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January 05, 2011

iPad for Learning for All the Wrong Reasons

05tablet-2-articleLarge
In Long Island administrators are seeking to reduce textbook costs by replacing their purchase of paper with the iPad, reports the New York Times. Perhaps some quick maths with the iPad's oversized calculator would have shown the folly of justifying a luxury personal slate on cost grounds.

Update: This post now generating some conversation on The Huffington Post, too.

At an outlay of $56,250 for 70 iPads with textbook savings coming in at $7,200 a year, the idea is that the purchase pays for itself in just under eight years. By this time, the technology will be out of date and the students will be graduating from University.

Crucially, the applications that are really required to revolutionalise learning have a) yet to be built, b) will be designed by professional learning companies, who will c) charge healthy sums for them. Whose iTunes account on the student iPads will pay for this? A modest $2.99 education app for each of four school terms, for every student in a trial comes to around half the annual textbook costs.

It's not just on dubious cost grounds alone, of course, that the justification is being made. Teachers love the iPad, they say, because it allows them to move learning beyond the four walls of the classroom. Teacher Larry Reiff now publishes all his lessons online.

But this isn't thanks to the iPad.

This is thanks to the internet, and millions of educators already publish their courses online through learning environments or their personal sites. You don't need an iPad per se to do this, you need any device, including the much cheaper and more likely student-owned smartphones that, increasingly every holiday season, we see our youngsters hiding at the bottom of their school bags.

Where the iPad - or any light weight slate such as the Samsung Galaxy Tab - can make a difference is opening up the web to those working in schools who are on the move. Principals, teachers making classroom observations and students out doing fieldwork may find them hitting a spot that laptops (with their slow startup times and clamshell) and smartphones (whose screens are a little to small to permit long-form typing or writing) fail to.

I liked Chris Lehmann's instinct to use his (personal) iPad and a Google Form to provide instant feedback on classroom observations as he does his rounds at Philladelphia's Science Leadership Academy.

I admire the work that Steve Beard and colleagues in Shropshire, England, have done to get students designing their own iOS (the operating system for iPhones and iPads) applications, and then testing them out for real. This is the kind of cross-curricular learning that cannot happen in any other way than through the requisite hardware.

But spending $750 to only harness the free apps limits the use of any device. You need to have significant budget to invest in the high quality learning apps that exist and will exist in the future, and a clear means of getting those funds to students. The iPad is not any old computing device - it's a personal computing device. The most disheartening practice I've seen is a return to the computing lab, something we realised a long time ago is not an effective means to integrate technology into learning:

Pinnacle Peak School in Scottsdale, Ariz., converted an empty classroom into a lab with 36 iPads — named the iMaginarium — that has become the centerpiece of the school because, as the principal put it, “of all the devices out there, the iPad has the most star power with kids.”

You cannot get the most out of an iPad without letting the student own it, and harness their personal accounts, tastes and media for some creative learning. Putting it in a lab like this takes away from the iPads principle boon: it helps us move further away from the office metaphor of learning and into new, personalised, anytime anywhere learning metaphors.

The iPad itself is a great device - I love mine and it's changed the nature of computing on our couch. It is the ultimate in personal computing; it is not, as my wife and I have discovered, very good at being a shareable device despite the efforts of crack designers BERG London to make it a non-personal computer. It has helped me read more in a casual manner (rather than feeling I have to carve out a time, place and tome to 'get some reading done'), and this would be a welcome side-effect in any schooling environment. The collaborative annotation of literature has been eye-opening and allowed me to understand some texts I've read before in a new light.

But educators should not get confused between what the iPad offers and what it represents might offer us. Jump on the personal computing bandwagon pronto, for sure. The educational benefits are there (despite what the NYT might claim) and the iPad is still the most beautiful, most appealing and most app-laden device to try it out with.

Some of those experimentations are about the right size - a few classes or a whole small school filling up their boots with iPads makes sense, provided some sturdy action research is taking place alongside. They should learn from those who've been there already, such as Ian Stuart and the students of Islay High School who've been using Ultra Mobile (personal) computers for the past few years with interesting results.

Above all, they should use the internet (through their iPad or maybe just on a plain old PC) to share what they get up to, the impact it really has and, if it has no impact at all, or if the impact is proving hard to decipher, they should let us know that, too. And we can do that without the New York Times.

Pic from, of course, the New York Times.


Links for 2011-01-04 [del.icio.us]

  • Article Archive | EDUCAUSE
  • How the world’s most improved school systems keep getting better
    McKinsey research on what we can pull out of different contexts of educational improvement. How to move from Poor to Good and Good to Great.

    In Good to Great systems comes a much higher bar in terms of professional expectations of teachers and how they work together. They require greater flexibility, raising of the requirements to become a teacher, making practice public (demo lessons, obs, sharing online). Teachers place professional pressure on each other to improve practice.

    The engine to improvement is really the frontline of teachers. Accountability is felt strongest in poor to fair systems, but in good to great systems the onus is on professional development and training.
  • lendwithcare.org


January 04, 2011

The ultimate standardised test: get the students to design it

Standardised tests designed by students Most people seem to acknowledge that while rote learning for standardised tests will help keep countries and cities at the top of the PISA rankings for reading, science and maths, it's not the best formula for happy, fulfilled, creative and entrepreneurial children. But what would happen if we got children to design the standardised tests in the first place?

