[Advisory] Re: After #Naace2010 - Twitter wall

Paul Springford paul.springford@naace.org
Sun, 21 Mar 2010 23:00:29 +0000


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Apologies for the space which crept into the evaluation url.

On 21 March 2010 22:49, Paul Springford <paul.springford@naace.org> wrote:

> Colleagues
>
> A couple of points about the use of Twitter at Blackpool.
>
> First, all keynote speakers were asked if they were happy with the display
> of tweeted comments. There was no pressure upon them to agree.
>
> Secondly, there were some comments on display which for various reasons -
> distracting, irrelevant, offensive, impolite... - might have been considered
> inappropriate by some people.
>
> So we have a powerful tool which engaged many people at Blackpool and
> around the world and at the same time created anxiety or worse for others
> (including the conference team). Sounds a bit like the regular debate about
> whether or not to block stuff in schools.
>
> At their post-conference review on Thursday, the use of Twitter was one of
> the issues the Board discussed. In thinking about the 2011 conference, they
> really would value your views. So if you attended, or joined in remotely,
> please do complete the online evalution at
> http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/AnnualConferenceConference<http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/AnnualConference>and be sure to comment on the use of Twitter.
>
> Paul
>
>
> On 20 March 2010 19:37, theo kuechel <theo.kuechel@googlemail.com> wrote:
>
>> I think Leon and Doug are right, it is very easy to get caught up in the
>> moment of the Twitter wall and it soon feels very uncomfortable.  I think we
>> should all agree it is best use Twitter as a tool to observe and report to
>> those not physically present, and leave engaging with the speaker to the
>> question session in a talk.
>>
>> This piece by danah boyd provides a good insight into the issues
>> http://www.zephoria.org/thoughts/archives/2009/11/24/spectacle_at_we.htm
>>
>> It would be shame to lose the benefits of the backchannel if it becomes
>> threatning to speakers.
>>
>> best
>> Theo
>>
>>
>> On 20 March 2010 19:19, Doug Dickinson <doug.dickinson@ntlworld.com>wrote:
>>
>>> Totally agree with the comment about the Twitter wall ... Twitter is
>>> intended as a back-channel, not as a running commentary for all ... found
>>> myself tweeting my thoughts as i would normally but then felt that I was
>>> being disrespectful ... didn't feel good
>>>
>>>    Doug Dickinson
>>> Independent E-Learning Consultant
>>> doug@dougdickinson.co.uk
>>> Tel: 01509 265653
>>> Mobile: 07889 712 208
>>> Skype: dougjdickinson
>>> Web: www.dougdickinson.co.uk/blog
>>> -------
>>> The creative spirit is a wild bird that will not sing in captivity - Van
>>> Dearing Perrine
>>> -------
>>> "There is nothing in a caterpillar that tells you it's going to be a
>>> butterfly."
>>>
>>> "You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change
>>> something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete."
>>>
>>> Buckminster Fuller
>>> ------
>>>
>>> This message is confidential. You should not copy it or disclose its
>>> contents to anyone. You may use and apply the information only for the
>>> intended purpose. Internet communications are not secure and therefore the
>>> sender does not accept legal responsibility for the content of this
>>> message.  If the e-mail has come to you in error please delete it and any
>>> attachments.
>>>
>>> On 20 Mar 2010, at 18:44, Leon Cych wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> Brian,
>>>
>>> I would agree with some of these points but not others.
>>>
>>> Certainly Ofsted's lack of direction came into high relief in relation to
>>> the Twitter Wall. But somehow I felt it unfair to have a Twitter Wall
>>> running when someone was unaware of the comments going on in the room.
>>>
>>> With Ofsted the problem has always been bean counting - they need to
>>> shift up a gear if they are not going to be marginalised in the future. Yes
>>> they still have power to determine the parameters by which to judge a school
>>> but I think they are beginning to woefully lose their way judged by the
>>> other key note contributors to the conference have outlined the way things
>>> are going.
>>>
>>> What happens currently is that head teachers are given pages and pages of
>>> questions they have to answer which are then summatively judged against
>>> those frameworks.
>>>
>>> What isn't there?
>>>
>>> 1) Any formative system of assessment that could offere positive
>>> management solutions - having an inspection force who are merely observers
>>> is not good enough - they need to be made to engage as part of a
>>> professional assessment system - not just be number crunchers.
>>>
>>> 2) No aggregation of meaningful data that would prove useful to schools
>>> is held in any way that could be useful on the Ofsted site. If you are going
>>> to bean count then why not make it more transparent. Have a useful search
>>> function that aggregated subjects, schools, data, outcomes, school meals
>>> (:)) so it can be compared like for like - where's the data back engine to
>>> do this - well overdue I would think or is it merely just to be hidden and
