If you've read much of this blog you'll know that I'm a big fan of the K12 Online conference and have been involved with bringing these presentations to teachers in my own district via LAN parties. It made me smile to hear one seasoned colleague say that these sessions were the best professional development he had experienced in his career. Wow!
I've been viewing as many of this year's offerings as I can and they're as inspiring as ever. The one that stands out for me so far in terms of the way we work with students is Paul Curtis' Building a Web 2.0 Culture. We chose it to show at our first LAN party of the year and Paul generously offered his time to join us in an Elluminate session for some discussion after we viewed his presentation. The chat is archived here. He's part of the New Technology Network whose philosophy is to inspire and engage students to become collaborators, thinkers, innovators and leaders. Whether you're transforming a school or just wanting to improve your practice on Monday morning this presentation will get you thinking.
In order to keep the presentations straight in my head I started a Google Doc to briefly list the focus of each presentation. Here are a few I will definitely be bringing to the attention of others:
- Sylvia Tolisano's Around the World With Skype
- Jason Neiffer's Probing the Possibilities of Paperless Pedagogy in which he gives a tour of his own paperless classroom, comments on using Google docs, Wordpress and Moodle.
- Julie Lindsay's Learning Confluence: where philosophy meets practice in the 21c addresses why education needs to be globally focussed.
- Kelly Hines' Little Kids, Big Possibilities gives a how-to for several tools she uses with her class She has set up some trial accounts for session viewers to play in the sandbox. A great way to dip your toes in.
- Andy Crozier and Mike Amante talk about Just a 'touch' of leadership: Using the iPod Touch/iPhone in Administration giving lots of hands-on ideas.
- Sarah Sutter's Show and Tell: Exhibit, Reflect, Critique with Blogs is excellent for art teachers but the her ideas transfer to other subject areas as well.
Grab some refreshments or even a colleague or two and pull up a chair for some engaging viewing! Most will take less than 20 minutes of your time to view.
1 comment:
Lesley,
Thanks for mentioning my K12Online presentation on exhibiting student work. I hope it proves helpful to get other teachers started, especially as they see many paths to positive ends. I love connecting with other art teachers when the opportunity arises, so I hope they will join the K12Online ning and continue the conversation. All the best - Sarah
Post a Comment