At The Education Project, Bahrain, I ran a workshop session with Jeff Utecht, Tinkering School's Gever Tulley and Indian edu-entrepreneur Sudhir Ghodke where participants such as Charles Leadbeater, the Bahraini education quality improvement team and Cisco's senior management designed practical solutions to some of their biggest policy and practice headaches.

I can't remember from which group this suggestion came, but finding it once more makes me think that we might indeed have a compelling, design-thinking and student-centred means of making something constructive out of the standardised test:

"Have the students collaborate on designing a standardised test to assess their collaborative learning program. Then they will learn / assess what can / cannot be assessed via standardised tests and collaborative to design an alternative assessment for collaborative learning, metacognition..."


Links for 2011-01-03 [del.icio.us]

  • Total Politics- Home
  • YouTube - 3-on-3 with Barack Obama
    Barack hit the courts at the Maple Crest Middle School for a pick up game of basketball with the winners of the 3-on-3 Challenge for Change voter registration drive.
  • Barack Obama Launches ‘Hillary Attacks’ Website | Digital Media Wire
    As the conclusion to the races for party nominations draws closer, bare-knuckle boxing has ensued. Senator Barack Obama has taken his fight to the internet, creating a website called Hillary Attacks, which, as its name might suggest, serves the purpose of acknowledging, and then dismantling, oncoming barbs from Senator Hillary Clinton.

    The new site leads with two quotes, one in which Clinton says on November 10 that she is “not interested in attacking my opponents, I’m interested in tackling the problems of America.” She is then quoted as having said in the New York Times, “’…well, now the fun part starts,’ Mrs. Clinton said, punctuating the word ‘fun.’” The quote refers to her declaration that she will increase the attacks on her opponents leading up to the Iowa caucuses.
  • Fight The Smears - Learn the Truth About Barack Obama
  • How can we engage more people in the democratic process? - Yahoo! Answers
    Yahoo! Answers Staff note: Yahoo! Answers is a forum for people from all over the world to engage with one another and to find information on topics that interest them. This is not an endorsement. We are not siding with any candidate or party -- in general or for the 2008 US elections. We're hopeful that people from all perspectives will realize the great insights that the Answers community can have, and will turn to us for future discussions.
  • YouTube - Dinner with Barack Obama
    Barack Obama has dinner with four grassroots donors.
  • Organizing for America | Sam Graham-Felsen's Blog: Meet Angela, Our 250,000th Donor
    I just got off the phone with Angela Berg, who, despite her teacher's salary, contributed $100 to this campaign.

    Angela was a bit out of breath. She'd just received a phone call from Barack.

    "I can't believe it. I'm so excited, not just because I got to speak with Senator Obama, but because this whole campaign is so different," she said.
  • Half-formed thought on Wikileaks & Global Action « Clay Shirky
    The legal bargain from 1971 simply does not and cannot produce the outcome it used to. This is one of the things freaking people in the US government out — not that the law has changed, but that the world has, and the industrial era law, applied to internet-era publishing, might allow for media outlets which exhibit no self-restraint around national sensitivities, because they are run by people without any loyalty to — or, more importantly, need of — national affiliation to do their jobs.
  • Shanghai Schools Push Students to Top of Tests - NYTimes.com
    But many educators say China’s strength in education is also a weakness. The nation’s education system is too test-oriented, schools here stifle creativity and parental pressures often deprive children of the joys of childhood, they say.
  • Jiang Xueqin: The Test Chinese Schools Still Fail - WSJ.com
    Shanghai's stellar results on PISA are a symptom of the problem. Tests are less relevant to concrete life and work skills than the ability to write a coherent essay, which requires being able to identify a problem, break it down to its constituent parts, analyze it from multiple angles and assemble a solution in a succinct manner to communicate across cultures and time. These "critical thinking" skills are what Chinese students need to learn if they are to become globally competitive.


January 03, 2011

Links for 2011-01-02 [del.icio.us]

  • Orangutan Land Trust (orangulandtrust) on Twitter
    Creating sustainable solutions for the long-term survival of the orangutan in the wild by ensuring safe areas of forest for their continued existence.
  • Statistics (1)
  • Facebook Timeline (1)
  • iPad Curriculum
  • Desktop QR Code Reader | dansl
  • The End of an Era – 1935 to 2010 « Steve McCurry's Blog
    Today is the day that Dwayne’s Photo in Parsons, Kansas, the last lab on the planet to process Kodachrome, stops developing the iconic film forever. When Kodak stopped producing the film last year, they gave me the last roll. When I finished shooting the final frames, I hand-delivered it to Parsons. Here are a few of those last 36 frames.
  • Going on Safari: Games Based Learning in Action - #edjournal
    Our use of the game was over a short & concentrated period at the end of the summer term for Year 6. The children developed their writing skills, their knowledge acquisition, their time management, speaking and listening skills, co-operation, scientific and geographical knowledge and they had fun. Using a game like this as a contextual hub for learning in the classroom is a very effective way of reaching out and enabling all learners to succeed and develop. It provides a clear focus with understandable links to their learning. It also allowed us to reinforce the idea that it is ok to say ‘I don’t know’ and to ‘fail’ as long as the students tried again which the game and games based learning allows us to do. It seems that Samuel Beckett’s words are ideally suited to the class and games based learning in general: ‘Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try Again. Fail again. Fail better.'
  • transparency.jpg (JPEG Image, 4797x1500 pixels) - Scaled (26%)