>>> proprietorial so that dictats can be issued once in a while for the media.
>>> There is no commutativity of data and sharing of data - no desire to engage
>>> other than measure by fixed parameters which, as we see, are a retreat into
>>> the dark ages.
>>>
>>> Try and search the PDF database and find patterns of inspection - why is
>>> this not made more transparent?
>>>
>>> So now we are expected to take the communication out of ICT because "We
>>> do that well" and concentrate on a curriculum inspection that is in
>>> retrograde at the moment as far as I'm concerned.
>>>
>>> So we go back to a set of parameters that appear to be a comfort zone and
>>> schools will be judged against them. An immutable tail wagging a
>>> particularly dozy dog. When the dog wakes up as it is doing in the teaching
>>> force or the people observing activity around the teaching force, then
>>> things begin to happen. People start to question the traditional models of
>>> planning, assessment and examination.
>>>
>>> I guess it is to be expected Ofsted and QCDA appear to not seem to be
>>> aware of the possibilities of more recent social media or the disjunction
>>> between what is now happening in the home and the school. This gulf will
>>> only grow wider - the school population and parents become increasingly
>>> disaffected as technology will become more ubiquitous and broadband more
>>> available.
>>>
>>> If you want more girls to do ICT then change the exam - make it more
>>> relevant and interesting - personalise it - make sure people engage not just
>>> have to do these increasingly disaffecting exams - for that surely is what
>>> they are if 50 per cent of the pupils are using walking away. It just isn't
>>> working - saying people aren't engaging should tell you something...
>>>
>>> Sometimes unintended consequences cause the education and insight you are
>>> looking for. With programming it was the coming of the early personal
>>> computers and the games written by amateurs at home off the back of that.
>>> Some marvellous programmers emerged from that - al lot of them bypassed
>>> exams and started their own companies...
>>>
>>> That whole industry still isn't acknowledged by government in terms of
>>> tax benefits even though they make more than the film industry in this
>>> country. Most of those companies have gone to Canada ... yet another
>>> opportunity lost.
>>>
>>> If you want people to do stuff that aids the economy and uses imagination
>>> to do it, then devise something more than just husks of proprietorial fence
>>> jumping for individuals. Bring in collaborative exams where people can
>>> explore and work to their talents - make peer assessment and personal
>>> responsibility ways in which you can assess. Anyone tried thinking of that
>>> one yet? How about a vibrant, imaginative, "fun" curriculum completley
>>> contextualised and relevant to the ways we live our lives now. Guess not -
>>> oh dear - yet another fail...and for the country as a whole as well...never
>>> mind the banks are beginning to be back in profit not that any of them will
>>> pay back in terms of social capital what they ruined as a knock on in terms
>>> of culture and education although they are more than morally bound to do
>>> so...in the meantime we'll be expected to pull in our belts and
>>> intellectually too I would hazard a guess...
>>>
>>> The one big topic I took away from the conference is that we need to
>>> think very carefully about assessment and exams - in some cases they are
>>> getting in the way of actually adding to the country's economic well being
>>> because we lack vision in the way we can educate for the 21st century.
>>>
>>> The system we have at secondary level is enabling people to teach more
>>> and more efficiently about less and less relevant things when it comes to
>>> what people need in jobs and creative endeavor in some cases. It's not fit
>>> for purpose - people are retreating into 'curricular comfort zones' that are
>>> cul de sacs when it comes to moving this country on.
>>>
>>> Sometimes I feel if someone doesn't do something soon we are going to be
>>> mired in confusion and failure to respond to the 21st Century and all its
>>> challenges.
>>>
>>> And I'll ask it again as I have done over the years:
>>>
>>> Where is the vision and where is the courage to follow that vision when
>>> it comes to Education?
>>>
>>> The next few months will see cutbacks and all sorts of justifications for
>>> a retreat into more cost-effective models of "delivery" - Education isn't
>>> ring-fenced and that is a tragedy because it will enable all sorts of
>>> justifications for paucity of vision - if people don't stand up and say
>>> these things - well we have ourselves to blame in the long run...
>>>
>>> Leon Cych
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> --- On *Sat, 20/3/10, Brian Smith <brian@briansmithonline.com>* wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> From: Brian Smith <brian@briansmithonline.com>
>>> Subject: [Advisory] After #Naace2010
>>> To: advisory@talk.naace.org
>>> Date: Saturday, 20 March, 2010, 16:35
>>>
>>> Following this year's conference, I'm struggling to find solutions.
>>>
>>> Clearly Ofsted is still counting that which can be counted and
>>> nit-picking over whether data-logging is being 'delivered' or not. In the
