Presentation to the Centre for Veterinary Education (CVE) tutors forum in Melbourne, April 2014. Focus on exploring the functionality of LMS systems to support good online pedagogy.
Slides from the Beckenham School staff workshop - covers planning a PD programme based on understanding of staff concerns, introduction to modern learning environments, and how to change a staff culture together.
Using the Concerns Based Adoption Model to underpinning planning for institutional professional development programmes. Workshop presentation I gave at the DEANZ14 conference in CHCH, 2 May 2014. Focus
What is Heutagogy? And And how can we use it to help develop self-determined ...Lisa Marie Blaschke
Today's employees must readily adapt to quickly changing and complex work environments, and employers are looking to educational institutions to produce employment-ready students who will hit the ground running. Learning to learn has become an overarching theme, and as a result, interest in the theory of heutagogy, or the study of self-determined learning, is on the rise. This webinar would provide an overview of the theory as well as research- and practice-based examples of how we can help guide our students along the pedagogy-andragogy-heutagogy (PAH) continuum to become more self-determined learners.
Presentation to the Centre for Veterinary Education (CVE) tutors forum in Melbourne, April 2014. Focus on exploring the functionality of LMS systems to support good online pedagogy.
Slides from the Beckenham School staff workshop - covers planning a PD programme based on understanding of staff concerns, introduction to modern learning environments, and how to change a staff culture together.
Using the Concerns Based Adoption Model to underpinning planning for institutional professional development programmes. Workshop presentation I gave at the DEANZ14 conference in CHCH, 2 May 2014. Focus
What is Heutagogy? And And how can we use it to help develop self-determined ...Lisa Marie Blaschke
Today's employees must readily adapt to quickly changing and complex work environments, and employers are looking to educational institutions to produce employment-ready students who will hit the ground running. Learning to learn has become an overarching theme, and as a result, interest in the theory of heutagogy, or the study of self-determined learning, is on the rise. This webinar would provide an overview of the theory as well as research- and practice-based examples of how we can help guide our students along the pedagogy-andragogy-heutagogy (PAH) continuum to become more self-determined learners.
Even before Covid-19, higher education was facing a perfect storm of challenges: increased costs, reduced funding, and rising industry demand for more skilled graduates. Educators were also challenged with finding ways to better prepare students for an uncertain future where lifelong learning skills are essential. The current pandemic has only served to intensify the storm, and educational institutions have rushed to technology in order to survive. In response to the new — or next — normal, institutional leaders are attempting to adapt traditional curriculum and systems so that they can transition rapidly to remote teaching and learning. Online, hybrid, and hyflex learning have become the beguiling buzzword solutions of today. How to survive this perfect storm and the storms to come? This presentation will propose that it is not technology that will best address these challenges; instead, a fundamental rethinking of how we teach and learn is necessary. By adopting heutagogy — or a pedagogy of agency, where the learner takes control of learning — will we be able to agilely transition and pivot across delivery methods, while also equipping our students with the lifelong learning skills and competencies required for the future.
Keynote presentation at the 2021 FLANZ conference in Wellington. Illustrates the historical development of open, flexible and distance learning in NZ and projects forward to imagine learning in a 'borderless' system.
The presentation addresses the topic of pedagogy, and specifically, learner-centered education and the quality issues that surround and emerge as institutions transition to learner-centered education. The presentation also draws on the experiences we have had in our international master’s program in moving toward more competency-based education (a program offered together with the University of Maryland University College in the U.S.), identifying key quality issues and how these have been addressed. In addition, the presentation describes the trends — technologies (and delivery frameworks), pedagogies, political, social — that are working together to drive institutions toward more learner-centered education, as well as the opportunity e-learning institutions and organizations such as EDEN have to influence and lead this movement. Presentation at: Quality Assurance for online universities in Europe, Online University Pegaso, April 10, 2017, https://www.facebook.com/events/287096761746218/
Self determined learning: Creating personal learning environments for lifelon...Lisa Blaschke
We live in a networked world that gives us a multitude of opportunities for creating, connecting, collaborating, and networking, allowing us to build multi-faceted learning environments of exploration and inquiry. Self-determined learning, or heutagogy, is one pedagogical approach that be can applied for taking advantage of these opportunities across all levels of schooling – starting from pre-school and kindergarten to post-secondary education and lifelong learning. Combined with technology, self-determined learning becomes a powerful means of creating personal learning environments that support lifelong learning. During this session, we will look at ways in which a self-determined learning approach has been applied across all learning communities and discuss how the approach can be used in practice, from the early years through formal education to lifelong learning.