January 02, 2011

I will act now: Happy New Year 2011

Loony Dook

I've sat for just a little bit this afternoon marvelling at the velocity of shared links, blog posts penned, conversations raging on the Twitterverse about all manner of things: the future of education, coding hacks, social media marketing, Google analytics. And I once more leave the iPhone aside with a feeling that either

  • I'm either missing something by not engaging with this helter skelter chat 24/7 (for that is what it would take to keep up with everyone, across timezones);
  • not doing my job by ignoring most of it completely, or
  • neglecting my family; or
  • admitting that any potential I might have for flow in my work will disappear if I even try to engage more frequently (what do I really believe about assessment, about learning, about social media, about journalism in a new age, about communications with those who are not on Twitter, about...?)

There are so many people thinking about some great things in great ways, so many giving their local angle, and their world view, so many options to consider, that there must come a point where we stop thinking, stop speaking and take actions.

So that's my 2011 resolution, and one I'm going to enjoy keeping. I'm going to swallow more of my own advice, and that of Dr John Hunter, and not think so hard, just try the experiment.

From Euan a quote that sums up the urgency I feel to abandon the torrential streams flowing on this holiday of holidays:

I will act now. I will act now. I will act now. Henceforth, I will repeat these words each hour, each day, everyday, until the words become as much a habit as my breathing, and the action which follows becomes as instinctive as the blinking of my eyelids. With these words I can condition my mind to perform every action necessary for my success. I will act now. I will repeat these words again and again and again. I will walk where failures fear to walk. I will work when failures seek rest. I will act now for now is all I have. Tomorrow is the day reserved for the labor of the lazy. I am not lazy. Tomorrow is the day when the failure will succeed. I am not a failure. I will act now. Success will not wait. If I delay, success will become wed to another and lost to me forever. This is the time. This is the place. I am the person. -  Og Mandino

Pic of people really doing stuff, in the Loony Dook, from Gareth Harper.


December 31, 2010

Links for 2010-12-30 [del.icio.us]

  • Infographic of the Day: What the Bible Got Wrong | Co.Design
    The Bible was wrong. For evidence look to, well, the Bible.

    Such is the conclusion of this stunning, provocative infographic, which maps contradictions in the Bible, from whether thou shalt not commit adultery down to the color of Jesus’s robes. Career skeptic Sam Harris commissioned the chart for his nonprofit foundation Project Reason, with graphic design by Madrid-based Andy Marlow. Whatever your religious views, it’s an incredible testament to the power of data visualization. It’s managed to make an ancient text -- over which men have fought wars and women have sacrificed babies -- look downright silly.
  • moritz.stefaner.eu - Map your moves
    Map your moves – A visual exploration of where New Yorkers moved in the last decade
  • Infographic of the Day: Inception Contest Winner! | Co.Design
    A scant two weeks ago, we began a contest asking readers to create an infographic explaining Inception. The movie needed it, given how complex it was.

    Briefly, Inception is about a group of industrial spies (led by Leonardo DiCaprio's character Cobb), tasked with convincing the scion of a business empire that he should break up his father's company. To do that, they have to drug the son and plant that desire within a dream.

    But for the idea to take hold and consume the target--and not to be dismissed as nonsense from a sleeping brain--they have to plant it deep into his mind, via a series of intense, sub-conscious narratives. And that means creating dreams within dreams within dreams, so densely layered in the subject's mind that it feels like a bedrock desire.

    We received lots of great entries. But Rick's idea was the clear winner:
  • MDG interactive
    How health and education play off each other
  • Infographic of the Day: The Power Structure of a Mexican Drug Cartel | Co.Design
    This is surely one of the most remarkable infographics we've ever posted. Created by social scientist Eduardo Salcedo-Albarán, it documents the organizational structure and almost limitless influence of Mexico's Michoacan drug family. And it teaches you a great deal about why, exactly, the family is so hard to combat -- and why its power seems so pervasive.
  • Infographic of the Day: Who Won the World Series for the Giants? | Co.Design
    Chartball, which makes lovely infographic charts about sports, is selling a 24'x36' print that summarizes every game of the Giants 2010 season. More than just a summary of games won and lost, it offers a series of charts that break down which players contributed the most -- and who actually should have just broken their ankle and sat the season out.
  • Infographic: How to Explain the Internet to a 19th-Century Street Urchin | Co.Design
    Do you know how the internet really works -- how you're able to read this article on a magical glowing rectangle attached to a keyboard? Neither do we. But if you ever have to explain the inner workings of the web to someone even less informed -- say, a homeless orphan from the 1800s -- you can now feign understanding, thanks to this handy cheat sheet created by flowchart guru Doogie Horner.
  • Infographics of the Day: How Segregated Is Your City? | Co.Design
    Recently, cartographer Bill Rankin produced an astounding map of Chicago, which managed to show the city's areas of racial integration.