>>> meantime the world's children are disengaging from education en masse. (If
>>> they need datalogging they can pick it up in an hour - and probably most do
>>> when they buy some technical Lego or a similar toy).
>>>
>>> The pressure to break the mould and throw out the Victorian curriculum
>>> with its deliver-and-test regime is building towards bursting point. Too
>>> many bright people are saying it: Ken Robinson, Don Tapscott, David Puttnam;
>>> their numbers are growing and their voices getting louder almost daily.
>>>
>>> And finally, Lord Puttnam's film showed that increasing global problems
>>> mean that if we don't create a 21st century curriculum - and quickly - there
>>> may be no need for five A*- Cs because there'll be no world to live in.
>>> See what he showed at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VRi8_fXz1D8
>>>
>>> *So what's the solution?*
>>> Needless to say I haven't a clue.
>>> But I do find that Web 2.0 technologies open the ability to problem-solve
>>> and debate.
>>> Twitterfall at conference added a dimension and a global audience to our
>>> sessions.
>>> You do realise, don't you, that Chris Smith was participating in Thailand
>>> and many comments were being retweeted to a global network of people by an
>>> educator in Ecuador. That's just two examples.
>>>
>>> TeachMeet was real chalk-face practitioners turning their back on
>>> Government and Ofsted and getting together to share innovative ideas - and
>>> their sessions were streamed on Ustream to a global audience.
>>>
>>> This global dimension is almost totally lacking in the average classroom.
>>> In its place we have locked-down systems which wouldn't allow my photos from
>>> BETT to be viewed by Pete Rafferty (@raff31) an innovative Year 4 teacher on
>>> Merseyside. No, he didn't have 8-year-olds accessing Twitter - this was his
>>> own account on his own laptop which he was using to receive news from
>>> professional educators attending the BETT Show. Nothing reached his children
>>> without being filtered by him - yet even he, as a teacher, wasn't given this
>>> freedom because Twitpic is blocked.
>>>
>>> How can children become the "people we need" when even their teachers
>>> can't show them the benefits technology can bring?
>>>
>>> *Unlock the Web*
>>> My instinct is to unlock the web and let teachers use Web 2.0 with their
>>> classes but that ignores Internet safety issues.
>>>
>>> The more I think about it the more I know that it depends on age. But the
>>> starting point should be open access and then lock down only as much as
>>> necessary.
>>>
>>> Consider nursery and reception children for example. Open access would be
>>> so wrong for them. Yet a primary teacher who can't put Twitterfall on the
>>> whiteboard is surely damaging the children's prospects.
>>>
>>> So how about this.
>>> Consider the roads analogy.
>>> We wouldn't let five year olds roam freely on the roads so we keep them
>>> shut indoors or safe in the garden with the gate shut.
>>> But we also go out onto the roads with them so they learn road safety.
>>> We do it by constantly explaining and demonstrating.
>>> Not incessantly, just every time a road needs to be crossed.
>>> In between we are talking about everything else.
>>>
>>> *A suggestion:*
>>> On the net, then, I think we should direct young children to safe sites
>>> for specific activities and have filters in place so they can't go ANYWHERE
>>> else.
>>>
>>> But not a county filter or even a school filter. It needs to be a class
>>> filter because the seven year olds will need a bit more flexibility and the
>>> 11 years old a lot more.
>>>
>>> AND, the class filter should be only on the children's access points. The
>>> teacher should have unfettered access so if she wants to use Twitter or any
>>> other social networking site - or MSN - or Skype - or Ustream - she can.
>>> Because she won't let the children on that computer and she'll only ever
>>> access these sites as part of a lesson. So she might have Twitterfall on the
>>> big screen for a particular purpose during a particular lesson, perhaps with
>>> a TA monitoring content in the seconds between receipt and display.
>>>
>>> Thus the children are safe but they also learn to communicate and
>>> collaborate as the teacher holds their hand.
>>> Just like on the road.
>>>
>>> As they grow older the filters come off but only with adequate internet
>>> safety training.
>>>
>>> And on that subject, see these two articles::
>>>
>>> A school that's praised for less filtered access with good safety
>>> training:
>>>
>>> http://www.thisisplymouth.co.uk/news/Use-online-tool-nets-school-E-Safety-mark/article-1812042-detail/article.html
>>>
>>> Managed rather than locked down:
>>> http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/education/8505914.stm
>>>
>>>
>>> So those are my fairly random thoughts so far, two days after conference.
>>>
>>> What do you think?
>>>
>>> Brian Smith
>>>
>>>
>>> ---------------------------------------
>>> Disclaimers about how this is intended for you and if you aren't you, let
>>> me know.
>>> Oh and by the way, the content *is* my opinion.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Theo Kuechel
>> Learning Technology Research
>> theo.kuechel@gmail.com
>> T.Kuechel@hull.ac.uk
>>
>>
>>
>