Key issues in the 21st Century Future of Education; Pedagogy, Heutagogy, Technology, Social Media, New Learning Infrastructures based on Digital Learning Architectures of Participation We will need teacher as Digital Practitioners and Technology Stewards
An overview of ideas and approaches that teachers can use, adopt or think about in developing their practice from subject based learning based on content delivery to a more inclusive learner-centred approach. This is based on developing the confidence and curiosity of their learners by developing the self-determination of their learning. How can teachers achieve this in the digital age of learning? Here are some ideas and successful practice that teachers can emulate and learnt from
Learning for Life: Preparing Learners for the Complexities of the Workplace T...Lisa Marie Blaschke
Today s learners need to be well-prepared for the complex demands of ever-fluctuating, international business environments. To help students contend with this rapid pace of change, our institutions of higher education need to equip them with the necessary knowledge and skills to ensure their success. But how to achieve this when what we teach learners today can easily change and even be irrelevant tomorrow? Heutagogy provides meaningful, pedagogical guidance for navigating a shifting higher education landscape, as well as a rapidly evolving technological one. This keynote will discuss the barriers that have kept us from implementing heutagogy within higher education in the past and the more recent developments that are causing those barriers to slowly begin slipping away. We will also consider why it is necessary for higher education to adopt forms heutagogical practice in order to prepare students for lifelong learning and the web 2.0 and social media that help us do just that.
A curated conversation of the book Self-Determined Learning edited by Stewart Hase & Chris Kenyon featuring 50 words on every chapter trying to answer the question "What is Heutagogy?" for World Heutagogy Day 26 September 2013
This is a Timely Intervention by nefg on the Craft of Teaching as an Open Educational Resource, an OER. This looks at how we might apply the Learner-Generated Contexts Group PAH Continuum to our practice with examples from 5 great thinkers.
This the first in a series of monthly uploads. More at the nefg blog; http://nefg01.wordpress.com/
Breakout presentation at the Aurora Institute Symposium, 2021 - with Marsha Jones and Joe DiMartino. Based on the paper we co-authored available at https://aurora-institute.org/resource/agency-by-design-making-learning-engaging/
Peeragogy presentation for E3Tech Conference July 28 - July 29
The purpose of Peeragogy and how we can successfully use new platforms and technologies with peer learning strategies to impact the way students learn
In response to the global pandemic, institutions everywhere swiftly pivoted to online learning in an attempt to help salvage and preserve education. During this abrupt shift to emergency remote teaching, students were neither prepared for learning remotely nor were they equipped with the kind of autonomy and agency needed for online learning. As a return to traditional classroom teaching is unforeseeable in the near future, it is crucial that we continue to improve upon our teaching and learning practices within online environments. This session will argue that we can view the current situation through a different prism: as a unique opportunity in which our students can be become agents of their learning and be enabled to take more control of their learning paths. The session will focus on the opportunities of online learning, specifically the teaching and learning approaches that can be used to engage students and to nurture their self-directed and self-determined learning skills in order to become better prepared for lifelong learning.
Even before Covid-19, higher education was facing a perfect storm of challenges: increased costs, reduced funding, and rising industry demand for more skilled graduates. Educators were also challenged with finding ways to better prepare students for an uncertain future where lifelong learning skills are essential. The current pandemic has only served to intensify the storm, and educational institutions have rushed to technology in order to survive. In response to the new — or next — normal, institutional leaders are attempting to adapt traditional curriculum and systems so that they can transition rapidly to remote teaching and learning. Online, hybrid, and hyflex learning have become the beguiling buzzword solutions of today. How to survive this perfect storm and the storms to come? This presentation will propose that it is not technology that will best address these challenges; instead, a fundamental rethinking of how we teach and learn is necessary. By adopting heutagogy — or a pedagogy of agency, where the learner takes control of learning — will we be able to agilely transition and pivot across delivery methods, while also equipping our students with the lifelong learning skills and competencies required for the future.