    Eric Fischer saw those maps, and took it upon himself to create similar ones for the top 40 cities in the United States. Fisher used a straight forward method borrowed from Rankin: Using U.S. Census data from 2000, he created a map where one dot equals 25 people. The dots are then color-coded based on race: White is pink; Black is blue; Hispanic is orange, and Asian is green.
  • NREL: News Feature - NREL Solar Scientists Epitomize Teamwork
    "The era of the lone scientist is over," Ginley said. "The kinds of problems we deal with, you just don't have the horsepower to do it by yourself. That's an increasing realization nationwide. Look at the Energy Frontier Research Centers. These new centers are a reflection of that. People are realizing that big problems take critical-mass teams."

    "We don't know enough on our own," Ginley said. "It's that shared knowledge base and experience base that makes things go faster."
  • One Tweet CAN Change the World - The Tempered Radical
    One teacher's class learning so many things through lending to entrepreneurs through Kiva:

    Since then, my students—both in my regular classes and in my after school Kiva club—have made a real difference in the world, lending almost $6,000 to 146 entrepreneurs in countries on almost every continent.

    We’ve also made videos advertising our work—learning about visual persuasion and Creative Commons image licensing at the same time. We’ve made Google Maps—tracking our impact and learning about the countries in the middle school social studies curriculum at the same time.
  • Africa's social media revolution
    Africa's 100 million internet users make the continent the region in the world with the lowest penetration rate and a tiny minority of the two billion people online around the world. Among the many reasons for this poor showing are the scarcity and prohibitive costs of high speed internet connections and the limited number of personal computers in use.

    But these challenges simultaneously contribute to the growth in the use of mobile internet, which in recent years has been the highest in the world.

    "Triple-digit growth rates are routine across the continent," notes Jon von Tetzchner, co-founder of Opera, the world's most popular mobile phone internet browser. "The widespread availability of mobile phones means that the mobile web can reach tens of millions more than the wired web."
  • Modeling Instruction in High School Physics
    Research papers showing increases in attainment through modelling, student-led learning.

    In Modeling, on the other hand, instruction is organized around a storyline of concept flow specifically designed to develop a model. A variety of representations of natural phenomena are used, and connections between conceptual representations and the physical model are explicitly developed.
  • Modeling Instruction in Physics on Vimeo
    Instead of relying on lectures and textbooks, Modeling Instruction emphasizes active student construction of conceptual and mathematical models in an interactive learning community. Students are engaged with simple scenarios to learn to model the physical world.
  • The Status Quo Effect (Or, Pay Without Play) at The Psychology of Video Games
    More on how the default settings are so important.


December 29, 2010

Links for 2010-12-27 [del.icio.us]


December 24, 2010

Happy Christmas: A Digital Nativity

It made me smile. I hope 2010 has been as good to you as it has been to the McIntosh Family. Best wishes to you all from a freezing Edinburgh, and see you for some more exciting projects, inspiring encounters and new friends in 2011!


December 23, 2010

Links for 2010-12-22 [del.icio.us]


December 22, 2010

Beating the recession by working internationally: 2010's Travel in Review

Map
A year ago yesterday I started NoTosh Limited, a to-the-point, action-based consultancy for digital media and education arenas, which has proven far more successful than I had hoped. Here's hoping 2011 is just as successful (actually, no, our target is to double revenues with some new stars on our team).

Crucial to this velocity has been the acceptance of overseas clients (thank you all so much!) to take a risk and have us over to inspire, cajole or troubleshoot. Plenty of their stories will appear on a new NoTosh.com site in the New Year. Exporting our skills makes up around 65% of revenue.

But this has also meant a fair level of travel; the last quarter of the working year saw me personally undertake 56 flights, covering the world two and a half times. This year, I've travelled 106,372 miles on Seat 53F (big, modern aircraft), compared to a much more tiring 41,902 miles of Extreme Commuting that I did while working for Channel 4 in 2009 (on seat 23C -smaller aircraft, less efficient, more carbon). The nature of that travel wasn't easy to handle, and noted when I was leaving the company last year. 2008, back when I was doing more educational stuff, saw some 82,000 miles.

A colleague told me that every time you do a transatlantic flip you experience the same radiation as a chest x-ray, so neither I nor my current or future colleagues leave our families and jump on a plane lightly. We do so because we believe in our work, that it will make a difference to thousands of students lives and that this will far outweight the environmental impact we're having.

Not content with that, though, we're announcing a pro bono project in the New Year which will more than make up for our own airmiles (and probably all of yours, too, dear readers). Planting trees with Carbon Credits doesn't solve the problems we're creating today at all - it's going to take 20 years for their impact to be felt. So we're planning something far more here-and-now, that will take the edge of all those miles.

Until the New Year, and notwithstanding a blog post or two inbetween, best wishes for the festive season from a thankfully Edinburgh-based, airline-free Ewan!