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Apologies for the space which crept into the evaluation url.<br><br><div cl=
ass=3D"gmail_quote">On 21 March 2010 22:49, Paul Springford <span dir=3D"lt=
r">&lt;<a href=3D"mailto:paul.springford@naace.org">paul.springford@naace.o=
rg</a>&gt;</span> wrote:<br>
<blockquote class=3D"gmail_quote" style=3D"margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; borde=
r-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); padding-left: 1ex;">Colleagues<br><br=
>A couple of points about the use of Twitter at Blackpool.<br><br>
First, all keynote speakers were asked if they were happy with the=20
display of tweeted comments. There was no pressure upon them to agree.<br>
<br>
Secondly, there were some comments on display which for various reasons
 - distracting, irrelevant, offensive, impolite... - might have been=20
considered inappropriate by some people.<br><br>So we have a powerful tool =
which engaged many people at Blackpool and around the world and at the same=
 time created anxiety or worse for others (including the conference team). =
Sounds a bit like the regular debate about whether or not to block stuff in=
 schools.<br>

<br>At their post-conference review on Thursday, the use of Twitter was one=
 of the issues the Board discussed. In thinking about the 2011 conference, =
they really would value your views. So if you attended, or joined in remote=
ly, please do complete the online evalution at <a href=3D"http://www.survey=
monkey.com/s/AnnualConference" target=3D"_blank">http://www.surveymonkey.co=
m/s/AnnualConference</a><a href=3D"http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/AnnualConf=
erence">Conference</a> and be sure to comment on the use of Twitter.<br>

<br>Paul<br><br><br><div class=3D"gmail_quote">On 20 March 2010 19:37, theo=
 kuechel <span dir=3D"ltr">&lt;<a href=3D"mailto:theo.kuechel@googlemail.co=
m" target=3D"_blank">theo.kuechel@googlemail.com</a>&gt;</span> wrote:<br><=
blockquote class=3D"gmail_quote" style=3D"margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; border=
-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); padding-left: 1ex;">

I think Leon and Doug are right, it is very easy to get caught up in the mo=
ment of the Twitter wall and it soon feels very uncomfortable.=A0 I think w=
e should all agree it is best use Twitter as a tool to observe and report t=
o those not physically present, and leave engaging with the speaker to the =
question session in a talk.<br>


<br>This piece by danah boyd provides a good insight into the issues <a hre=
f=3D"http://www.zephoria.org/thoughts/archives/2009/11/24/spectacle_at_we.h=
tm" target=3D"_blank">http://www.zephoria.org/thoughts/archives/2009/11/24/=
spectacle_at_we.htm</a><br>