Keynote presentation at the 2021 FLANZ conference in Wellington. Illustrates the historical development of open, flexible and distance learning in NZ and projects forward to imagine learning in a 'borderless' system.
The presentation addresses the topic of pedagogy, and specifically, learner-centered education and the quality issues that surround and emerge as institutions transition to learner-centered education. The presentation also draws on the experiences we have had in our international master’s program in moving toward more competency-based education (a program offered together with the University of Maryland University College in the U.S.), identifying key quality issues and how these have been addressed. In addition, the presentation describes the trends — technologies (and delivery frameworks), pedagogies, political, social — that are working together to drive institutions toward more learner-centered education, as well as the opportunity e-learning institutions and organizations such as EDEN have to influence and lead this movement. Presentation at: Quality Assurance for online universities in Europe, Online University Pegaso, April 10, 2017, https://www.facebook.com/events/287096761746218/
Self determined learning: Creating personal learning environments for lifelon...Lisa Blaschke
We live in a networked world that gives us a multitude of opportunities for creating, connecting, collaborating, and networking, allowing us to build multi-faceted learning environments of exploration and inquiry. Self-determined learning, or heutagogy, is one pedagogical approach that be can applied for taking advantage of these opportunities across all levels of schooling – starting from pre-school and kindergarten to post-secondary education and lifelong learning. Combined with technology, self-determined learning becomes a powerful means of creating personal learning environments that support lifelong learning. During this session, we will look at ways in which a self-determined learning approach has been applied across all learning communities and discuss how the approach can be used in practice, from the early years through formal education to lifelong learning.
Key issues in the 21st Century Future of Education; Pedagogy, Heutagogy, Technology, Social Media, New Learning Infrastructures based on Digital Learning Architectures of Participation We will need teacher as Digital Practitioners and Technology Stewards
An overview of ideas and approaches that teachers can use, adopt or think about in developing their practice from subject based learning based on content delivery to a more inclusive learner-centred approach. This is based on developing the confidence and curiosity of their learners by developing the self-determination of their learning. How can teachers achieve this in the digital age of learning? Here are some ideas and successful practice that teachers can emulate and learnt from
Learning for Life: Preparing Learners for the Complexities of the Workplace T...Lisa Marie Blaschke
Today s learners need to be well-prepared for the complex demands of ever-fluctuating, international business environments. To help students contend with this rapid pace of change, our institutions of higher education need to equip them with the necessary knowledge and skills to ensure their success. But how to achieve this when what we teach learners today can easily change and even be irrelevant tomorrow? Heutagogy provides meaningful, pedagogical guidance for navigating a shifting higher education landscape, as well as a rapidly evolving technological one. This keynote will discuss the barriers that have kept us from implementing heutagogy within higher education in the past and the more recent developments that are causing those barriers to slowly begin slipping away. We will also consider why it is necessary for higher education to adopt forms heutagogical practice in order to prepare students for lifelong learning and the web 2.0 and social media that help us do just that.
A curated conversation of the book Self-Determined Learning edited by Stewart Hase & Chris Kenyon featuring 50 words on every chapter trying to answer the question "What is Heutagogy?" for World Heutagogy Day 26 September 2013
This is a Timely Intervention by nefg on the Craft of Teaching as an Open Educational Resource, an OER. This looks at how we might apply the Learner-Generated Contexts Group PAH Continuum to our practice with examples from 5 great thinkers.
