Our initial visit to Shirley Warren
Primary School was an absolute pleasure. From the outset, the ICT co-ordinator’s
passion regarding his specialist subject shone through. Feeling in awe of this
enthusiasm immediately engaged my interest in a way that I can only hope to
achieve in my own teaching, as this can install a positive zeal for learning
through ICT and beyond.
This drive to use ICT to its full
potential has evidently been adopted in the whole school ethos, as I was surprised
by the vast amount of technology and media resources that the school possesses,
including their own radio station. This has been shown by UKLA (2005) to not
yet be the norm for all schools, but I believe that it is a step in the right
direction to best support our ‘digitally native’ children (Palfrey and Gasser, 2008). It may be said that as children
are growing up in a digital culture, it is important that ICT is integrated
across the curriculum, rather than as an added extra onto topics, as shown at
Shirley Warren (Simpson & Toyn, 2012). I was amazed by the extent of what
children as young as year R had achieved including great examples of a green-screen
equipped depiction of the gunpowder plot, an ‘Art Attack’, a French retelling
of ‘The Hungry Caterpillar’ and another use of green-screen to explain the
process of mummification all scripted by the children themselves to foster
ownership. The radio station resource was of course very impressive but it is
also important to note how it is being used in order to engage and enhance learning.
For example it formed an insightful incentive for children to arrive at school on
time so that they may have a chance to contribute to the radio broadcast,
demonstrating how children value the opportunity.
The exciting challenge presented
to us was to produce a talking book using iPads, explaining how Shirley Warren support the
children’s rights in line with The United Nations Convention on the Rights of
the Child (UNICEF,
1989). Although slightly apprehensive as an English rather than ICT specialist upon
seeing the great contribution from last year, as soon as we were thoroughly introduced
to the largely intuitive apps literally at our fingertips, I couldn’t wait to
get started! One consideration here, however is the rather limited time frame that the session allowed for, preventing us from involving the children in this
planning stage.
Looking
at issues surrounding the use of iPads, it may be of interest to consider how competent
children potentially are at navigating them. From reading other people’s blog
posts as well as my own experiences, it may be easy to underestimate the skills
that children already possess. To demonstrate this, an example shared at
Shirley Warren regarded the initial introduction of the resource to a year 1
class. When asked who had seen an iPad before, all of the class’s hands went
up, and perhaps even more illuminating, over half remained raised when asked
who had access to a Tablet at home. It is the role of the school therefore, to
keep up with the developments that children experience at home, by constantly
updating their expertise and resources (Walsh, 2010). This is something that
the school acknowledges and has taken steps to overcome. In particular,
training has been provided for all staff across the school so that they may feel
confident and capable, even including reception and lunchtime staff.
Male and Burden (2013) emphasise
that personal digital devices can challenge traditional pedagogy, including but
also going beyond the ethical and safety issues highlighted in the blog posts
of week 9. With the increased ownership provided, the authority and ownership
of the teacher may be undermined (Male and Burden, 2013). Therefore, teachers
should find an appropriate balance towards children’s freedom within learning
and teacher facilitation. Back to Shirley Warren, children are
introduced to technology from Reception, which is fantastic as it reveals how
the school is aware that pupils need to be prepared to live in the future
digital world (Blake, Winsor & Allen, 2012). This reflects a positive
departure from my prior experience in schools where I have seen iPads only used
by the teacher as a tool for recording, not something that the class are
familiar with.
Further questions that
arise from today’s visit…
- How realistic is it for schools to afford this level of technology?
- How can teachers ensure that lesson’s go beyond children’s already extensive experiences with Ipads and tablets from home?
- Is time provided for children to familiarise with keyboard-based typing?
- How much time would a project ideally take to produce effectively?
References
Blake, S. Winsor, D.
& Allen, L (2012) Technology and Young Children: Bridging the Communication-Generation Gap. Hershey: Information
Science Reference
Evans, A.E.. (2008) 'The joys of text' Think, educate, svare
[Online] 1, (1) 1. Available at http://www.tes.co.uk/article.aspx?storycode=394636 [Accessed 22 March 2014
Male, T. and Burden, K. (2013)
‘Access denied? Twenty-first-century technology in schools’ Technology, Pedagogy and Education
Palfrey, J. and Gasser, U. (2008) Born Digital: Understanding
the First Generation of Digital Natives. New York: Basic Books.
QCA/UKLA (2005) More than words 2: Creating
Stories on page and screen. London: QCA 2012, School of Education. (The Impact of Digital
Technology on Learning) [pdf] Durham University: Education Endowment
Foundation. Available at http://learn2.winchester.ac.uk/pluginfile.php/286045/mod_resource/content/1/Higgins%20et%20al%20Impact%20of%20Digital%20Technology%20on%20Learning.pdf [Accessed 22 March 2014].
SIMPSON, D and
TOYN, M. 2012. Primary ICT Across the Curriculum. London: Sage
Publications.
UNICEF (1989) The United Nations Convention
of the Rights of the Child, London: UNICEF UK.
Walsh (2010) Australien journal of language and
literacy. Vol 33 no.3 pp.211-239
I was also very surprised at how capable the children were at such a young age. This inspired me to use a range of digital media with children in order to support them in becoming 'digitally literate' and competent users of ICT. I also agree that I was quite worried about the time limit we were given and the fact that we had not met the children therefore we had not had prior planning time with the children. Another concern I had was about how much the children would already know about using digital technology and also what the children would be like and whether they would be confident in working with us.
ReplyDeleteI also liked how the school had provided training for all of its staff as I think this is a reason of why they are so successful in their use of digital literacy. However, this can be very costly for schools and sometimes, as was said in the seminar today, why not just let the children be the 'experts' and teach you?
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