Slideshow transcript
Slide 1: Judy O’Connell St Joseph’s College, Hunters Hill School Libraries Leading Learning Australian School Library Association (NSW) 28 March 2008 www.judyoconnell.com
Slide 2: Photo: Woodley wonderworks Photo: question mark
Slide 3: We have always cared! Learning by questioning (Socrates) Learning by doing (Piaget, Papert) Learning through dialogue (Vygotsky, Mercer) Learning through reflection (Dewey, Jarvis)
Slide 4: What kind of lifeline do we throw? subject material? Cover the Promote thinking and creativity?
Slide 5: The Escalator http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nKrHX6afkhs
Slide 6: Worth being familiar with Enduring Understanding Important to know
Slide 7: Digital universe Approximately 70% of the digital universe is created by individuals The Diverse and exploding Digital Universe ‐ IDC
Slide 8: Digital universe YouTube, a company that didn’t exist just a few years ago, hosts 100 million video streams a day The Diverse and exploding Digital Universe ‐ IDC
Slide 9: Digital universe Digital content in 2006 could be likened to 12 stacks of books extending from the Earth to the sun. By 2010 the stack of books could reach from the sun to Pluto and back. The Diverse and exploding Digital Universe ‐ IDC
Slide 10: Digital universe By 2011 the digital universe will be 10 times the size it was in 2006 The amount of information created, captured or replicated exceeded available storage for the first time in 2007 By 2011 almost half of the digital universe will not have a permanent home The Diverse and exploding Digital Universe ‐ IDC
Slide 11: The Human Network Welcome to a new world! A new way of getting things done! And we’re more powerful together than we could ever be apart. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x60pWzJvb9Q
Slide 12: Photo: Introduction to social bookmarking
Slide 15: Candid camera! Exam supervision Sport event
Slide 16: Teacher delivers content and skills according to the syllabus School 1.0 Students act as Content and skills mirrors reflecting delivered by the content and skills teacher and back to the reflected back by teachers and the students external examiners
Slide 17: Students act as amplifiers, mining, processing, mixing & remixing content and sharing School 2.0 Content and skills Teacher models are mined by learning and students who build sharing and from information monitors student raw materials then work channelling share within the and crafting class and outside learning experience
Slide 19: Students 2.0 http://students2oh.org/
Slide 20: Go2Web2.0 http://www.go2web20.net/ The complete Web 2.0 Directory
Slide 22: It’s a state of mind human communication collaborative and contextual processes demanding and intellectually rigorous time and space non‐ dependent
Slide 23: It’s a state of mind human communication collaborative and contextual processes demanding and intellectually rigorous time and space non‐ dependent
Slide 24: AWNM Live Blogging I decided that students would need to know how to ask good questions (higher level thinking questions), how to facilitate a conversation while still being able to get their point across, how to manage the classroom, how to look for criticism and understand the criticism they found, as well as understand what they read. If the teacher led the discussion I think it would have an 'artificial' feeling that would keep some students from having a deep discussion. Since we are leading the discussion, it has a more 'authentic' feel that encourages deeper discussion.
Slide 25: Horizon Projects Keynote During this project, the Horizon 2008 Report will have its trends "student sourced" as students from around the world analyze, compile information, and share their predications based on the report in a "Wikinomics"‐style mass collaboration. http://horizonproject2008.wikispaces.com/ Wikinomics: Filled with many tales of how ordinary people and firms are linking up in imaginative new ways to drive innovation and success.
Slide 27: 1001 Flat World tales A flat world classroom writing project Elementary (age 6‐10): http://es1001tales.wikispaces.com Middle Years (age 11‐13): http://ms1001tales.wikispaces.com Secondary (age 14‐18): http://hs1001tales.wikispaces.com We are using the story telling format of 1001 Nights to tell a new story, a story of our world. The format of 1001 Nights is unique, with thousands of different stories embedded within the one main story.
Slide 29: ` A vision of K‐12 students today http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_A‐ZVCjfWf8
Slide 30: If your students are digitally smart, what are you doing? Photo: Edutained
Slide 31: R U up for the challenge? It starts with you! Image: You can’t hide!
