FULL ENJOY đ 8264348440 đ Call Girls in Vasant Kunj | Delhi
Â
peter-apricot.ppt
1. Technology :
The classroom, the challenges
and the future
Peter Lasscock
Department of Education
Victoria, Australia
2. âThe focus of the Department of Educationâs
communication and multimedia strategy is to realise
the potential of technology to enhance the quality of
all aspects of education, especially student learning.
To compete and be successful in an information rich,
technologically-enhanced and rapidly changing
environment, students need to be highly skills and
flexible in their ability to use technology in all its
forms.â
(Learning Technologies in Victorian Schools 1998-2001:8)
3. 1. effective planning: all aspects of the schoolâs
operations
2. computer networks: information,communication
and collaboration
3. Internet: a powerful learning tool
4. Intranet: a private network
5. expanding role of library
Key findings of navigator schools
4. 6. learning technologies has challenged teachers
7. integration of learning technologies: a whole
school process
8. collegiate culture
9. changed classroom practice
10. electronic links between home and school
5. Statewide Vision
⢠All schools developed information and
communication technology plans by the end of
1998
⢠All principals have implementing these plans as
part of their performance review
⢠All teachers must improve their skills
⢠Financial support to schools
6. ďˇ Government to provide AUS$26 million over 4 years
for 63,000 new multimedia capable computers.
ďˇ Government to provide AUS$9 million over two
years for improved access to technologies by
teachers.
Computers in schools:
Improve the computers to students ratio to 1:5
by June 2000.
7. ⢠40 hours of professional development.
Notebooks for teachers:
Notebook computers to be provided to 36,700
principals and teachers over a period of five
years.
8. ⢠wide area network - Min 64 Kb link
⢠1,900 sites including:
Schools
TAFE colleges
Department administration
VicOne
Re-engineering delivery of education at both
curriculum and administration levels
9. CASES 21
Whole school approach to
re-engineering schoolâs administration process
⢠system administration
⢠student/academic administration
⢠asset register
⢠student absence and accident register
⢠finance and payroll
⢠curriculum and assessment
11. An example from one school:
Bendigo Senior Secondary
College
http://www.bssc.edu.au
12. Background
⢠1993 - Steering committee established,
Spending put on hold for 2 years
⢠1993/94 - Staff visit state, interstate and
overseas
⢠1994 - Whole college plan developed
SOSE example
13. Background
⢠1995 - Learning area plans developed, network
rolled out
⢠Dec 1995 - Laptops for all staff
⢠Jan/Feb 1996 - Classroom machines
⢠1996 - Learning are plans updated, coaching
team established
⢠1997 - Timetabled professional development
14. Background
⢠1730 Students in year 11 and 12 in 1999
⢠Every classroom has between 2 and 6
computers - all networked and connected to the
internet
⢠600 families connected from home via 60 dial in
lines
⢠Staff connected from home
18. Letting go
Teachers need to:
⢠Understand the potential of what students can do with
computers
⢠Implement structures to facilitate this happening
⢠Build their own skills but not be scared that they donât
know how to do it themselves
⢠89% of staff at BSSC are happy that students know more
about computers and software than themselves.
LOTE example
19. Evolution of the classroom
⢠What will the classroom become?
⢠Laboratories to classroom machines
⢠Distinct information technology classes to
appropriate integration into all subject areas
⢠One place and time to many places and times
⢠Technology in control to learner in control
Triple science example
20. Low expectations of the teacher -
Narrow learning outcomes
High expectations of
the teacher - Broad
learning outcomes
User has control
Technology has control
SimCity etc
Drill and practice eg Math Blaster and
many CD ROMs
HyperStudio, Microworlds, PowerPoint,
Clarisworks, Kid Pix, Office, Web
Publishing Software,Email
Software Pyramid
Graeme Oswin 1997
21. Professional development
⢠Skills in context
â Make the main focus what you can do in the
classroom - this gives a need to learn the skills
⢠Share & celebrate
â develop teams with expectations of outcomes
â share - students and staff
â create support structures
English discussion forum
22. Support for staff
⢠Emotional
⢠Pedagogical
⢠Technical
Art - teacher
Art - student
23. Support for Staff
⢠Teaching and learning
â 4 teaching and learning coaches
â PD based around teaching and learning, in teams
⢠Technical
â Technology development manager
â 2 full time technicians
â 2 full time web support
â 15 students part time
25. The future
⢠What future do our students face?
⢠What skills will they need?
⢠What skills will a teacher need to equip our
students for the future?
⢠What outcomes are possible?
PhotoShop
IRC
Website
26. 80% of the children currently in Years 6 & 7
will enter careers which donât exist now.
90% of the technology to be used in the year
2000 has not been invented or is not available
yet.
Graduates will have been exposed to more
information in a year than their grandparents
in a lifetime.
(Commission for the Future/Finn Meyer Report, 1992)
27.
28. mailbox manager
⢠Manage email accounts from school
through a web browser
⢠Secure administrator logon
⢠filter mail
⢠batch accounts for students
29. access manager
⢠View all sites visited
⢠View all searches made by students
⢠Control and breakdown of costs
⢠Snapshot toll allows administrator to
see what sites all active users are on
30. web manager
⢠Allows creation of school, teacher and
student web pages through a browser
interface
⢠CGI tools - counters, chat etc
⢠Access statistics
⢠Filters and control tools through
censorman.