December 21, 2010

Links for 2010-12-20 [del.icio.us]


December 20, 2010

Links for 2010-12-19 [del.icio.us]

  • Actually Ironic - CollegeHumor video
    Isn't it nice to correct Alanis? Don't you think?
  • facebook vs. the rest of the world | Flickr - Photo Sharing!
    A map which puts the connections of facebook users into context and shows where other social networks have the upper hand.
  • Infographic of the Day: What That Amazing Facebook Map Left Out | Co.Design
    Gaetz simply took the lines of Butler's map, colored them black, and overlaid them against another map, showing all of the areas in the world with a population over 2 people per square mile. Which already is pretty revealing -- you can see that vast tracts of land where plenty of people live are actually left out of Butler's map altogether. What might explain that? Gaetz adds some helpful annotations of other social networking sites that dominate those uncovered regions, such as Orkut in India and South America, Vkontakte and Odnolassniki in Russia, and Ren Ren and Q Zone in China.

    In other words, Facebook connections aren't exactly the whole caboodle when it comes to online life. Not yet, anyway.
  • Tableau: physical email on Vimeo
    Tableau is an refinished heirloom nightstand that stores and retrieves memories using a Twitter account. It acts as a bridge between users of physical and digital media, taking the best parts of both. The nightstand quietly drops photos it sees on its Twitter feed into its drawer, for the owner to discover. Images of things placed in the drawer are posted to its account as well.

    "My grandmother loves to handle and pass around physical family photos. The less paper we use, the more valuable the things we put on it become. (Sort of the reverse of the Internet.)"
  • - The Obvious? - Something worth worrying about
    The fiercest critics of technology still focus on the ephemeral have and-have-not divide, but that flimsy border is a distraction. The significant threshold of technological development lies at the boundary between commonplace and ubiquity, between the have-laters and the "all have." When critics asked us champions of the internet what we were going to do about the digital divide and I said“nothing,” I added a challenge: “If you want to worry about something, don’t worry about the folks who are currently offline. They’ll stampede on faster than you think. Instead you should worry about what we are going to do when everyone is online. When the internet has six billion people, and they are all e-mailing at once, when no one is disconnected and always on day and night, when everything is digital and nothing offline, when the internet is ubiquitous. That will produce unintended consequences worth worrying about."
  • About THNK | THNK Amsterdam School for Creative Leadership
    THNK – the Amsterdam School for Creative Leadership is on a mission: to develop a new breed of creative leaders who transcend disciplines and co-create to solve real world challenges and generate unexpected innovations.

    At THNK, students will learn how to effectively lead organizations through uncertainty and constant change using divergent thinking. Our faculty will go one step further by encouraging them to actively seek ‘no comfort’ zones to trigger creativity, discover new possibilities beyond the status quo and learn a whole lot about themselves in the process.
  • Solving the World's Toughest Problem: Turning Public Policy Into Private Action | Co.Design
    It's time for individuals to play a role as agents of change -- to understand the very "public" consequences of their private actions. Policymakers can help make this happen by crafting and broadcasting messages that reach the masses, but still connect with deeply personal motivations.
  • How to Build 24/7 Relationships, Using New Media | Co.Design
    Don’t invent, integrate. Systems are already in place so that you can communicate via tools consumers already use.
  • The Future of the Book. on Vimeo
    "Alice" is very similar to Taptale that we designed with SixToStart
  • Soapbox: ‘Look to collaborate with those who can do what you can’t’ - SME, Business - The Independent
    Small is the new big

    I can’t tell you the number of times I’ve heard the following two phrases said in a meeting: “We need a really big idea”, and “That’s a great idea, but it’s not big enough for us”. Sorry, but give me small, impactful, intelligently executed ideas any day, preferably a series of them that connect, are doable and build business, not the single, big, imaginary, disruptive bomb that falls from heaven and transforms everything overnight.

    Apologies for the shameless plug here, but a great example of what I am talking about is the “Keep the change” service that IDEO |did for Bank of America in |the US. The simple, observed act of watching people subconsciously tossing coins in jars and “rounding up” their payments created a new savings scheme that was implementable in record time, encouraged billions of dollars in savings, and built a huge business for the bank, to boot.
  • Teachers as Makers - O'Reilly Radar
    They participated in a writing exercise, documenting the process that they followed to make something. This exercise in technical writing is also a good way to reflect on your own learning process and think about how others might benefit from what you had learned. As I said to them, Tim O'Reilly and I were technical writers and this is what we did that helped us start a publishing company. We wrote about what we learned to do ourselves.

    Technical writing -- communicating a process or procedure in detail -- remains a useful skill. It also takes a different approach to writing as it is usually taught.

    A couple of teachers commented how they could use hands-on projects to teach a range of subjects from math to history. Someone made the comment that this workshop was unlike any professional development she had experienced; nobody was talking at them. They were experiencing what it means to be a maker, and I bet that will help them become better teachers.


December 19, 2010

Marc Prensky on Passion-based Learning

Tinkering School laughs
Over the past year I've been sharing techniques, ideas, examples and resources that help educators move from a content-based, curriculum-focussed world to one where we pass more control over to students to lead with their passions. Whether it's Gever Tulley's Tinkering School model, the Albany Senior High model of Impact Projects or one of the many examples in my talk at the Global Education Conference, I'm convinced that the only way we can encourage a generation to be more entrepreneurial in their learning habits throughout life is to indulge their passions throughout formal education.

