What can you do to prevent your training materials being used to run a course -- without your permission or involvement, much less any compensation? This 13 part series suggests a few ideas.
Read MoreThe Great Training Robbery, Part 3 of 13
What can you do to prevent your training materials being used to run a course -- without your permission or involvement, much less any compensation? This 13 part series suggests a few ideas.
Read MoreThe Great Training Robbery, Part 2 of 13
What can you do to prevent your training materials being used to run a course -- without your permission or involvement, much less any compensation? This 13 part series suggests a few ideas.
Read MoreThe Great Training Robbery, Part 1 of 13
What can you do to prevent your training materials being used to run a course -- without your permission or involvement, much less any compensation? This 13 part series suggests a few ideas.
Read MoreFake news, the great training robbery and a bunch of other stuff
The next issue of the Digital Education will soon be out. Here's a brief guide to what's in it.
Read MoreTake part in an education research survey
Professor Sarah Younie and her colleagues are undertaking research about, er, research. Do you find educational research useful in your teaching? What would make it more useful? Please take part in a brief survey that is looking into questions like these.
Read MoreReview of FotoJet
Fotojet is an online design application. Here's what I thought of it.
Read MoreA rubric for assessment? What a joke!
A lighthearted look at rubrics as a form of assessment.
Read MoreComputing Curriculum Conundrum: an analogy
A comic strip that, for me at least, encapsulates what has befallen the Computing curriculum in England.
Read MorePhoto by Jills, issued on a CC0 licence.
The Computing curriculum in England: A timeline of hopes and experience
Has the Computing Programme of Study been an unequivocal success? In my article It Wasn’t Me Wot Done It, Sir! The Depressing State Of Computing As A Subject, I said that many students were voting against Computing qualifications with their feet, and also that girls were under-represented. Moreover, I stated that the situation was entirely predictable (many of us indeed had predicted it).
In this article I set out what I see as the key milestones in the journey to where we are now. I have included quotes from the sources, and also given the source in each case so that you can check out the sources yourself.
Read MoreDroning on: Review of Drones in Education
What a fascinating idea: using drones as part of the curriculum. This book tells you much of what you need to know.
Read MoreComing up in Digital Education
The next issue of Digital Education is just about to be published. It includes a chance to get a free book, and a competition. Read on to find out what else is in it.
Read MoreIt wasn’t me wot done it, Sir! The depressing state of Computing as a subject
Here in England, students are voting with their feet: the numbers studying Computing at higher levels are going down. I hate to say "We told you so" but....
It's not as if nobody warned 'them'.
Read MoreMaking the Computing curriculum interesting
The Computing curriculum doesn't have to sound boring and nothing but coding.
Read MoreHow to get the most out of ISTE17 (and other conferences)
Listen to my interview with Vicki Davis about how to get the most out of #iste17 and other conferences -- and grab my book for £0.99/$0.99 or equivalent (plus VAT if applicable) -- a third of its usual price.
Read MoreToday's ed tech to-do list
What's my day looking like so far? Main item on my to-do list: don't die from the heat. My most-looking forward to item? Writing the latest issue of my newsletter.
Read MoreDeciding what ed tech to buy: who ya gonna call?
What does the latest research from Besa tell us about who schools listen to when it comes to ed tech product recommendations?
Read MoreWhere's the ed tech action? Maybe under your nose!
Not everything is a million miles away or up in the cloud, when it comes to education technology.
Read MoreWhy and how to become a teacher researcher
The classroom is a great place to conduct some research. Picture by Jordan Dreyer
In my opinion, every teacher should be a researcher, and I think that especially applies to teachers who have some degree of influence of what education technology is bought and used.
Why?
- It's important to know what's going on in your field. Imagine going to a doctor who last updated his knowledge ten years ago, or even one year ago.
- If you hope to convince the powers-that-be to spend more money on technology, you have to be able to prove that it works, or at least that it's likely to work.
- Research and reflection are good ways to improve one's teaching. The research part helps to avoid the 'echo chamber' situation in which you only know what's going on in your own school.
How?
- Read the research. This is not always accessible, either because of a paywall or because the language is too abstruse and abstract to be acted on quickly. Solutions:
- Check whether or not your status as an alumnus (assuming you have a degree) gives you access to academic journals online.
- Sign up to my newsletter, Digital Education. I often summarise research and review academic books in that, and it's free.
- Join the Association for IT in Education. Disclosure: I'm on their committee. You receive an academic journal called Technology & Pedagogy in Education, and that's worth a lot more than the subscription fee in my opinion.
- Attend conferences. A very accessible one in terms of cost, location, and down-to-earthness is Research Ed.
- Conduct research in your own classroom. You can do this even in a very quick and easy way:
- Know what the problem is you're trying to solve with the technology.
- Keep a note on what went well, what didn't go so well, and why.
- Get the kids' feedback too. I think having kids evaluate the technology is a no-brainer: they're the ones who are going to be using the stuff! I was pleased that John Galloway advocated this in a discussion hosted by the Guardian Teacher Network recently too.
- Read blogs. Some good ones to start with (apart from mine!) are:
- Plan B by Donald Clark
- EdTech Now, by Crispin Weston
- Learning with E's, by Steve Wheeler
Finally, do share your research and findings, whether from your own research or reading, with other people. If you haven't already done so, start a blog. Or share on Twitter or Facebook.
You might like my article, Education Technology research, and how it's reported
In case you became sidetracked earlier, here's the sign-up form for my newsletter, Digital Education:
Photo by Abel Tan Jun Yang CC0
8 conferences in the latest issue of Digital Education -- and a 50% discount!
8 conferences, and a whopping half price offer. What's not to like?
Read More