effect for ppt, visually pleasing but also new point or idea can be given on a new slide so for my seniors for example, we have a 'all you need to know for term 1' ppt and I share it with the kids during teaching time and they can use it as a resource for their assessments - this slide has every single lesson I've done with the kids. Step by step: Doc, Flows down the page nicely, ppt - probably my most common form I use which in class as well as shared with students and on my site to present information - effect: all you need to know in one place. Videos of myself: rewindable learning for kids who missed a lesson or want to revisit learning (more used during lockdowns), youtube, mainly for trips and guest speakers to revisit learning and for assessments - effect: positive for those who've used them at home especially and for students new to the class and subject. Exemplars: So they know what the end picture could look like and they have something tangible to work towards & kids can see what's achievable.
Seeking more attractive and appealing ways to communicate and teach content especially literacy and the ARTS.
Collaborative, co-sharing our learning is tops in my pedagogical approach. Scaffolding learners carefully to avoid assumptions about process and content is why I try as much as I can to ensure learners are enabled with support to work independently. While aiming to push towards high expectation learning, I'm also focused on offering students enough supportive scaffolding to cater for the diverse learners in the space. modelling and working together before independent application, to then wananga together as a peer teaching tool, makes for dynamic teaching and learning.
These modes of presentation are easy to prepare and it can be shared or sourced from other Kaiakos who have expert knowledge in curriculum areas they are good at. Students found these modes of presentations easy to follow because they could listen to instructions, watch demonstrations and do hands on activities by following step by step instructions.

Is there anything that you have done that you really recommend as it does the job well?
I do a demonstration and students repeat or follow. Whole class reading and discussion works well for me as well as oppose to letting them do SDL
Screencastify if possible understand we teachers can be strapped for time.
Using flipgrid, that way students can complete the tasks at home and super fun making videos
Other programs such as IXL for reinforcement of topics taught in maths as it gives a clear record of achievement and students can immediately get help if they get answers incorrect . Google forms for feedback about their learning or to deconstruct next steps.
Exemplars are super important and worthwhile, especially examples of other students' work, I find it motivates the students to do better and push further when they see what their peers have produced. I use different methods of instruction at different stages of the project, more videos, and exemplars in the making stages and documents and presentations in the research stages.
Linking the scaffolds and providing a completed model for students to consult all the way through guarantees accessabity and success for all
Screencast especially for learning from home/lockdowns.
Started using mote - children that didn't like reading instructions can listen to the mote. They prefer things short - i.e. don't want to watch a whole video or read a whole page of instructions.
Mainly use Google slides with all the links (audio, links to templates, Youtube clips, etc).
Conversations with students and clarify. Maybe a workshop with an experienced student to explain or work together. Always have a good meaningful hook in for the subject.
Screencastify yourself doing things. It shows them each step and they know how to stop and start a video (Y4-5) to follow instructions
Making short movies of themselves explaining their learning.
It's a work in progress
When I set up a table for the do now or tasks with specific directions for each student named works reasonably well - depending on the time of day... Some lessons I need to do something that forms the class as a group before I can then get them to work on the work for their level or specific learning needs. I have my yr 9-11 subject specific class period 4 and 5 on a single day for 2/3 of their lessons in a week. For them I find I open learning links for each student to get them in the right place (but not focussed) for this class this means 15 different sessions, but the time to do it is worth it. I also get them to make their own docs, to put the work in rather than the links being docs they fill in.
Workspace great for teacher as everything in 1 place, which I think is superior to sites and blogs posts
Varies hugely... what worked well last year has not worked well this year!
When learning a new language for the first time at a high level, I found this year that it really does work to scaffold the students. I have also found that consistency in the formatting and design of my scaffolded resources work well, as my students know now what to do.
Can't think of anything at the mo;)
WORKSPACE
Working collaboratively on a doc and co-constructing - accompanied by sharing conversationally. Learn, create, share is happening formatively throughout a series of sessions. Students need to move aware form a fixation on individualised digital task completion to engaging is the dialogue of learning.
I have tried getting presenters from different works of life to come into the classroom and talk about their experiences about things like water conservation, gardening, pollution, transportation....

Is there anything that you have tried that was a disaster? Why did it not work? What did you do instead?
Letting the students pick what they want to make in a practical lesson without checking in before the actual assessment and finding out that the students do not even know what they are doing themselves even though it's their work. Produce a work plan outlining what they need to do and time frames.
Simplify instructions as much as possible but if you need to explain more and cannot be there leave a voice over instruction via screencastify.
Every disaster is a learning experience that is made better when laughing with the students. Eg not giving them access to a document they needed or doing the opposite and giving editing rights to a google form! You cannot restore Google forms
Lots of things! And all of the time. What doesn't work is having a one size fits all approach, or only one way of explaining for everyone, because all of our leaners engage differently.
Not so much a disaster but step by step instructions in written form are not very effective as the student would much prefer to listen and follow by watching a screencast of me explaining.
sharing master docs as 'make editable' rather than 'create a copy for each student', students ended up editting the subject website!!
Different things work with different students - I mix it up a lot and offer different ways of giving students work
If the Google slide show is too long it takes a long time to load.
A topic that the students were not interested in. Students were tired (Y 7 -Y 10) after weekend. It was my first two weeks with this class. Mainly boys. 100% Maori. I decided (without really building relationships with the students) on a motivational movie clip. I had watched it but I never saw all actors were all white Americans. One student said” Why do all white people do that in the mornings?” I just froze and thought, how stupid was that. A lesson well learnt
Nothing went too haywire really. And nothing has worked every single time. Just feel it out I suppose
Shared documents have been frustrating. I'd like to explore the links being in a sheet where everyone can view each others work without editing it.
workspaces- as above have the challenges mentioned I like the blog coupled with the website - blog with the directions on what to do access, website with the resources. Very much a work in progress and this is my first year of moving so far away from workspaces .
Too much stimuli, too much writing, too many instructions
I tried to make my first Year 10 group do Kōrero assessments as their summative assessment, but it was a complete disaster as they were all not confident or willing. With my next group of Year 10s I am using the Guess Who game as their summative assessment, and they are enjoying the learning. They are also retaining more through gamifying the work.
Yes for sure but can't think of any at the moment. Once or twice I've accidentally given kids editing rights on some docs and they end up deleting everything or using that as their main documents:)
Encouraging students to conduct their own recordings - students were not mature with the processs - recordings were carried out by teachers.
Less that..more that there are tools I'd like to try but haven't. I certainly can learn from you...but feel shy to approach you.