Derek Robertson asked Marc Prensky at the Qatar WISE conference how it can be possible to teach to 30 different passions sat in front of you. Other recordings and transcripts are over on the Consolarium blog:

I thought Marc's response was a good starting point for the discussion, one with which no educator, hand on heart, could disagree:

If you don't know what the passions of those in front of you are then you'll never know how to teach the people in front of you.

If you don’t know what your students passions are then you basically don’t know who is sitting in front of you and that makes teaching at a really deep level, I think difficult. Its never 30 separate passions its typically clusters of passions so one thing that you can do is to put people into clusters

There ought to be times in a day, maybe the days that a substitute teacher comes in when what you say to kids is ‘your job today, is to just learn more about what you are passionate in’ and it may have nothing to do with our curriculum but it is still important because you are going to find it valuable.
...
If every teacher tomorrow or the next school day takes twenty minutes out of the day and says to every student ‘what are you passionate about?’ and writes it down and then thinks about it in the back of their mind how they can use that, education will be much improved overnight.

All too often I get asked at events and roundtable discussions whether I have any evidence for what I'm sharing. The answer is: "Of course, here it is...". When I turn the tables and ask school or university leaders what evidence they have for their decision-making, on the other hand, one is repeatedly reminded that most institutions don't do enough talking with and listening to their constituents. My favourite doubting question after any presentation is: "what about the students who don't own smartphones or laptops?". My response - "have you asked them if they own them?" - is normally met with slightly annoyed silence (and occassionally an excited: "let's do that tomorrow!")

The same goes for passions as for equipment. We cannot spend enough time asking our students what they have, what makes them tick, what they think of their learning and what they need help with.

Tinkering School Laughs picture from Gever Tulley.


Living in a Post-Digital World [Central Station book essay]

Censta2
Two-and-a-half years ago I joined award-winning ISO Design, as their Commissioner at Channel 4, in developing an creative art, film and photography network, Central Station. It was the hardest sell of my entire time at Channel 4: those who got it, totally got it. Those who didn't, never would. You can read and view a video about Central Station on the site.

18 months in the network has proven über successful, connecting artists from the UK with those in Berlin, the Netherlands, Spain, the US and the Far East. It has continued to reflect a quality mark that most other networks could never claim: its initial members, joining through curiosity and choice, were Turner-prize winners and hotshots of the art world.

Through some incredibly careful planning about how that mix of social network, exclusive-yet-approachable, high quality but not "up itself" vibe could be reached, the team have pulled off an incredible feat, as a browse through the Collections and Portfolios shows. The Community is throbbing.

As part of its first full year in operation, I wrote an essay for a celebratory book, which I've reproduced below:

Censta

Star Alliance Art

When I started writing and publishing audio stories on my own blog I was convinced that it would be a great way to connect with people from far-off lands from the comfort of my own proverbial sofa. Half a million airmiles later I realise I couldn't have been more wrong. The growth in our online connections has in the past five years led to only one related phenomenon: in as much as we enjoy connecting virtually to people, art and artefacts, we want to connect as much with the analogue, physical elements we discover online.

For me, the highlight of this analogue-digital playoff in 2010 must be Joanna Basford's Twitter art projects. They've captured our imaginations: send a tweet, the most transient of our digital photons, and a real living artist will transcribe those binaries into a new sort of artistic physical binary of the black and white linear for which she has become so well known. You can see what she's up to - digitally - through the 24 hour welcome. 100 special customers pay top dollar to get hold of the limited edition - analogue - prints before sharing them in all their - digital - beauty on photosharing websites like Flickr.com.

Or maybe this tension between analogue and digital is best expressed through BakerTweet, designed by London-based Poke as a means of getting their local baker to broadcast when the croissants were fresh out the oven. A constructed, physical object with a mobile transmitter stashed inside, BakerTweet represents all that is artisanal and ambiently intimate in this digital age.

As we watch less television and participate more in virtual networks of real acquaintances, friends and Friends (there is a notable difference), we have gained, as journalist and sociologist Clay Shirky puts it, "cognitive surplus". With limitless choice in the virtual world we have more mental bandwidth than we've had since before the birth of television to do with what we please. That would include hanging on the every tweet of a baker's oven, or assisting in the creation of a new artwork by an artist hundreds of miles away.

The digital world lets us find these physical products more easily and we can attempt to experience them through photograph, visualisation, video or audio. But when it comes to the physical, the tangible and the experiential of the physical world, there is still a sense of scarcity, especially if the product is one of a creative or artisanal hand.

Central Station really is the meeting place of these two worlds. Behind almost every pixel is that scarcity of the physical piece. Behind every piece the even more scarce creator and maker. This community has managed to weave these two worlds together, and has managed to do so while both celebrating the real world of art, film and making stuff, and harnessing the best of the slightly transient, virtual world of click here, type there.

We can all be in each other's pockets digitally if we want, but, frankly, when the bread comes out the oven or the artwork receives its final stroke of the pen, we want to feel, meet, eat or see the physical, real, tangible product of their craft. As an artist, that's incredibly reassuring. As a bystander, it's exciting to know that the digital world will only help me get closer to the things I didn't already know I wanted to experience first hand.

Prints, above, from KavanStudio. View their portfolio.