<br>It would be shame to lose the benefits of the backchannel if it becomes=
 threatning to speakers. <br><br>best<br>Theo<div><div></div><div><br><br><=
div class=3D"gmail_quote">On 20 March 2010 19:19, Doug Dickinson <span dir=
=3D"ltr">&lt;<a href=3D"mailto:doug.dickinson@ntlworld.com" target=3D"_blan=
k">doug.dickinson@ntlworld.com</a>&gt;</span> wrote:<br>


<blockquote class=3D"gmail_quote" style=3D"border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, =
204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;"><div style=3D"wor=
d-wrap: break-word;">Totally agree with the comment about the Twitter wall =
... Twitter is intended as a back-channel, not as a running commentary for =
all ... found myself tweeting my thoughts as i would normally but then felt=
 that I was being disrespectful ... didn&#39;t feel good<div>


<br></div><div><div><div> <span style=3D"border-collapse: separate; color: =
rgb(0, 0, 0); font-family: Helvetica; font-size: medium; font-style: normal=
; font-variant: normal; font-weight: normal; letter-spacing: normal; line-h=
eight: normal; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal;=
 word-spacing: 0px;"><div style=3D"word-wrap: break-word;">


<span style=3D"border-collapse: separate; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); font-family:=
 Helvetica; font-size: medium; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; fo=
nt-weight: normal; letter-spacing: normal; line-height: normal; text-indent=
: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; word-spacing: 0px;"><div =
style=3D"word-wrap: break-word;">


<span style=3D"border-collapse: separate; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); font-family:=
 Helvetica; font-size: medium; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; fo=
nt-weight: normal; letter-spacing: normal; line-height: normal; text-indent=
: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; word-spacing: 0px;"><div =
style=3D"word-wrap: break-word;">


<span style=3D"border-collapse: separate; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); font-family:=
 Helvetica; font-size: medium; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; fo=
nt-weight: normal; letter-spacing: normal; line-height: normal; text-indent=
: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; word-spacing: 0px;"><div =
style=3D"word-wrap: break-word;">


<span style=3D"border-collapse: separate; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); font-family:=
 Helvetica; font-size: medium; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; fo=
nt-weight: normal; letter-spacing: normal; line-height: normal; text-indent=
: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; word-spacing: 0px;"><div =
style=3D"word-wrap: break-word;">


<div><div><div><div>Doug Dickinson</div><div>Independent E-Learning Consult=
ant</div><div><a href=3D"mailto:doug@dougdickinson.co.uk" target=3D"_blank"=
>doug@dougdickinson.co.uk</a></div><div>Tel: 01509 265653</div><div>Mobile:=
 07889 712 208</div>


<div>Skype: dougjdickinson</div><div>Web: <a href=3D"http://www.dougdickins=
on.co.uk/blog" target=3D"_blank">www.dougdickinson.co.uk/blog</a></div><div=
>-------</div><div>The creative spirit is a wild bird that will not sing in=
 captivity - Van Dearing Perrine</div>


<div><div>-------<br>&quot;There is nothing in a caterpillar that tells you=
 it&#39;s going to be a butterfly.&quot;=A0</div><div><br></div><div>&quot;=
You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change somethi=
ng, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete.&quot;</div>


<div><br></div><div>Buckminster Fuller=A0<br>------</div><div>=A0</div><div=
>This message is confidential. You should not copy it or disclose its conte=
nts to anyone. You may use and apply the information only for the intended =
purpose. Internet communications are not secure and therefore the sender do=
es not accept legal responsibility for the content of this message.=A0 If t=
he e-mail has come to you in error please delete it and any attachments.</d=
iv>


</div></div></div></div></div></span></div></span></div></span></div></span=
></div></span> </div><div><div></div><div><br><div><div>On 20 Mar 2010, at =
18:44, Leon Cych wrote:</div><br><blockquote type=3D"cite"><table border=3D=
"0" cellpadding=3D"0" cellspacing=3D"0">


<tbody><tr><td style=3D"font: inherit;" valign=3D"top"><br>Brian,<br>
<br>I would agree with some of these points but not others.<br><br>Certainl=
y Ofsted&#39;s lack of direction came into high relief in relation to the T=
witter Wall. But somehow I felt it unfair to have a Twitter Wall running wh=
en someone was unaware of the comments going on in the room. <br>


<br>With Ofsted the problem has always been bean counting - they need to sh=
ift up a gear if they are not going to be marginalised in the future. Yes t=
hey still have power to determine the parameters by which to judge a school=
 but I think they are beginning to woefully lose their way judged by the ot=
her key note contributors to the conference have outlined the way things ar=
e going.<br>


