What are your kids learning when you're not looking?

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What are your kids learning when you’re not looking?

Miles Berry and Terry Freedman

BETT, January 2009

What are your kids learning when you’re not looking?

• BCS– Cre8or

• Who we are

• Why this maCers

• Literature review

• Survey results

• ImplicaIons for schools

Miles Berry

• Head at Alton Convent Prep

• Former Becta ICT in PracIce Award winner– Moodle

– Elgg

• BCS, Naace, Mirandanet, RSA etc.

• opensourceschools.org.uk

• Blog: milesberry.net

• Twit: twiCer.com/mberry

Terry Freedman

• hCp://www.icIneducaIon.org

http://www.lulu.com/terryfreedman

Why this maCers

PLTS:independent enquirers creative thinkers reflective learners team workers self-managers effective participators

The Primary Review

The new secondary curriculum, and the Diploma

Employability

Accreditation/e-Portfolios

The digital divide

School design

Continuing professional development

E-safety

Every Child Matters:

Positive contribution

Healthy

Safety

Enjoy and achieve

Economic

Functional Skills

Some staIsIcs

% of hours pw on web page

013>3

Some more staIsIcs (UK)

Doing homework 90%

Playing games 70%

Made a website 34%

Voted for something online 22%

Visited a site for hobby 40%

Posted pics or stories 17%

More stats: WriIng in the USA

47% of teen bloggers write outside of school for personal reasons several times a week, compared to 33% of teens without blogs.

65% of teen bloggers say that writing is essential to later success in life (53%)

Literature Review

Miles Berry

Growing up digitalDon TapscoC, 1998

Contrast between N‐Geners and Baby‐boomers

Contrast between TV and the Net

The Net:

•AcIve•Raises Intelligence•DemocraIc

•Community building

“Using the new technology is as natural as breathing”

The Digital DisconnectLevin & Arefah, 2002

A substanIal disconnect between how students use the Internet for school and how they use the Internet during the school day

Reasons:

•Administrators

•VariaIon in teaching policies•Uninspiring assignments

Barriers

•Quality of access•Filtering•InequaliIes of home access

Pupils’ home use of computersValenIne, Marsh and Pafe, 2006 

• High level of access

• EducaIonal opportuniIes outside school are beneficial

• Children value the freedom they have at home

• Extensive use of communicaIon

Their SpaceGreen and Hannon, DEMOS, 2007

• Building relaIonships

• CreaIng content

• EssenIal skills

– CreaIvity

– CommunicaIon

– CollaboraIon

• User types:

– Digital pioneers

– CreaIve producers

– Everyday communicators

– InformaIon gatherers

Beyond TechnologyDavid Buckingham, 2007

The new digital divide:

“Home uses were oken extensive, diverse and open‐ended, school oken posed restricIons on students’ autonomous access and use”

Learners and Technology: 7‐11Cranmer, PoCer, Selwyn, 2008

• “Use of computer games, digital cameras, and making pictures were all more prevalent in the home”

• RelaIvely liCle creaIve or collaboraIve use of the net, either at school or home

• Good awareness of e‐safety issues

Safer Children in a Digital WorldByron Review, 2008

• OpportuniIes for fun, learning and development

• GeneraIonal digital divide and risk averse culture

• Children are sIll developing criIcal skills

• Empowering children to keep themselves safe

Digital Media and Learning IniIaIveMacArthur FoundaIon, 2008

• GeneraIon gap in perceived value of online acIvity

• Learning social and technical skills

• Peer learning

• Most aren’t making the most of the opportuniIes

• Hanging Out

• Messing Around

• Geeking Out

Social Networking Survey

Terry Freedman

Social networking survey resultsNumber of general social

networks 3

Number of specific social networks 2

Specific %

Video-sharing networks, like YouTube 42%

None 34%

Photo-sharing networks, like Flickr 12%

Music-sharing networks, like iLike 10%

Book-sharing networks, like FictionPress 2%

Other 0%

Social networking survey results

% who blog: 44

Reasons for being online Rank Order

Learn new things 1

Do homework together with friends 2

Play games  3

Social networking survey results

• Number of “friends”: 30

• % who upload photos etc: 61

• % supervised by adult: 24

• % providing email address: 59

Summary of the research

• Young people spend a lot of Ime online: it is part of their life

• They use it for socialising, with people they already know (esp. girls)