December 17, 2010

edinburghmsc: via @flittleton: The UoE EUSA Teaching Awards recognise academics who are committed to delivering great teaching. http://www.eusa.ed.ac.uk/

edinburghmsc: via @flittleton: The UoE EUSA Teaching Awards recognise academics who are committed to delivering great teaching. http://www.eusa.ed.ac.uk/


Links for 2010-12-16 [del.icio.us]

  • My Adobe Connect Recipe - CogDogBlog
  • Our Research
    CfBT has commissioned, conducted and published a significant volume of research over the past-ten years. The research largely aims to provide evidence about effective interventions, strategies and policies in education with a view to impacting on or improving practice and policy.
  • BBC News - Manufacturing the dream: Game changing new production
    Shapeways is a company on the cutting edge of manufacturing. A three-dimensional design can be submitted to it over the internet and it can "print" the design layer by layer out of plastics or metal, and send it back to you.
  • Learning, Teaching and ICT » Assessing Our Glow Blogs
    Brilliant rundown of how blogging is still bringing students together and raising their confidence.
  • Designing Media
    The book features interviews with thirty-seven people who have made significant creative contributions to the design and development of media, ranging from the publisher of the New York Times to the founder of Twitter.
  • + t t o k y . c o m _____ by sey.min +
  • Generations 2010 | Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project
    Half as many teens blog now as did in 2006.

    However, internet users in Gen X (those ages 34-45) and older cohorts are more likely than Millennials to engage in several online activities, including visiting government websites and getting financial information online.

    Finally, the biggest online trend is that, while the very youngest and oldest cohorts may differ, certain key internet uses are becoming more uniformly popular across all age groups. These online activities include seeking health information, purchasing products, making travel reservations, and downloading podcasts.

    Even in areas that are still dominated by Millennials, older generations are making notable gains. While the youngest generations are still significantly more likely to use social network sites, the fastest growth has come from internet users 74 and older: social network site usage for this oldest cohort has quadrupled since 2008, from 4% to 16%.


December 16, 2010

FunFelt: Finally something for toddlers on iPad

FunFelt_Logo2_GREEN

Since getting my iPad this summer I've been frustrated at the lack of apps designed for me to use with my three year old daughter, so I'm delighted that we've managed to launch FunFelt just in time for Christmas. Remember fuzzy felt when you were a kid? This is the 21st Century equivalent for iPad.

Fun Felt has a beautiful user interface, 50 delightful realistic felt shapes, colours and sounds that help you to easily produce the pictures you (or your toddler) want.

FunFelt

You can save your creations to iPhoto and share them via email. You can also save your artwork to the Felt Board library to continue working on it later. The FunFelt letters allow you to start spelling out words.

Don't be surprised, then, this year if your email Christmas card comes in the form of a FunFelt creation!

You can download the app now from the Apple Store.

FunFelt is one more app from the world's first iPad Fund that I kicked off in January with Northern Film & Media, based in Newcastle. It's also the second in a series of 'retro' games that we've brought up to 2010 for the iPad. Check out the first one we launched, Pitch N Toss and Pitch N Toss Lite.

Chris Chatterton, Producer, Fun Felt puts the development this way: “The Fun Felt app has been a labour of love. I have a background in graphic design, so the user experience and the interface were very important to me. Throughout development we tested the app on a focus group made up of children of different ages. This helped us to find out what worked and what didn’t, meaning that the final version has a clean layout and is easy to use. "


Links for 2010-12-15 [del.icio.us]


Links for 2010-12-14 [del.icio.us]

  • Shapeways | About - How it works
    So you have hit the ‘order’ button on Shapeways? And you want to know how we turn the most wonderful 3D designs to tangible products? This page explains the intriguing process of personal fabrication through 3D printing
  • The World According to Facebook
    The entire image is defined not by topographical features or political boundaries, but by Facebook friendships.
  • Not so ‘techno-savvy’: Challenging the stereotypical images of the ‘Net generation’ - Digital Culture & Education
    When it comes to using the Internet in school we could only compare the two youngest age groups 12-16 and 17-20 year olds. The proportions of students in the older age groups were too small to be used in a statistical analysis. The average time spent online in school is 68 minutes per week for 12-16 year olds and 253 minutes or approximately 4 hours per week for 17-20 year olds. The reason is that a much larger proportion of 17-20 year old students are using the Internet daily (45%) in comparison to the 12-16 year olds (7%). One explanation could be that 93 percent of 12-16 year olds who have Internet access in school say that there are rules about what they can and can’t do online when they are in school and 61 percent of the same cohort report that they are not allowed to use the Internet during breaks.


December 14, 2010


Learning spaces. Virtual spaces. Physical spaces.

The Seven Spaces of Technology in School Environments from Ewan McIntosh on Vimeo.

I'm delivering the opening keynote for Edinburgh University's IT Futures Conference today and was asked to deliver an expanded version of the work I've been doing on the physical spaces of learning, and how they transgress virtual learning spaces, too. The theme of the conference is fascinating, and a conversation I'd like to see happening more regularly in more schools:

It will look at both the staff and student perspective of what the working space is, and is becoming. Where does technology fit in, and how do we work and study in this increasingly mobile world?

