Tag Archives: #flatclass

A Glimpse into “A Day in the Life of a Connected Educator”

It started as a normal, fairly mundane school day………

Well connected teachers will  find there are many ways to learn, share and teach, teachable moments arise constantly and interruptions to normal routines may become the norm. Yesterday was one such day, when normal classes were planned and a relaxing night at home anticipated, but….

World Museum Scratch Day Saturday, May 18th

Year 8 students are participating in  the Squares, Circles and Triangles project for the World Museum Project to celebrate World Scratch day. Students take photos of shapes in the real world and add them as a sprite to Scratch, highlighting the shape first and then sharing the whole picture. See an online animated sample.

Circles-Storage  tanks for firewood

Circles-Storage tanks for firewood

However, this project is quite challenging and as I am not confident with the programming elements, we had to impulsively skype my wonderful online colleague – Lorraine Leo from Boston, USA to help us in our dilemmas. My laptop webcam shared the screens of students with Lorraine so that she could see what the student was doing, speak to them and help them solve their problems. The lesson time was not long enough. So a sample student project was emailed to Lorraine for further investigation in consultation with Yoshiro Miyata, the creator from Japan.

Lorraine from USA  (in laptop) virtually teaches Amy how to solve her problem with Scratch

Lorraine from USA (in laptop) virtually teaches Amy how to solve her problem with Scratch

Brendah from Sth Africa shared her lesson on learning cell references in MS Excel with grade her 2s with the HLW Skypers Group in the chat area of skype. Joe McNulty of Pennsylvania USA, joined our conversation. Within 6 hours he had shared a google document containing more mystery picture challenges that his year 7/8 students had created for Brendah’s young students. It was on impulse that I decided to use these tasks with my year 3/4 ICT class after lunch. Students were highly engaged colouring in reference cells to reveal the mystery pic. They discovered a house, faces, a flag, a rainbow etc if they followed instructions carefully.

A rainbow in progress

A rainbow in progress

Images of Brendah’s and my students working on the tasks were emailed to Joe who then shared them with his students, resulting in them being even more motivated in creating further tasks. Joe has now put some of these up on his google site.

Home at last!

Enjoying the last remnants of my evening meal, I noticed a message in my HLW Skypers Group popup seeking people to ‘jump’ in and join a hangout with Reinhard  Marx and a class from Germany. The students were about to share their learning about “German Islands and the drinking water situation”.

The group skype request from Reinhard

The group skype request from Reinhard

I joined the hangout on my laptop as our desktop computer has been playing up and fully expected to be ejected from it due to my poor bandwidth. Surprisingly I was able to stay in but not able to use my video, nor see the screen sharing from Germany, but….. I could hear and speak to them. In the hangout were Endang from Western Java, Indonesia and Linlin from Taiwan. With me being from Australia, the foreign participants all came from islands – some small, some large and learnt about islands in Germany.

where islanders get their water from

Islands of Germany water

Students from Germany had prepared Powerpoint slides. Reinhard shared his screen with us via the Ghangout. Groups came forward and spoke to the slides and their pictures in clear English. Linlin and I then spoke about the importance of water, issues where we live and how we conserve it.

A small group shares with us

A small group shares with us

Next, a skype message came from Endang to see whether I could help her Indonesian students speak English to a native speaker. Two students introduced themselves to me, answered my many questions and then asked me questions. The chat in skype helped ensure that we understood each other reasonably well!

English speaking girl

An ordinary day turned into a very exciting one in an amazing global classroom! How was your day?

Reflecting on the Flat Classroom Conference Yokohama, 2013

Reflections on an innovative, pioneering conference –  the Flat Classroom Conference 2013 at Yokohama International School, Japan.

The goal: To provide ‘flatclassroom’ experiences for both physical and virtual conference attendees  across the globe with the innovative use of cutting edge technology.  To truly flatten walls across oceans, hemispheres, time zones etc is largely unchartered territory. Julie Lindsay, co-founder of the Flat Classroom Projects was the co-ordinator of this conference which was held at the Yokohama International School, Japan. Kim Cofino who teaches at this school was one of the conference organisers. Taking IT Global also partnered with this event.

