Rumble in the curriculum jungle…

March 2nd, 2006 by Peter Ford

An interesting keynote from Mike Rumble tonight. Gareth put some notes on the conference blog. He encourages schools to takes risk and in developing ‘our’ curriculum, likening it to building regulations in which the  architects and builders can have creative freedom to produce very different buildings while still adhering to the regs.

The curriculum is presently the entire planned learning experience. The Curriculum of the future needs to encompass universal and unique elements. We need to move from THE National Curriculum, to OUR Curriculum. The phrase we need to be using is Contagious professionalism.

The conference is not at all like I imagined it to be. More on this another day ;-)

Its almost like being there…

February 28th, 2006 by Peter Ford

I’m still at home in Nottingham before I begin the trek down to Torquay but I feel like I am already there. I can look at the photos posted already to the conference photo blog. Gareth has been blogging the ‘The Next Three Years - Emerging ICT Agendas‘ Check out the really interesting sound-bytes in the comments.

Leon Cych

Leon Cych - talking aobut a top down model, but only just touched on a bottom up structure. The fear is we would be all VLE’d up and no one will use it. How far have you considered this?

Doug Brown - DFES

We have 23,000 flowers blooming, some not as bright as other. When we see good practice we should say to the others, wake up. We should disseminate that. There’s lots of good practice. Part of out problem is that we are not top-down enough. What we are trying to do is to provide leaderhip.

Winds of Change

February 27th, 2006 by Peter Ford
Another quote that has made it into my presentation. Theo’s Winds of Change brilliantly sums up recent changes in technologies.

There has also been a sea change in technologies. Until very recently the most powerful ICT resources used were usually the most expensive, for example, image and video editing, music, 3D modelling, and of course the staple bloatware that is ‘Office’. Now many of the most powerful technologies we can use for learning are free, open source, or cost relatively little. To name a few; Wikis, podcasts, blogs and collaborative software such as online word-processors or Flickr photo sharing. Google Maps and Earth have landed and with their resultant ‘mashup’ developments reveal new ways of working. Many of these tools only need a browser, and all offer unequalled opportunities for learning,

Loss of literacy?

February 27th, 2006 by Peter Ford

This quote over at dblteach is definitlely going to feature in my presentation :-)

I think the answer to the people (sometimes me) who complain about a loss of literacy is becoming apparent. Surely communication via the printed or spoken word is more intense now than ever. Voicemail or texting, blogs, podcasts, videocasts, all mix commentary with other forms of communication in exciting ways. Teenage bloggers often write far more creatively in their personal blogs than they do in the classroom. Jokes, puns, topical allusion, cynical/rueful aside, heartfelt commentary, angry denunciation, bursts of poetry or apposite quotation are all present in many of these often lengthy letters to the world

BlogChat

February 23rd, 2006 by Peter Ford

BlogChat is a simple chat application for a blog. I even used it with my pupils during an OFSTED inspection almost 4 years ago. It is still is incredibly useful. The teacher is the host of the chat and only if he is online can it take place. If the diamond is green then folks can join it. If it is red then the chat is closed. I always loved its simplicity and would go online for a little while in the evenings to field any homework questions from my pupils.

Look in the righthand BlogChat menu on this site. If the diamond is green, click and say hello!

Clicker 5

February 23rd, 2006 by Peter Ford

One of the NaaceBloggers was wondering about Clicker5 and its current use in primary schools. I popped an email off to Crick Software, the creators of Clicker and asked if they cared to respond and they did. It is often said that the ‘market is a conversation’ and is good to see how blogs can help the open conversation between supplier and customers to take place.

An interview with kids about blogs…

February 22nd, 2006 by Peter Ford

I thought I would ask my eight- and ten-year-old sons about their blogging and what they thought about moderation and other such issues. The interview can be downloaded below. It’s about 2 MB and 12 minutes long and features me at my most inarticulate. They make some interesting points though :-)

Kids interview about blogging

The problem of risk…

February 21st, 2006 by Peter Ford

Early in my career I worked at a school in which there was a real reticence among staff to use the large gymnastics equipment during PE sessions. There was a clear risk involved in letting the highly energetic children climb up the bars or use the beam. Stories were rife among the staff of pupils they had heard about who had fallen, broken limbs and been impaled on sharp pieces of wood. The equipment was also a real pain to get out and put away and the pupils needed reminding of the safety rules at the beginning of every session. They seemed to forget every week! The large apparatus was thus avoided and the risk of serious injury was eliminated. The children had to make do with floor exercises literally in the shadow of all the exciting gymnastic equipment.