This the first in a series of monthly uploads. More at the nefg blog; http://nefg01.wordpress.com/
Breakout presentation at the Aurora Institute Symposium, 2021 - with Marsha Jones and Joe DiMartino. Based on the paper we co-authored available at https://aurora-institute.org/resource/agency-by-design-making-learning-engaging/
Peeragogy presentation for E3Tech Conference July 28 - July 29
The purpose of Peeragogy and how we can successfully use new platforms and technologies with peer learning strategies to impact the way students learn
In response to the global pandemic, institutions everywhere swiftly pivoted to online learning in an attempt to help salvage and preserve education. During this abrupt shift to emergency remote teaching, students were neither prepared for learning remotely nor were they equipped with the kind of autonomy and agency needed for online learning. As a return to traditional classroom teaching is unforeseeable in the near future, it is crucial that we continue to improve upon our teaching and learning practices within online environments. This session will argue that we can view the current situation through a different prism: as a unique opportunity in which our students can be become agents of their learning and be enabled to take more control of their learning paths. The session will focus on the opportunities of online learning, specifically the teaching and learning approaches that can be used to engage students and to nurture their self-directed and self-determined learning skills in order to become better prepared for lifelong learning.
Modern Learning Environments - where's the innovation?Derek Wenmoth
Keynote presentation to the Independent Schools Association of New Zealand - focusing on where the innovation really lies - with our practice. The environments enable a greater variety of practices to emerge, and encourage more participation and collaboration on the part of both teachers and students.
Unleashing learners VALA Conference June 13 2014Adrian Bertolini
How do we unleash our students to find their passion, to be intrinsically motivated, to become entrepreneurial? It not only requires an unleashing of the mindset and beliefs of the students but also the mindset and beliefs of teachers and school leadership. In this session the presenter will share his experiences of unleashing young people via the ruMAD (Are you Making a Difference) program but how he followed his passion to work with schools to think from, plan for, and gradually set up learning environments that unleash learning in schools.
Do you enter your middle school classroom with visions of interactive learning, only to be frustrated by ensuing chaos? Do you spend more time correcting behavior than correcting homework? Learn about the consortium’s activities for teaching procedures, building classroom relationships, and transforming your classroom into a self-managing, respectful environment where students not only enjoy learning, but where high performance is eminent.
Presenter(s): Christie Norris
Project work, Field trips, Laboratory work, Journal writing, concept mapping,...DeepanshuYadav2
The key focus and desired outcomes for Project Work are:
1. Communication
2. Students can express their ideas clearly and effectively, both verbally and in written form.
3. Collaboration
4. Students can work as a team to achieve common goals.
5. Knowledge application
6. Students are able to make links across different areas of knowledge and to generate, develop and evaluate ideas and information related to the project.
7. Independent learning
8. Students are able to learn on their own, reflect on their learning and improve upon it.
Rah awakening advanced adolescents (2013) blue1rob howard
Teaching English to advanced level teenagers is tough using the materials we have been given. Some ideas and projects to achieve success are presented here. For more info, contact: rahstar1@yahoo.com
Module 8: Pedagogy of Environmental Studies (Primary Stage)NISHTHA_NCERT123
Learning Objectives
After going through this module you will be able to
• appreciate EVS as an integrated curricular area at the Primary Stage
• relate its objectives with the concepts and issues included in the syllabus
• locate the concepts and issues in textbooks and be aware of different approaches to their transaction in classroom
• plan and design context and need specific learning experiences for children
• organise learning opportunities to engage all learners meaningfully.
• use varied assessment strategies to map the learning progress against learning outcomes in EVS
Learning and collaboration at a distance 121202Mark_Childs
A seminar produced for Warwick University comparing two different educational programmes that contained activities involving collaboration at a distance.
Let's push some boundaries for education in the futureDerek Wenmoth
Workshop slides from my presentations at the Masterton Schools TOD on Tuesday 4 June, 2024. Focusing on providing tools and strategies for teachers to use when looking to become more future focused in their work, and anticipate the changes ahead etc.
Dynamic Education Leadership in a Changing WorldDerek Wenmoth
Keynote presentation to the Manawatu Principals Association, May 2024. Explores three key questions about principalship as a system leadership responsibility.
Agency By Design Masterclass - USBE, March24Derek Wenmoth
Slides used for the USBE Masterclass held in Salt Lake City, March 2024. This masterclass used a variety of activities to engage participants in unpacking the contents of the book: Agency By Design: An Educator's Handbook.