Many would say that this is an impossible goal to achieve, others would not even dream that it could be made possible. Another rather unique feature of this conference was that  both students and teachers attended, learning with and from each other.

mcelroy23

Participation: There were 2 levels of virtual participation for teachers and students:-

  1. Participation via Virtual Flat Classroom® online spaces via streamed video, wikis, blogging, backchannels, twitter etc. This level of participation is one that has been successfully trialled at other conferences
  2. But the next level of participation was the innovative one -participation as a full team member in either the Leadership Workshop or the Student Summit by virtual participants. These participants were to be fully involved via the online spaces (eg the wiki, online documents and other media) with at least some synchronous attendance.

Read more about the virtual level of participation.

To this end, Julie Lindsay worked hard to ensure that the virtual experience was a collaborative, interactive experience and as realistic as possible. Two virtual participant co-ordinators were appointed – Jason Graham from Indonesia and myself from Australia. This required several online meetings in Blackboard Collaborate prior to the conference to discuss tools to be used, how it would all look, enlisting and updating the virtual element. Updates and further conversations were made via google documents

Interest was high in both physical attendance at the conference and virtual participation. There were 17 groups of students and 16 groups of teachers each group having virtual and physical members and comprising of approximately 5 or 6 members.

Participating from my kitchen table.

Participating from my kitchen table.

The tools used for the conference included:

  1. Email for prior announcements, updates etc
  2. Blackboard Collaborate: used for online organisational meetings, and as a virtual lounge or meeting place during the conference – allows chat, audio, sharing presentations, video etc T
  3. Twitter – to share conversations in 140 characters or less  with the hashtag #flatclass2013– gave people a feel for what was happening, used to share links, photos and resources and generally keep the world informed. Hashtag used for searching was #flatclass2013
  4. A Backchannel  using backchannel chat– this was the most successful tool for connecting and communicating amongst the virtuals in ‘real time’. It allowed text, the sharing of URLs the chat etc.  Links to or embed codes for flickr, youtube, slideshare, voicethread etc actually embed the media.
  5. The ning- for networking, sharing blog posts, uploading photos and for sharing conversations in the chat. Many virtual people used the chat in the ning to find out what they could be involved in or what was happening.
  6. Flickr – for sharing photos with the hashtag #flatclass2013
  7. Wikispaces – the collaborative webpage of the conference – the program, participant lists, groups, tutorials and final outcomes from the groups were all found here.
  8. Etherpad – online notepads were set up for each group of teachers and students. This was tool was chosen as it is not blocked in any country – unlike google apps.
  9. Ustream – for live streaming of conference keynotes and final outcomes

some of the tweetfeed

Highlights

  • Participating in a ‘cutting edge’ conference that has the ability to truly flatten and remove any barriers – including cost, effort, location, time etc
  • The virtuals collaborating and creating a video sharing our perspectives of the conference
  • Testing and trialling google hangouts as a means of connecting.
  • Finding the Blackboard Collaborate room populated on the second morning of the conference. Susan in Japan and her pre-service teacher students from Canada were in there ready to present for the Keynotes. Nerves, excitement and a little anxiety were evident. The chatter was lively, one student used her video to good effect for her linkup and all were able to use this tool to connect and deliver to Japan. This, for me was the best tool for audio, video and interactive connections.
  • The degree of interest, the determination of some virtuals to be fully involved and active despite any obstacles etc
  • The challenges of time zones and infrastructure

What worked well

  • The backchannel and chat in the ning.
  • The wiki housing all information
  • The live streaming was a great inclusive tool as  virtuals could listen to the keynote presentations synchronously and view the final outcomes. (There were technical glitches at times though.)
  • The support and comraderie of the virtual participants.
  • Blackboard Collaborate (BbC)was the most stable of the connections. I was at home where bandwidth is poor. Google hangouts, live streaming etc were erratic but BbC was great for video and audio projection.
  • Having two virtual co-ordinators. It would be difficult to sit at a computer screen for the full extent of the conference but sharing it with Jason, made it possible for one of us to be on call and duty.
  • Julie Lindsay suggested that the virtuals create their own video of what it was like to participate in this manner. This gave the group a sense of purpose and really inspired and motivated us to share and collaborate together. Thanks to  Violet Lindsay for her effort in putting it all together for us.

