Leadership for connected and global learning: Session 1 Chinese
1. Leadership for
Connected
and Global
Learning
Ningbo-Auckland
Education
Association
Conference
Session 1: Chinese speaking
2. Meet Julie Lindsay…..
Global Educator, Innovator
Teacherpreneur, Author
MA Educational Technology Leadership
MA Music
EdD Student, University of Southern
Queensland
Adjunct Lecturer, Charles Sturt University,
Faculty of Education
Global collaboration consultant
Apple Distinguished Educator
Google Certified Teacher
Director, Learning Confluence Pty Ltd
Founder, Flat Connections
@julielindsay | #flatconnect | @flatconnections | about.me/julielindsay
3. ….my global journey
Zambia
Kuwait
Bangladesh
Qatar
China
Ocean Shores
Melbourne
5. Our Goals for Today
To provide ideas, resources and strategies to
schools for ONLINE global connections that lead
to collaborations
To discuss connected and collaborative learning
and review working examples
To discuss with partner schools what can be
possible in the future
7. Our Goals for this Session
This session will:
• Explore what it means to be connected and
learning online
• Discuss synchronous and asynchronous online
learning modes
• Define leadership characteristics for
connected learning
• Explore current global collaborative projects
as examples of best practice connections
8. Connected Learning Part 1
What is Connected Learning?
Being connected to others who inspire, support
and amplify your LEARNING
Being connected to places and people for
personal and professional advantage
Understanding the opportunity and power that
technology brings to all learners
Knowing how to access tools, resources and
people to connect learning locally and globally
10. Some terms to know……
• PLN – Personal
Learning Network
• PLC – Professional
Learning Community
11. DIGITAL LEARNING ENVIRONMENT
(DLE) refers to the tools, skills,
standards, attitudes and habits for
learning while using technology and
accessing digital resources.
13. Why do we need to move to online
learning modes?
How do we move our learning to
online spaces?
What global digital citizenship
challenges do we need to
consider?
14. Why Connected Learning?
We must be able to sustain
connections beyond the face-to-
face experience and beyond
the virtual, synchronous
experience e.g. Skype call.
16. Learning in online spaces
Two types to sustain a global connection
Traditional
Classroom
Separated by
Location
Separated by Time
Connected
Classroom
Unified by the
Internet
Unified by
asynchronous
communication
tools
SYNCHRONOUS and ASYNCHRONOUS
22. Some leadership ideas and concepts…..
Facilitating a pedagogical shift
A change in teaching and learning beliefs
and practices from transmission paradigm to
constructionist paradigm
Rise of a distributed leadership model
23. Leadership and Skill Audit
• Is YOUR school ready to connect?
• What skills do leaders and teachers have?
• What skills do they need to learn?
• What skills will students need?
• What support will teachers and students have
for global connected learning?
• How does global collaboration embed into the
curriculum?
24. Technology and Skill Audit
• What technologies are available?
• What online access is available:
– At school?
– At home?
• What skills are needed to use the
technologies?
• Who will teach these skills?
• What about global digital citizenship?
25. Connected Learning Part 4
Building bridges between learners
Technology must be the bridge, not the barrier to new
connected teaching and learning modes
27. Digital citizenship……
How will students (and teachers) learn this??
Just in time
SKILLS, HABITS and
ATTITUDES
for learning while digital
How do we move from local to global??
29. Global Awareness
• Different countries
have different laws
Image: 'M like Muslim?’ http://www.flickr.com/photos/50451886@N00/2502594771
– Copyright, legal
– Taboo subjects
• Nationality transcends
culture
– Every nation has
multiple cultures
– Never stereotype a
nation
30. The future of connected learning includes
collaboration online.
How are we supporting this?
31. Facilitate or Constrain?
• What are the barriers and
enablers to connecting teachers
and students online?
• Are you a facilitator or a
constrainer?
Technology infrastructure
Curriculum development
Leadership
Global digital citizenship
33. Examples from
Flat Connections
Global Projects
http://flatconnections.com
34.
35. Singapore American School International School of the Sacred Heart, Japan
Asynchronous global debates between classrooms
Theme 2014-15:
Global Peace and
Security
http://globalyouthdebates.com
Tools: Voicethread & Fuze
36. Flat Connections Global Project (FCGP)
• 500 students
• 20+ classrooms
• 6 countries
• 36 student teams
• 1 Keynote
• 24 Expert Advisors
• 18 Judges and 3 Meta-judges
• 213 Videos
• 15 eBooks
February-June 2014!
http://flatconnections.wikispaces.com
38. FCGP Content and Themes
Horizon Report K-12, 2013
Emerging technologies impacting
education and learning shared via a
timeline of potential relevance.
http://www.nmc.org/horizon-project/
horizon-reports/horizon-report-k-
12-edition
Open
Learning futurist, David Price OBE, argues
that ‘open’ is not only affecting how we
are choosing to live, but that it’s going to
be the difference between success and
failure in the future.
http://engagedlearning.co.uk/