Slide 32: Who am I? Myself! Synchronous & asynchronous conversations global Enhanced by local & connectivity Photo: Wallstreet Angel
Slide 33: My Professional Learning Community
Slide 36: Photo: Networked teacher
Slide 37: John Connell
Slide 39: Does it matter? If learning is a “multi modal conversation” then we have to deal with the common misconception that computers and the Internet are just tools. The point is that enquiry approaches that start from students' own ideas, interests and experiences are likely to require creative thinking about the resources that can be used to develop knowledge and understanding.
Slide 42: Enquiring Minds is an approach to teaching and learning, developed by Futurelab, that takes students’ ideas, interests and experiences as its starting point, and provides them with more responsibility for the direction and content of their learning. http://www.enquiringminds.org.uk/ http://www.futurelab.org.uk/
Slide 43: Enquiry pedagogy • The shift to enquiry pedagogy does not represent a clean break from existing principles of effective teaching. • Enquiring minds instead builds on existing good practice. It relies on good interpersonal relationships and mutual respect between teachers and students. This involves being honest, challenging ideas and [where necessary] confronting patterns of behaviour.
Slide 44: Value of information
Slide 45: Source for images and information
Slide 46: Databases and more http://www.visuwords.com/
Slide 47: Ethical and fair use! Creative Commons provides free tools that let authors, scientists, artists, and educators easily mark their creative work with the freedoms they want it to carry. Why? Why not? http://creativecommons.org/
Slide 48: Literacy for 21C learning displays
Slide 49: Social Networking
Slide 50: Peanut butter and jelly Since I accepted the position of 21st Century Literacy Specialist at ISB just over a year ago, I’ve been thinking about how natural the connection is between the library and technology. Kim Cofino Librarians need to: Embed themselves within the core curriculum, through the ‘backwards design’ process. Let go of some shackles of information literacy – which is not the driving force of what we do ‐ it’s about kids developing deep understanding. Speak the language of the curriculum Recognise the vast differences between cooperation, coordination and collaboration Facilitate a sustained journey to deep knowledge
Slide 51: Journey together Image: Snow Geese
Slide 52: Work it out! If you don’t want to travel the learning journey alone then develop your learning ‘tactics’ Do It! Develop a checklist • for yourself • for your library • for your teachers • for your school Then target one thing at a time to create a new e-learning framework that can grow with knowledge and experience.
Slide 53: Make a hit list! Wikis and group authoring activities Social bookmarking Social networking Multimedia sharing Information management tools
Slide 54: Choose your information Image: RSS
Slide 55: Then get on with it! books! social bookmarking specialist search Clickview specialist sources specialist info feed professional development pathfinders & support sheets specialist databases http://studysearch.com.au/
Slide 56: http://twittervision.com/maps/show_3d
Slide 57: http://flickrvision.com/
Slide 58: Learning 2.0 & Library 2.0 http://nswpubliclibrarieslearning2.blogspot.com/ http://yarraplentyonlinelearning.blogspot.com/
Slide 59: Web 2.0 Backpacks Office replacements Calendars Note‐making Collaboration Mind‐mapping Bookmarking Creativity http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/web_20_backpack_web_apps_for_students.php
Slide 60: Digital storytelling 50 Ways to Tell a Story from Alan Levine As Easy as 1‐2‐3! Outline a Story Idea Find Some Media Pick a Tool to Build Your Story Image: Woody spots danger
Slide 61: Angela Thomas http://angelaathomas.com/
Slide 62: Delany library
Slide 63: Student Tools ‐ Let them fly! http://heyjude.wordpress.com/
Slide 64: Four levels of support Literacy across the curriculum Books to e‐books & ipods Image repositories Research design and support Multimodal learning design Constructivist assessment tasks Integration of information sources and tools Effective use of online databases Search strategies and tools E‐learning and Web 2.0 Blogs, wikis, podcasts RSS and information streams
Slide 65: The wired kids
Slide 66: Online all the time! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q06xFf6Xe8o&feature=related
Slide 67: www.judyoconnell.com O2ma’s photostream






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