participants in the backchannel

Challenges

  • Although many virtual participants registered, few were keen or had sufficient knowledge to be fully and interactively involved at the highest level. Most were satisfied enough to simply be an online spectator via the live streaming.
  • Many virtual participants were ‘lost’ and uncertain of how to fully participate. Their group was often too engrossed with the physical group and did not involve their virtual participants.
  • Physical groups were often to busy to be able to take the time to include their virtual participants
  • Some groups decided to work with google documents rather than the online collaborative pads which had been set up. This excluded participants from some countries or organisations where google was blocked.
  • The live streaming was not active all the time. But it was great when it did work, so could listen to the keynotes and group presentations and understand the ground work being made.
  • Intermittent use of twitter by all participants – for me this is a great way to promote and share what is happening at the conference and for virtuals to seek actively seek help and gain links to resources that were shared. Thanks to those who took the time to do this.
  • Several registered students found they were involved in other activities once the conference dates approached and were unable to participate at the last moment.
  • Lack of familiarity with all or some of the tools used for all levels of participants
  • Problems in keeping up with the variety of communication options – backchannel, twitter, chat in ning and particpants in the Blackboard Collaborate room.  People used all these options at times and chose the ones they were most comfortable with and the ones that they were able to access.

ustream not working

Futher notes

The virtuals often found it difficult to know exactly where they should be and what they should be doing. There was a small group of really keen and dedicated virtuals who really wanted to work with their group but the physical group were often too busy, too engrossed or not familiar enough with the tools to involve them fully.  However, it is great to note that one or two teacher groups did work well with the mix of face to face and virtuals. One success story eventuated as they already had a connection attending and made prior communication with them.  Live streaming gives everyone the opportunity to participate in real time or to check the recording, if the time zone was not friendly. The wiki and the ning were available 24/7 for any interested parties to be actively involved.

tweetfeed

Suggestions for future Flat Classroom Conferences

  • Get started earlier with the virtual component.
  • It would be good to have a dedicated physical participant at the conference in charge of social media, updating the virtual co-ordinators re current conference happenings and playing ‘go-between’ physical groups and virtual participants. Ie a Virtual co-ordinator on site as well as several off-site.
  • Continue to offer a variety of tools so that people can choose those  they are most comfortable with and the ones that will work on their bandwidth and internet access.
  • Create grouping of physical and virtual participants earlier, so they have a chance to connect with members of their group prior to the conference.
  • Identify one group member in each teacher or student group (at the conference) to be responsible for tweeting, being active in the back channel  and generally communicating with the virtual members of their particular team etc.
  • Make greater use of twitter for updates etc
  • Continue to have at least two virtual co-ordinators with the possibility of a third who would be on-site at the conference.
  • Keep on working at ‘getting it all right’ as it is a truly amazing experience – to work and learn with others across the globe in synchronous and asynchronous time.
  • Consider groups of virtual participants who wish to be highly active in both participation and in achieving outcomes.

Thanks Julie for making this possible and achievable, thanks Jason for being a wonderful virtual colleague and to all who participated at any level. Looking forward to working in a similar capacity again soon!

Were you part of this exciting event? If so what were your reflections? How can we keep on improving the experiences?

Co-ordinating a Flat Classroom Conference Virtually

As I live in a small country area, I have experienced many times the isolation, the missed opportunities that my counterparts in cities enjoy readily and the full networking opportunities that so often require face to face contact.

Technology has changed all that and having learnt so much, personally, from being part of the Flat Classroom Projects, I have experienced first hand how classroom walls can be broken down and the barriers of distance and isolation removed.

One vivid memory that I have is of students working in small groups at the American School of Bombay in Mumbai, India, interacting and actively working with a student from Korea using skype in real time. He sat next to them in a laptop screen. They were one group, one team despite one student being virtual and the others face to face. For them there were no walls,  their classroom was flat.

It is with pride that I take on the role of    co Co-ordinator of the Flat Classroom Conference for virtual participants together with Jason Graham. This conference features teachers, students, educationalists and virtual participants in the form of students and teachers. The participation can be at two levels:-

  1. Full involvement – part of an actual  team etc producing an outcome synchronously  See this wiki page for more information and fill in this form 
  2. Partial involvement –  attending when you can, adding to the discussions on the ning or wiki, viewing the livestream or google hangouts when possible, microblogging, adding comments etc There is no need to fill in a form. Follow the twitter stream  and the following hashtags #flatclass2013, #flatclass. Make sure you follow the following on twitter @flatclassroom, Julie Lindsay (@julielindsay), Jason Graham (@jasongraham99 and  me, Anne Mirtschin,  @murcha, Vicki Davis  (@coolcatteacher) and Kim Cofino (@kimcofino)  amongst others.

We are still looking for more participants. If you feel you would like to experience first hand, a real flat classroom experience as a level 1 participant fill in the form, (see above) or if a level 2 participant we would love to hear from you if you leave a comment on this blog post. What questions  do you have?