Agency By Design: ensuring rigor in our approachDerek Wenmoth
Keynote presentation at the USBE symposium, March 2024. Introduces the concept of learner agency, and the framework for developing agency by design contained in the book of the same name.
In the rapidly evolving landscape of education in today's world, the ability to navigate complex change is crucial for leaders and organizations. Leading such change requires building the buy-in of stakeholders, address roadblocks hindering progress, and fostering a culture of experimentation that embraces calculated risks and encourages learning from failures. This workshop introduces the concept of transformative leadership, introducing a comprehensive framework specifically designed to guide leaders and organizations as they tackle complex challenges where no obvious solution exists.
These slides are from a workshop run at the Aurora Institute Symposium in Palm Springs, October 2023
Final keynote presentation at the ULearn23 conference held in Manukau, October 2023. Begins by telling the story of the beginning of CORE Education, then reflecting on the boundaries we need to be pushing in order to make educational experiences for our young people authentic, equitable and future focused. Ends with a challenge for all educators to become future makers in the work they do.
Normal Schools are entrusted with setting the norm for teaching practices – so what does this mean as we face the imperative to adapt our education system to a future filled with disruption and uncertainty?
By learning from the past, envisioning the future, and embracing the challenges of today, we can create an education system that empowers young minds to thrive in a world of constant change.
This keynote will explore the transformative journey towards preparing young people for the challenges and opportunities ahead while equipping teachers to navigate this ever-evolving landscape.
Workshop presentation at the JCPS Deep Learning Conference in Louisville, Kentucky, 1-3 August 2023. Introducing the Friction Free Transformation framework and thoughts about how to achieve simple, fast and frugal change .
WORKSHOP: Shifting the Ownership of LearningDerek Wenmoth
Workshop slides from the JSCP Deep Learning Symposium Workshop, Louisville, 1-3 August 2023. Exploring the concept of learner agency and the teacher's role in shifting the ownership of learning.
DLL -Shifting the Ownership of LearningDerek Wenmoth
Slides used in the Insight workshop at the NPDL Deep Learning Lab in Anaheim, April 2023. The focus of the workshop was on the shifts we need to make in order to enable truly agentic learning in our schools and classrooms.
Deep learning innovation in challenging timesDerek Wenmoth
Mobilizer presentation to the NPDL Deep Learning Lab (DLL) in Anaheim, April 2023. Explores the innovative approaches taken by three New Zealand teachers when classes were disrupted by COVID and extreme weather events.
Keynote presentation to the Queensland Principals Conference in Brisbane, 11 October 2022. Focusing on key themes of transformation in our education system to build resilience in our schools and better serve our learners and our communities.
Keynote presentation at the Life Education conference, Te Pae Otautahi - July 2022. Exploring the drivers and future directions for the organisation in a hybrid world
Presentation prepared for school leaders and SLT members, introducing the concept of hybrid learning and exploring strategies for leading this change in schools.
How to Split Bills in the Odoo 17 POS ModuleCeline George
Bills have a main role in point of sale procedure. It will help to track sales, handling payments and giving receipts to customers. Bill splitting also has an important role in POS. For example, If some friends come together for dinner and if they want to divide the bill then it is possible by POS bill splitting. This slide will show how to split bills in odoo 17 POS.
The Art Pastor's Guide to Sabbath | Steve ThomasonSteve Thomason
What is the purpose of the Sabbath Law in the Torah. It is interesting to compare how the context of the law shifts from Exodus to Deuteronomy. Who gets to rest, and why?
Palestine last event orientationfvgnh .pptxRaedMohamed3
An EFL lesson about the current events in Palestine. It is intended to be for intermediate students who wish to increase their listening skills through a short lesson in power point.
Read| The latest issue of The Challenger is here! We are thrilled to announce that our school paper has qualified for the NATIONAL SCHOOLS PRESS CONFERENCE (NSPC) 2024. Thank you for your unwavering support and trust. Dive into the stories that made us stand out!
Instructions for Submissions thorugh G- Classroom.pptxJheel Barad
This presentation provides a briefing on how to upload submissions and documents in Google Classroom. It was prepared as part of an orientation for new Sainik School in-service teacher trainees. As a training officer, my goal is to ensure that you are comfortable and proficient with this essential tool for managing assignments and fostering student engagement.