<br>What happens currently is that head teachers are given pages and pages =
of questions they have to answer which are then summatively judged against =
those frameworks.<br><br>What isn&#39;t there?<br><br>1) Any formative syst=
em of assessment that could offere positive management solutions - having a=
n inspection force who are merely observers is not good enough - they need =
to be made to engage as part of a professional assessment system - not just=
 be number crunchers.<br>


<br>2) No aggregation of meaningful data that would prove useful to schools=
 is held in any way that could be useful on the Ofsted site. If you are goi=
ng to bean count then why not make it more transparent. Have a useful searc=
h function that aggregated subjects, schools, data, outcomes, school meals =
(:)) so it can be compared like for like - where&#39;s the data back engine=
 to do this - well overdue I would think or is it merely just to be hidden =
and proprietorial so that dictats can be issued once in a while for the med=
ia. There is no commutativity of data and sharing of data - no desire to en=
gage other than measure by fixed parameters which, as we see, are a retreat=
 into the dark ages.<br>


<br>Try and search the PDF database and find patterns of inspection - why i=
s this not made more transparent?<br><br>So now we are expected to take the=
 communication out of ICT because &quot;We do that well&quot; and concentra=
te on a curriculum inspection that is in retrograde at the moment as far as=
 I&#39;m concerned.<br>


<br>So we go back to a set of parameters that appear to be a comfort zone a=
nd schools will be judged against them. An immutable tail wagging a particu=
larly dozy dog. When the dog wakes up as it is doing in the teaching force =
or the people observing activity around the teaching force, then things beg=
in to happen. People start to question the traditional models of planning, =
assessment and examination.<br>


<br>I guess it is to be expected Ofsted and QCDA appear to not seem to be a=
ware of the possibilities of more recent social media or the disjunction be=
tween what is now happening in the home and the school. This gulf will only=
 grow wider - the school population and parents become increasingly disaffe=
cted as technology will become more ubiquitous and broadband more available=
.<br>


<br>If you want more girls to do ICT then change the exam - make it more re=
levant and interesting - personalise it - make sure people engage not just =
have to do these increasingly disaffecting exams - for that surely is what =
they are if 50 per cent of the pupils are using walking away. It just isn&#=
39;t working - saying people aren&#39;t engaging should tell you something.=
..<br>


<br>Sometimes unintended consequences cause the education and insight you a=
re looking for. With programming it was the coming of the early personal co=
mputers and the games written by amateurs at home off the back of that. Som=
e marvellous programmers emerged from that - al lot of them bypassed exams =
and started their own companies...<br>


<br>That whole industry still isn&#39;t acknowledged by government in terms=
 of tax benefits even though they make more than the film industry in this =
country. Most of those companies have gone to Canada ... yet another opport=
unity lost.<br>


<br>If you want people to do stuff that aids the economy and uses imaginati=
on to do it, then devise something more than just husks of proprietorial fe=
nce jumping for individuals. Bring in collaborative exams where people can =
explore and work to their talents - make peer assessment and personal respo=
nsibility ways in which you can assess. Anyone tried thinking of that one y=
et? How about a vibrant, imaginative, &quot;fun&quot; curriculum completley=
 contextualised and relevant to the ways we live our lives now. Guess not -=
 oh dear - yet another fail...and for the country as a whole as well...neve=
r mind the banks are beginning to be back in profit not that any of them wi=
ll pay back in terms of social capital what they ruined as a knock on in te=
rms of culture and education although they are more than morally bound to d=
o so...in the meantime we&#39;ll be expected to pull in our belts and intel=
lectually too I would hazard a guess...<br>


<br>The one big topic I took away from the conference is that we need to th=
ink very carefully about assessment and exams - in some cases they are gett=
ing in the way of actually adding to the country&#39;s economic well being =
because we lack vision in the way we can educate for the 21st century.<br>


<br>The system we have at secondary level is enabling people to teach more =
and more efficiently about less and less relevant things when it comes to w=
hat people need in jobs and creative endeavor in some cases. It&#39;s not f=
it for purpose - people are retreating into &#39;curricular comfort zones&#=
39; that are cul de sacs when it comes to moving this country on.<br>