This is an exciting opportunity, one that I am looking forward to, but a little nervous about as so much is unknown and virtual. Further posts will be written with updates.

Global Projects for the Early Years – K2 Building Bridges

Grade Prep One at the Playground

I have been given the challenge of teaching ICT to prep/ones this year for one lesson per week. Having been part of the Flat Classroom Projects for the past 5 years, I was keen to join in the  pilot K-2 Building Bridges project  for early years’ students which started in February, 2012.

The key question of this project is:- Can very young students effectively connect, communicate, and collaborate in a global project? Read further aims of this trial project.

Demand to be involved was strong from across the world was strong. Numbers were capped due to its trial nature with 44 schools represented. Here is how it works:-

  1. A ning is used for networking
  2. A google group that  allows regular updates, questions, issues, discussions etc
  3. Blackboard Collaborate is used for regular online meetings
  4. A wikispace featuring our groups, outcomes etc
  5. Trello for the work flow

The workflow:-

  1. Classes are divided into groups, comprising four different schools, including at least one from another country.
  2. Each class shares a ‘handshake’  introducing themselves to their group.
  3. Each group is given a topic to collaborate on. These topics were brainstormed and collaboratively setup at an online meeting. Our group is number 9 and the topic is “Part of a Family”
  4. Views from our windows – the thoughts are that we create an online book that features “views from our windows” to show the diversity of our locations etc. Discussion is centring around what this means, but it could include anything that represents our school, neighborhood, city/town that reflects some of our similarities/differences or maybe how geography impacts where we live.
  5. The next step is to work on our collaborative group topic.
Image

A voicethread was used for our handshake. Most of my students used MS Paint to draw an avatar. This was cropped, saved as a  jpg and uploaded onto a voicethread. Year 7 and 9 students helped the young ones record “What I like!” as an audio file to their avatar. The voicethread was shared by grabbing the code and embedding it on the wiki. There were a great variety of handshakes, many really creative and innovative. Each school has shared their handshake on the bottom of their group wikipage.

Here are some creative handshakes

  1. A puzzle of students by Mrs Jolley’s class. This involved the use jigsaw planet, diigo and google docs
  2.  A handshake by Ms Tong’s class in China, using the iPad app ‘Puppet Pals’  Introducing Ourselves where students tell their names and favourite place in China.

Highlights of being involved:-

  • Working with a team of like minded teachers
  • Having a global support group when I am new at teaching this age group.
  • Witnessing the enthusiasm, creativity and innovativeness of teachers of the young, where there tends to be greater flexibility with the curriculum.
  • Noting that my students cope well with the nature of the project. They are really engaged watching the other handshakes and using the different media involved.
  • The teachable moments that arise – where is this country, why does that child speak differently, why do their locations look different etc
  • The extension activities that occur. eg Once our voicethread went up, an email was received from one of our partner schools in the USA, asking us so many questions about Australia. They had researched so much about Australia. They had lots of questions of us eg re our unique animals, the aborigines etc As my time is limited with the classes, the classroom teachers will now also need to get involved.
  • Mentoring, sharing and teaching each other our favourite online tools.
  • Learning, learning always learning
  • But……. Best of all there are so many ideas coming from so many people, from so many countries, that we push the innovation and creativity beyond our own personal ability and act as one ‘collective and digital brain’, advancing learning further.

What do you think? Can the young collaborate on a global scale? What questions do you have? This post was written as part of my role asInnovator of the Month. Please email any questions to innovatorofthemonth@gmail.com

The Netgened Project for newbies

Netgened in a wordle

As part of my Innovator of the Month Award, I shall be writing about some of the innovative projects that I am involved in. Please note that the current netgened project is work in progress, so keep checking out the wiki to see how it transforms. (The above wordle summarizes this post in a word cloud.)

The Flat Classroom Projects were founded by Julie Lindsay and Vicki Davis. There a variety of different projects, aimed at all school year levels . These projects are great to get involved in, especially as many educators prefer to join in existing and established global projects where :-

  1. The pressure of organizing is on the shoulders of experienced technology users and project managers.
  2. Risk taking is shared in a caring environment.
  3. A global network of educators, with similar interests and passions, can be tapped into and extended/maintained beyond the project itself.
  4. The Flat Classroom projects come with an amazing support base and a history of more than 5 years of learning and sharing collaboratively. Previous projects can still be explored and researched. There is a comprehensive teachers guide.
  5. There is full support from weekly online meetings to boot camps, keynote speakers, student project managers, teacher mentors, a social networking site for teachers and for students/teachers.
  6. There are expert advisors from across the globe for students and experienced expert teacher mentors for new teachers and much, much more
  7. Any issues and challenges that do arise especially when students, different cultures, religions and ideologies are involved are worked through with the teacher cohort. There is no feelings of blame if netiquette rules are breached, just teachable moments that are shared and solved collaboratively.
  8. Allowances for differing time zones and school years etc with some projects being offered several times per year.