When OFSTED came to call they did not accept that total avoidance of risk was an acceptable excuse for not offering pupils appropriate learning opportunities.The challenge of minimising risk while allowing pupils access to learning (and teaching) experiences is one that schools have to contend with in all areas of the curriulum every day of the week.

Fortunately, the this story has a happy ending. The teachers were given practical training, instilled with confidence when using the apparatus and were taught the importance of giving pupils ownership and understanding of the rules for safe gymnastic sessions. The minimal risks are still there but so is the gymtastic action!

The fears were quite understandable but in the end an acceptable solution was found because the school (not really under duress from OFSTED) believed that pupils needed to enjoy the benefits of gymnastics. Blogging presents a whole host of motivating opportunities for teaching and learning but is accompanied by challenges and some degree of risk. However, a solution-driven approach to enjoying their benefits is in the reach of all schools. The question is do they really want them?

Back in 2001 I approached Mike Roberts, the head of my school, with the encouraging results of my use of a class weblog to extend the learning community beyond the four walls of the classroom. We discussed the plan to allow my own 10 year old students to create and run their own fully-functional weblogs. As a good leader of a school, he asked all the pertinent questions about security, child protection and publishing to the web.

They are questions that are repeated every time I visit a school or speak at conferences about the potential of blogging as an effective teaching and learning tool. And rightly so… we must take every reasonable care to ensure that our children are safe from potential harm. That is also true of every activity across the curriculum.

Solution or Excuse?

Leaders and teachers who ask me about weblog security fall broadly into one of two categories - those who want a solution and those who want an excuse. The first group of people are driven by a vision of students and teachers publishing their thoughts and achievements with real purpose to a real audience. They find the answers to the legitimate questions of security and they begin to harness the potential of blogs at the chalkface.

The second group are those who are looking for an excuse not to make use of new technologies in general and blogging in particular. The vision outlined above is for them, not a price worth paying to find a solution for their security concerns. Full of negative sound-bytes and horror stories, they eliminate all risk by avoiding it altogether.

If my headteacher had been in the last category, then my students and I would not have had the freedom to be creative and innovative with blogs and we would have missed out on positive memories that will probably last a lifetime. However, it was a freedom that was well thought through. Mike and I looked at the risks and minimised them. We looked at dream- and nightmare scenarios and our possible responses to them. We made sure the pupils had ownership of the project throughout, with clear expectations, guidelines and exhortations to be creative. Then we were set free to explore!

Tomorrow … How to earn the freedom to blog!

Controlling phones and MySpace

February 21st, 2006 by Peter Ford

Throwing this piece from Will Richardson into the mix. I can feel my thoughts beginning to mould into some kind of coherence about moderation, control and ownership. It is hard though when people keep throwing in good ideas and thoughts ;-)

Here’s another one from Garteh Davies -  ‘Positives and negatives of blogging’

Comments from Conference Blog

February 21st, 2006 by Peter Ford

Douglas Woods

I wonder though whether there is any age limit at which pupils can start blogging. Should blogs by pupils be moderated?

Terry Handley 

Should blogs be moderated? You could argue that this rather spoils the point and spontaneous nature of a Blog but I can understand why this issue is raised.

I beleive that if pupils are taught clearly what the rules are regarding the blog, what is and is not acceptable then to a large extent the blogs could be peer moderated with any abuse of the rules reported to the person (teacher?) nominated to oversee the blogs. Any breach of the rules could then carry consequences - again which could be decided by the class(es) involved.

On a visit to a school in New York I discoverd that this type of peer moderation worked well and that abuses were quicly reported.

So my answer would be yes to a certain extent but involve the pupils in this process


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