<br>Sometimes I feel if someone doesn&#39;t do something soon we are going =
to be mired in confusion and failure to respond to the 21st Century and all=
 its challenges.<br><br>And I&#39;ll ask it again as I have done over the y=
ears:<br>


<br>Where is the vision and where is the courage to follow that vision when=
 it comes to Education?<br><br>The next few months will see cutbacks and al=
l sorts of justifications for a retreat into more cost-effective models of =
&quot;delivery&quot; - Education isn&#39;t ring-fenced and that is a traged=
y because it will enable all sorts of justifications for paucity of vision =
- if people don&#39;t stand up and say these things - well we have ourselve=
s to blame in the long run...<br>


<br>Leon Cych<br><blockquote style=3D"border-left: 2px solid rgb(16, 16, 25=
5); margin-left: 5px; padding-left: 5px;"><br><div><table border=3D"0" cell=
padding=3D"0" cellspacing=3D"0"><tbody><tr><td style=3D"font: inherit;" val=
ign=3D"top">


<br>--- On <b>Sat, 20/3/10, Brian Smith <i>&lt;<a href=3D"mailto:brian@bria=
nsmithonline.com" target=3D"_blank">brian@briansmithonline.com</a>&gt;</i><=
/b> wrote:<br><blockquote style=3D"border-left: 2px solid rgb(16, 16, 255);=
 margin-left: 5px; padding-left: 5px;">


<br>From: Brian Smith &lt;<a href=3D"mailto:brian@briansmithonline.com" tar=
get=3D"_blank">brian@briansmithonline.com</a>&gt;<br>Subject: [Advisory] Af=
ter #Naace2010<br>To: <a href=3D"mailto:advisory@talk.naace.org" target=3D"=
_blank">advisory@talk.naace.org</a><br>


Date: Saturday, 20 March, 2010, 16:35<br><br><div>Following this year&#39;s=
 conference, I&#39;m struggling to find solutions.<div><br></div><div>Clear=
ly Ofsted is still counting that which can be counted and nit-picking over =
whether data-logging is being &#39;delivered&#39; or not. In the meantime t=
he world&#39;s children are disengaging from education en masse. (If they n=
eed datalogging they can pick it up in an hour - and probably most do when =
they buy some technical Lego or a similar toy).</div>


<div><br></div><div>The pressure to break the mould and throw out the Victo=
rian curriculum with its deliver-and-test regime is building towards bursti=
ng point. Too many bright people are saying it: Ken Robinson, Don Tapscott,=
 David Puttnam; their numbers are growing and their voices getting louder a=
lmost daily.=A0</div>


<div><br></div><div>And finally, Lord Puttnam&#39;s film showed that increa=
sing global problems mean that if we don&#39;t create a 21st century curric=
ulum - and quickly - there may be no need for five A*- Cs because there&#39=
;ll be no world to live in.</div>


<div>See what he showed at:=A0<a rel=3D"nofollow" href=3D"http://www.youtub=
e.com/watch?v=3DVRi8_fXz1D8" target=3D"_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch=
?v=3DVRi8_fXz1D8</a></div><div><br></div><div><b>So what&#39;s the solution=
?</b></div>


<div>Needless to say I haven&#39;t a clue.</div><div>But I do find that Web=
 2.0 technologies open the ability to problem-solve and debate.</div><div>T=
witterfall at conference added a dimension and a global audience to our ses=
sions.</div>


<div>You do realise, don&#39;t you, that Chris Smith was participating in T=
hailand and many comments were being retweeted to a global network of peopl=
e by an educator in Ecuador. That&#39;s just two examples.</div><div><br>


</div><div>TeachMeet was real chalk-face practitioners turning their back o=
n Government and Ofsted and getting together to share innovative ideas - an=
d their sessions were streamed on Ustream to a global audience.</div><div>


<br></div><div>This global dimension is almost totally lacking in the avera=
ge classroom. In its place we have locked-down systems which wouldn&#39;t a=
llow my photos from BETT to be viewed by Pete Rafferty (@raff31) an innovat=
ive Year 4 teacher on Merseyside. No, he didn&#39;t have 8-year-olds access=
ing Twitter - this was his own account on his own laptop which he was using=
 to receive news from professional educators attending the BETT Show. Nothi=
ng reached his children without being filtered by him - yet even he, as a t=
eacher, wasn&#39;t given this freedom because Twitpic is blocked.</div>


