Introduction to ways how educators can benefit from ICT in maths, both for preparing lessons, teaching, collaborating and professional development. It includes words of caution on what ICT can and cannot do.
3. How can ICT support maths teaching?
• Preparing lessons
– Content Repositories
– Lesson Plans
• Tools
– for sharing information
– For collaboration
• Reflection & Discussion among teachers
– Web 2.0
• Social Media
• Personal Development
– E-learning
4. Google is your friend
• Search options
• Be critical
• Look beyond 1st
page of results
5. Preparing Lessons
• Khan Academy
– Hundreds of free instructional videos
– Exercises and learning trajectories (badges)
8. Teacher Education for Sub-Saharan Africa
(TESSA)
• Collaboratively developed open educational resources
(OERs)
• South African universities as partner organisations
• South African context and curriculum
• Numeracy
– Investigating Number and Pattern
– Exploring Shape and Space
– Investigating Measurement and Data Handling
10. Apps for Maths
• 5 Apps That Will Make Learning Fractions Easier & More Fun
• 12 Of The Best Math iPad Apps Of 2012
• 99 Apps that will make Maths fun
• 100 Apps that will change the world
MathopolisElevated Math Motion Math Math Toolkit
18. If you are pointed in the wrong direction,
technology may help you get there more quickly
19. Be aware
• “Innumerable people inside and outside the education
system think of technology (always meaning ICT) as
something between a panacea and “the-most-important-
solution.”
• “At its best, the fascination with ICT as a solution
distracts from the real issues. At its worst, ICT is
suggested as substitute to solving the real problems, for
example, “why bother about teachers, when ICT can be
the teacher”.
http://www.livemint.com/
20. Be Aware
“I used to think that technology could help
education. I’ve probably spearheaded
giving away more computer equipment to
schools than anybody else on the planet.
But I’ve had to come to the inevitable
conclusion that the problem is not one that
technology can hope to solve.
The most important thing is a person. A
person who incites your curiosity and
feeds your curiosity; and machines cannot
do that in the same way that people can.”
Steve Jobs
21. Caveats
• Infrastructural challenges
– Total cost of operation
– Maintenance (virus scanning, back-up, file management)
– Equity concerns
• Pedagogical challenges
– Dialogic, discovery driven process of actual learning
– Teacher-centred use (replacing the lecture)
• Training needs
– More than one-off workshop
– Observing, trying-out and feedback
– Gaining confidence
22. Why be cautious?
• Though children are naturally curious, they nevertheless require ongoing
guidance and encouragement to persevere in the ascent. Caring
supervision from human teachers, parents, and mentors is the only known
way of generating motivation for the hours of a school day, to say nothing of
eight to twelve school years.
• No technology today or in the foreseeable future can provide the tailored
attention, encouragement, inspiration, or even the occasional scolding for
students that dedicated adults can, and thus, attempts to use technology as
a stand-in for capable instruction are bound to fail.
23. Needs Analysis
What would help you to provide more support on ICT
and maths to teachers?
Choose 3
1. Using Google Drive (incl. Collaborative editing, Wikis)
2. Sharing and finding information (OERs, Blogs, Twitter, TeachMeet and
others)
3. Using Search & tools to find resources critically
4. Using Khan Academy & Mindset (Flipping the classroom)
5. Using ICT resources meaningfully in a lesson
6. Using software to make worksheets, manuals etc. (Geogebra)
7. E-learning & Free Open and Online courses (webinars…)
8. Google Educator Groups (GEGs)
9. Others (specify)