The netgened project is aimed at senior students. Following is what it looks like from the student point of view:-

  1. Students socialize on the Flat Classroom Projects ning with teachers and expert advisors. They get to know each other, (especially their own team members) and enter into conversations.
  2. Each class or student is asked to prepare a handshake to introduce themselves. This could include details about their school, culture, passions, interest in the project etc.
  3. Students are grouped  in teams, preferably in interest groups on one element of the latest ­Horizon Report  and one of the netgened norms as outlined in Dan Tapscott’s book Grown Up Digital. Each team has up to 5 members mixed across the schools involved. They no longer work within their clqssroom but beyond into the amazing flattened classroom that technology enables.
  4. Each mixed group of students researches their topic and summarizes their findings on a wiki page eg Game Based Learning
  5. There are student project managers for each group.
  6. They then individually create a movie or multimedia product that portrays their topic. This movie must include an outsourced clip from a student in another school or country. The student requests go up on the wiki and the video clips uploaded to the ning page, for students to grab and add to their movie. The final movie is added to the wiki. This movie is then judged by a panel of global judges and the winners are announced in a special webinar with all encouraged to attend.
  7. It finally concludes with a student summit. Each student individually presents and summarizes their learning in a Blackboard Collaborate webinar, which is publicized globally and interested students and educators are invited to attend and participate in these summits. They are recorded and recording links are added to the wiki. This aspect pushes students well beyond their comfort zones, but gives them a real sense of achievement when they have completed it.

From the teacher point of view

  1. Teachers are required to attend weekly online meetings and if they cannot attend, are asked to listen to the recording.
  2. Bootcamps are held on a number of the online tools that are used, so that teachers can feel comfortable with these tools and learn how to use them effectively. They are recorded and links can be found on the wiki.
  3. The workflow schedule is found on the wiki and trello is also being used for workflows, prompts and scheduling reminders.
  4. Teachers add their students to a team grid on a google document, ensuring that students are spread across schools and countries.
  5. Teachers are on virtual duty to ensure that students are working in an educational setting
  6. Teachers are encouraged to be expert advisors and look after a student group(s).
  7. A google group is used for updates, questions, queries etc amongst the teachers involved.

The challenges

  1. The steep learning curve required for successful use of tools by both teachers and students
  2. Using different assessment criteria – now working with concepts of collaboration, connections, multi-media etc
  3. Students who do not follow appropriate netiquette and digital citizenship protocols
  4. Time zones
  5. Holidays, festivals, extra curricular activites – especially when many countries and schools are involved. (Every effort is made to accommodate everyone)

The tools used include: a ning, wiki, google groups, trello for workflow schedules, timebridge (for planning online meetings that will suit the majority), diigo for bookmarking, twitter, movie making software, powerpoint  for student presentations in summits, blackboard collaborate for online meetings, student summits; skype for classes that may wish to videoconference each other  etc and more

What do students learn?

  1. To  use technological tools innovatively for connecting, collaborating, creating and celebrating on a global basis. These skills will be necessary in the work force that is increasingly globalized.
  2. Netiquetts and digital citizenship
  3. Plaguraism, copyright and creative commons
  4. The use of hypertext language and other digital literacies
  5. They explore the impact of the latest technologies for education, their classrooms and global communities. The website that is built collaboratively contains knowledge, resources , case studies, experiences  and summaries for interested educators
  6. They become aware of other cultures, religions, expectations and global experiences
  7. They work in an environment alongside teachers, experts, other students and global community members
  8. Real time commitments and work schedules
  9. They establish a learning network of their own which can be taken beyond the project.
  10. Students and teachers are given the opportunity to attend a Flat Classroom Conference every second year and a Flat Classroom workshop on the alternate year. These have been held in Dohar, Qatar, Mumbai, India and Beijing, China.

Have you been involved in the netgened project or other Flat Classroom projects? What have I missed? What else do you need to know. Please email any questions to innovatorofthemonth@gmail.com and they shall be answered.

(Read more from the Flat Classroom book by Julie and Vicki)