<div><br></div><div>How can children become the &quot;people we need&quot; =
when even their teachers can&#39;t show them the benefits technology can br=
ing?</div><div><br></div><div><b>Unlock the Web</b></div><div>My instinct i=
s to unlock the web and let teachers use Web 2.0 with their classes but tha=
t ignores Internet safety issues.</div>


<div><br></div><div>The more I think about it the more I know that it depen=
ds on age. But=A0the starting point should be open access and then lock dow=
n only as much as necessary.<br><br>Consider nursery and reception children=
 for example.=A0Open access would be so wrong for them.=A0Yet a primary tea=
cher who can&#39;t put Twitterfall on the whiteboard is surely damaging the=
 children&#39;s prospects.</div>


<div><br></div><div>So how about this.=A0</div><div>Consider the roads anal=
ogy.=A0<br>We wouldn&#39;t let five year olds roam freely on the roads so w=
e keep them shut indoors or safe in the garden with the gate shut.=A0<br>Bu=
t we also go out onto the roads with them so they learn road safety.=A0<br>


We do it by constantly explaining and demonstrating.=A0</div><div>Not inces=
santly, just every time a road needs to be crossed.=A0</div><div>In between=
 we are talking about everything else.<br><br><b>A suggestion:</b></div><di=
v>


On the net, then, I think we should direct young children to safe sites for=
 specific activities and have filters in place so they can&#39;t go ANYWHER=
E else.<br><br>But not a county filter or even a school filter. It needs to=
 be a class filter because the seven year olds will need a bit more flexibi=
lity and the 11 years old a lot more.<br>


<br>AND, the class filter should be only on the children&#39;s access point=
s. The teacher should have unfettered access so if she wants to use Twitter=
 or any other social networking site - or MSN - or Skype - or Ustream - she=
 can. Because she won&#39;t let the children on that computer and she&#39;l=
l only ever access these sites as part of a lesson. So she might have Twitt=
erfall on the big screen for a particular purpose during a particular lesso=
n, perhaps with a TA monitoring content in the seconds between receipt and =
display.<br>


<br>Thus the children are safe but they also learn to communicate and colla=
borate as the teacher holds their hand.<br>Just like on the road.<br><br>As=
 they grow older the filters come off but only with adequate internet safet=
y training.<br>


<br>And on that subject, see these two articles::<br><br>A school that&#39;=
s praised for less filtered access with good safety training:<br><a rel=3D"=
nofollow" href=3D"http://www.thisisplymouth.co.uk/news/Use-online-tool-nets=
-school-E-Safety-mark/article-1812042-detail/article.html" target=3D"_blank=
">http://www.thisisplymouth.co.uk/news/Use-online-tool-nets-school-E-Safety=
-mark/article-1812042-detail/article.html</a><br>


<br>Managed rather than locked down:<br><a rel=3D"nofollow" href=3D"http://=
news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/education/8505914.stm" target=3D"_blank">http://news.bb=
c.co.uk/1/hi/education/8505914.stm</a></div><div><br></div><div><br></div><=
div>


So those are my fairly random thoughts so far, two days after conference.</=
div><div><br></div><div>What do you think?</div><div><br></div><div>Brian S=
mith</div><div><br></div><div><br></div><div>------------------------------=
---------</div>


<div>Disclaimers about how this is intended for you and if you aren&#39;t y=
ou, let me know.</div><div>Oh and by the way, the content *is* my opinion.<=
/div></div></blockquote></td></tr></tbody></table></div></blockquote></td>


</tr></tbody></table></blockquote></div><br></div></div></div></div></div><=
/blockquote></div><br><br clear=3D"all"><br></div></div><font color=3D"#888=
888">-- <br>Theo Kuechel<br>Learning Technology Research =A0<br><a href=3D"=
mailto:theo.kuechel@gmail.com" target=3D"_blank">theo.kuechel@gmail.com</a>=
<br>


<a href=3D"mailto:T.Kuechel@hull.ac.uk" target=3D"_blank">T.Kuechel@hull.ac=
.uk</a><br><br><br>
</font></blockquote></div><br>
</blockquote></div><br>

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