Unit 8 - Information and Communication Technology (Paper I).pdfThiyagu K
This slides describes the basic concepts of ICT, basics of Email, Emerging Technology and Digital Initiatives in Education. This presentations aligns with the UGC Paper I syllabus.
Students, digital devices and success - Andreas Schleicher - 27 May 2024..pptxEduSkills OECD
Andreas Schleicher presents at the OECD webinar ‘Digital devices in schools: detrimental distraction or secret to success?’ on 27 May 2024. The presentation was based on findings from PISA 2022 results and the webinar helped launch the PISA in Focus ‘Managing screen time: How to protect and equip students against distraction’ https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/education/managing-screen-time_7c225af4-en and the OECD Education Policy Perspective ‘Students, digital devices and success’ can be found here - https://oe.cd/il/5yV
2. SOME BIG QUESTIONS…
• What aspirations do you have for your children?
• What skills, knowledge, qualities will they require/
• What role school school play in this?
3. WHAT IS IMPORTANT TO LEARN…?
Using
language,
symbols
and text
Relating
to others
Thinking
Participating
and
contributingManaging
self
4. HOW IS IT IMPORTANT TO LEARN?
Student autonomy
and initiative
accepted and
encouraged.
Students engage in
dialogue with
teacher and each
other
Higher level thinking
is encouraged Class uses raw data,
primary sources,
physical and interactive
materials.
Knowledge and ideas emerge only from a
situation in which learners have to draw
them out of experiences that have
meaning and importance to them.
Teacher asks open-
ended questions
and allows wait
time for response
Students are
engaged in
experiences that
challenge
hypotheses
John Dewey – Constructivist Pedagogy, 1916
5. WHERE DOES LEARNING TAKE PLACE?
At home At my friend’s
house
At the library
At school
6. WHO DO I LEARN WITH?
With friends in
a group
At the
computer
On my own in
a quiet place
With my
teacher
12. AGENCY
• “The power to act”
• “Sense of ownership”
• “Executing and controlling
one’s own actions”
• “Self-efficacy”
• “Personalisation”
13. CHALLENGES
• Do our learners have to adapt to
our way of doing things, or do
we adapt to theirs?
• Are we focused on delivery – or
learning experience?
14.
15. >1 Billion
(100 billion connections)
>500 Million
>150 Million
>14 million articles
>6 Billion images
Sources from service providers and also http://econsultancy.com
3.5 Billion views/day
70 hours/minute
>400 Million
Steve
Wheeler,
University
of
Plymouth,
2013
>170 Million(55 million posts per day)
SOCIAL MEDIA USE IN 2013
16.
17.
18.
19. Remember this?
Desks in rows
Learning in unison
Teacher desk prominent
Blackboard as
focus of attention
Poor light, ventilation
Copy, read, absorb, rote…
20. AN EXPANDING VIEW OF LEARNING…
The current
education act and
policy is focused
almost exclusively
on this quadrant
21. A NEW WAY OF THINKING…
• Cave: for private concentration.
• Camp fire: group process.
• Watering hole: encounters and impulses.
• Sandpit: experimentation and practical work.
• Mountaintop: presentation of progress and
discoveries.
Source: Prakash Nair
36. CHALLENGES
• How adequately do our learning
spaces cater for the type of
learning we are wanting our
children to experience?
• Do our current spaces work
against the things we’re trying
to achieve?
37.
38. SCHOOL SPATIAL TYPOLOGIES
tradi;onal
school
plan
separate
classrooms
opening
off
corridors
large,
open
undifferen;ated
space
separate
classrooms
linked
to
shared
central
space
mul;-‐op;on
space
made
up
of
many
diverse,
discrete
but
connected
spaces
/
seDngs
SCHOOL SPATIAL TYPOLOGIES
Source: Mary Featherstone
40. duration of activities?
documentation of activities?
what furniture, equipment, resources?
what services are required?
what surfaces are required?what floor, levels area?
ambience, climate control?
degree of enclosure?
Source: Mary Featherstone