The video above is the short, 15 minute version of the main points. More notes and further reading can be found in its related blog post.


December 13, 2010

edinburghmsc: via @flittleton: Some MSc in eLearning students featuring in the IT Futures conference at Edinburgh tomorrow. Follow #itf10. Details: http:/

edinburghmsc: via @flittleton: Some MSc in eLearning students featuring in the IT Futures conference at Edinburgh tomorrow. Follow #itf10. Details: http:/


Links for 2010-12-12 [del.icio.us]

  • Horst font family « MyFonts
    Inspired by Laatzen’s Bilderbogen etchings by the extraordinary artist and printmaker Horst Janssen, this font is packed with Open Type features that allow the creation of truly unique typographic pieces.
  • The Happiness Project: "I Have Zero Tolerance for Self-Inflicted Drama."
    "I have come to the frightening conclusion that I am the decisive element. It is my personal approach that creates the climate. It is my daily mood that makes the weather. I possess tremendous power to make life miserable or joyous. I can be a tool of torture or an instrument of inspiration, I can humiliate or humor, hurt or heal. In all situations, it is my response that decides whether a crisis is escalated or de-escalated, and a person is humanized or de-humanized. If we treat people as they are, we make them worse. If we treat people as they ought to be, we help them become what they are capable of becoming.”
  • Wired 12.06: The Dark Genius of Kyle Cooper
    Nice task in here for students of filmmaking or storytelling - tell it in 150 seconds.

    His two-minute masterpieces made him one of the hottest properties in Hollywood. And that's just for starters.
  • Nonin Medical Inc. - 4100 Bluetooth® Wireless Pulse Oximeter
    # Small, lightweight, wearable Bluetooth-enabled digital pulse oximeter
    # Wireless connection between the patient and the host system
    # 30+ foot range between patient and host
    # Spot-check turn on/off configuration
  • The Networked Pill - Technology Review
    A system that monitors pill taking and its effects is being engineered by a Silicon Valley startup. The technology consists of pills that report when they've been taken, and sensors that monitor the body's responses.
  • Wireless body area network allows your body to send status updates to your cellphone -- Engadget
  • YouTube - MIT Media Lab Medical Mirror
    You can check a person's vital signs — pulse, respiration and blood pressure — manually or by attaching sensors to the body. But a student in the Harvard-MIT Health Sciences and Technology program is working on a system that could measure these health indicators just by putting a person in front of a low-cost camera such as a laptop computer's built-in webcam.
  • High income improves evaluation of life but not emotional well-being — PNAS
    Beyond ~$75,000 in the contemporary United States, however, higher income is neither the road to experienced happiness nor the road to the relief of unhappiness or stress, although higher income continues to improve individuals’ life evaluations.

    Below $75,000, many factors become gradually worse, at least on average.
  • Empowered - Harvard Business Review
    According to Wired summary of article, 37% of US office workers use software that is not sanctioned by their organisation.
  • ISU team calculates societal costs of five major crimes; finds murder at $17.25 million | www.news.iastate.edu
    Crime costs:

    "That each murder costs more than $17.25 million still does not convey the true costs imposed by homicide offenders in the current sample," the authors wrote. "Since the mean homicide conviction was more than one, the average murderer in these analyses actually imposed costs approaching $24 million. For the offender who murdered nine victims, the total murder-specific costs were $155,457,083!"

    The ISU researchers also calculated costs of rape ($448,532), armed robbery ($335,733), aggravated assault ($145,379) and burglary ($41,288).
  • Awesome 3D prints. No glasses required. - 'Cross The Breeze Pt.2
    Awesome 3D prints. No glasses required.
  • Poll reveals surge in support for Scottish independence
    The SNP have welcomed a TNS opinion poll showing a significant surge in support for Scottish independence. The poll shows 40% of Scots want to see the Scottish Parliament have the powers of independence.

    The survey of 950 people was conducted over St Andrews Day and shows 40% support the Scottish Parliament having the powers and responsibilities to enable independence, with 44% opposed and 16% undecided.
  • Brain scan: Making data dance | The Economist
    Do the data give any sneak previews of our future? “For most of human history, the world has been dominated by Asia, and it will be again within 40 years,” he says. “While nothing now can stop the surge to 9 billion, if the poorest 2 billion get improved child survival and the ability to buy bicycles and mobile phones, population growth will stop. We cannot have people at this level looking for basics like food and shoes. Lower-middle-income countries will also forge forward—but only if we invest in the right technologies to avoid severe climate change.”


December 12, 2010

Links for 2010-12-11 [del.icio.us]

  • Edge 333 - Howard Gardner
    Among cognitive psychologists, there is widespread agreement that people learn best when they are actively engaged with a topic, have to actively problem solve, as we would put it 'construct meaning.' Yet, among individuals young and old, all over the world, there is a view that is incredibly difficult to dislodge. To wit: Education involves a transmission of knowledge/information from someone who is bigger and older (often called 'the sage on the stage') to someone who is shorter, younger, and lacks that knowledge/information. No matter how many constructivist examples and arguments are marshaled, this view — which I consider a misconception — bounces back. And it seems to be held equally by young and old, by individuals who succeeded in school as well as by individuals who failed miserably.


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