• They use it for homework more than recreaIonal acIviIes like games

• They do a lot of mulItasking

What are you learning whilst your teachers aren’t looking…

• edtechuk.net• Live from 26th November to 18th December

• Publicised via • online forums, • discussion lists, • blogs and • twiCer

• google docs spreadsheet form• Demographics• Access to tech• Use of Internet and computers at home

• Filtering• Social networking in school• Comparison between school and home

985 responsesexcluding duplicates and blanks

Access to Technology

Access to Technology

Use of the Internet

Use of the Internet

Use of computers

Use of computers

WriIng (not school related)

Use of social networking

Use of computer games

Social networking at school?

Filtering

Enjoyment

What do teachers know?

Anything else?

• Make school like home? “I don’t think it should be made more like home because you wouldn’t learn very much.” (17 y/o girl; 11 y/o girl). 

• “Unblock access” (many respondents)

• What have you learnt at home? “well i learn new things for videos i see like how to make your computer run faster or part's to make it fast.” (17 y/o boy)

• “Touch typing” (10 y/o boy)

• Favourite acIvity at school? Virtually nobody said PowerPoint! Designing, and making or creaIng things featured heavily.

• Favourite acIvity at home? “Making videos, making music and photo booth” (9 y/o boy)

A few case studies…

Adrienne Blaser, 13

• loads of friends…

• … all over the world..

• Reads online

• Uses podcasts to teach self

• Researches on web

Eleanor, 11

My mum taught me people`s email addreses but I taught myself how to  actually email. I just clicked most of the buCons unIl I found the  right one! I also taught myself a lot of diseses as I would love to be  a docter! For this I mostly used the internet. I once also worked out  how to use Google Earth. I`m not a very tecnical so this was a big  leap for me! I simply fiddeld around with the buCons picking the ones  that I thought would do the job and aker just half an hour I found my  house! I don`t actuelly no why i kept at it‐ probably wanted to learn  something new as usual!

ImplicaIons

Primary curriculum

• Learning through play

• Digital show and tell

• MeeIng children where they are, moving them on– From communicaIon to collaboraIon

– From consumers to creators

• Rose Review: KS3 ICT by the end of KS2?

• Office skills?

Digital divide

• Phones!

• Home access scheme– Broadband

– Laptop with “relevant” sokware

– Support for internet safety – filtering?

– “embedding improved safety features”

• Cultural divides

CPD

• Net‐Gen Teachers

• Teachmeet

• PLNs

• EdTechRoundup

• TES Forums

• Filtering– Blogger, TwiCer, YouTube etc.

Secondary Curriculum

• Blogging and wriIng• CiIzenship• Providing opportuniIes• AccreditaIon• Diploma and New curriculum• PLTS:

– independent enquirers – creaIve thinkers – reflecIve learners – team workers – self‐managers – effecIve parIcipators 

CollaboraIon

“Wikispaces is a great way to communicate with people from all over the world. You can send emails, make web pages, work on projects, the possibiliIes are endless! You can communicate with each other and do projects and write things to help people and solve problems in the world. One thing I learned is that when you work hard, as a group or alone, trying to solve something it comes out as a big success.”

Every Child MaCers

• PosiIve contribuIon

• Healthy

• Safety (“Mission Impossible”?)

• Enjoy and achieve

• Economic 

Safety

• Filtering: hCp://flatclassroomproject.ning.com/video/8amission‐impossible 

• No “eyes on the street” (hCp://terry‐freedman.org.uk/artman/publish/eyes_on_the_street.php)

• Parental/family supervision• Research skills:

“It takes a teenager 1/20 of a second to determine whether a web page is worth reading.” 

• Uploading stuff about self• Legal issues, eg ©• Economic issues, eg ©

School design: some ideas (1)

• More areas given over to creaIng stuff rather than just receiving it

• Online repository of videos etc, some of which student‐created

• Own page on school VLE, like Facebook page• NOT banning phones or iPods…• … Designing spaces to accommodate them

School design: some ideas (2)From the University of Nottingham:

ContacIng us

BCS

www.bcs.org

01793 417567 

Miles Berry

milesberry.net

twiCer.com/mberry

mberry@bcs.org

Terry Freedman

www.icIneducaIon.org

twiCer.com/terryfreedman

terry@icIneducaIon.org