Paper Mark Book?

February 6, 2007

After going back to a paper planner after trying an excel planner, I’m also tempted to go back to a paper mark book, for the simple reason of being able to take it round the class with me. At the moment I print of a list of names write the marks down then I have the task of entering that into the markbook later (or not) as another piece of admin that just bogs me down.

There are other advantages (or disadvantages): I think I’m less likely to forget my book especially if its in the same book as my planner whereas my memory stick lives down at my feet in the machine on the floor (I have made a speciality of forgeting it on Friday night which complicates planning). Back up once a month by photocopying (just slightly more complicated than the stick)

The only thing is my penmanship on such documents is not accurate and mistakes could be costly.


No Comment – Sorry Mr G

November 13, 2006

I heard that Mr G was complaining that comments were closed on my blog. That was not intentional. It was a previous anti spam method that kept them closed by default – then I have to manually open them. I just forget this time. I might change that value now as the spam filter seams to work well.


Fun with scissors and glue: Year 7 books

November 8, 2006

At St W’s KS3 children stuck their printed work into A4 books. When I first saw this I thought it was rubbish, but I came round, the linear order of a book coupled with the stickyness of glue makes it a good way of seeing what work is there and what is missing. In fact at this school I asked for books for my year 7′s.

They have been sitting at the front of the room waiting for me to give them out for a few weeks. I am going to bite the bullet tomorrow and have “fun” (hmm) with scissors and glue.


Going back to paper

November 6, 2006

I’m almost ready to go back to a bound teacher’s planner. I’ve been relying on an Excel based planner/scheduler. One of the reasons is that my memory stick doesn’t work in a few rooms so I loose access to Excel. The other is that I don’t evaluate as freely (the next teacher is coming in and rushing me off the machine).

I miss having a single book where I write everything down that needs to be rememebered. The excel planner doesn’t fullfill that need. What it is good at though is giving an overview of what was/willl be taught for each class. I’ll probably end up maintaining 2 systems for a bit (suck it and see) bummer.

I wrote about this before a the begining of term.

My school Planner has already fallen to bits, despite me hardly using it. Anyway with 3 days on one page its not enough paper for me.


Moodle for DIDA

November 6, 2006

I’m assessing our AIDA taught coursework for Y10 and I’m up to my eyes in plastic wallets of kid’s printed work and typing grades into Excel. Surely thats where Moodle can help us, get it submitted electronically, kind of a half way house towards them creating there own portfolio.

Marking on Moodle is a bit slow, but hey at this stage its enough to know that the work has been submitted or not. Also, the grade book and csv export is adequate but could do with refining. Hopefully there will be improvements in the next upgrade (we haven’t upgraded to 1.6 yet).


How to teach Modelling?

September 4, 2006

I’ve got to write a scheme of work for Y8 modelling. I’ve been thinking about interesting/authentic contexts.

Luke (HoD) doesn’t like the Standard Teaching Unit (8.4) which examines mobile phone tariffs. I never taught this unit but I’ve looked at it before. I presume that while it might be interesting for the kids to analyse their expenditure on mobile phones (even if their parents are paying) there are so many different tariff structures on the market that comparing like with like is very difficult. At least that was my experience the last time I bought a phone & tariff. So therefore the analysis has to be too simplified. And this I think is the problem, by simplifying it to abstract or theoretical analysis you loose the authenticity for which you choose the context in the first place.

Profit and Loss or (Cash Flow) is an obvious context, but they already are doing the school disco in Year 7 (STU 7.4) and will be doing either the Theatre ticketing system (9.3) or something for their Mini Enterprise businesses in Year 9, so I thought that we might give them a break. And lets face it getting them to organise next year’s Glastonbury involves making up data and scenarios outside their actual experience.

[I might check with MfL because I think their might be a trip to Germany happening, they might need the budget doing - but how many of the kids will this involve?]

Eating (healthy or not) is an option. (Often with profit and loss included) I’ve come across Pizza toppings, counting calories of sandwiches or working out what a ‘good’ breakfast is. This fits nicely with PHSE. I’m sure there will be a number of departments using the healthy eating topic this year – how can I find out? Fitness data would be interesting, I wrote briefly about datalogging healthy kids last year.

There’s a really nice example of a piece of science work on resistance of wires, gathering data by doing an experiment and then plotting a line of best fit on Teach-ICT.com. But I already asked science (Doc) and they don’t do that experiment nor could they think of another suitable one.

Traffic surveys, braking distances and seat belts are other contexts I’ve seen. And my friend Kira did a nice Y7 spreadsheet where the kids counted the colour of Smarties in a packet shared their results with other groups and worked out averages. With some good weighing scales (science help needed again) that would extend to Year 8 and opens up a lot of possibilities for discussing the use of ICT in the real world.

I came up with an idea to survey how you got to school and how you went on holiday and then you have to work out how far you travel (google maps) and then factor in carbon dioxide emissions per mile for different modes of transport. (But I’m finding it hard to do myself).

Mr Field (famous in net savvy UK ICT teaching circles) suggested giving the kids a choice of the context.

How about putting them in charge of the activity? Give them a list of potential ideas, then ask for their thoughts and additional suggestions…. Then construct the activity directly around them

This sounds great, but I think my colleagues in the department are expecting a little more structure. We are a department with lots of non ICT specialist teachers (opportunities for cross curricular activities??) and at the moment we need to make sure everyone is singing from the same hymn sheet

I’d love to use project based learning and try and generate different contexts for different kids but the reality of working in a department where they are trying to tighten things rather than loosen them means that exercise based tasks are easier to swallow.

hmmm.


Skype for Schools

December 31, 2004

Kids can use Skype to practice Foreign Languages for free in the class room. Simple. Cool

Unbound Spiral: Skype for Schools


An ode to iPod – Steve Gillmoor

November 11, 2004

I’ve spent the last couple of days looking into, or more like listening into, Podcasting; more on that later. However here is a really nice article on the iPod from Steve Gillmoor which has a few gems on design philosophy

“The dominant bottleneck in this digital communications fabric is battery life. By scoping the iPod to handle audio but not video, to docking instead of transmitting, to caching but not computing, the device’s designers match its use cases to maximum utility. In each case, the device turns a liability (battery life) into an asset (shifting information to a time and place where it can be consumed most efficiently.)

Audio blogs have been around for a while but PodCasting automates the tedious process of downloading to you machine and uploading it to your MP3 player (iPod or not).

An ode to iPod


Gmail please host my domain mail !

November 9, 2004

You could take this as a plea, but also a prediction. Gmail want us to read email on their site because we might click on one of their text ads and give them revenue. So why don’t they let me host my mail from all the pop accounts that I have? Then I don’t have to check mail in outlook AND Gmail. I don’t just mean pulling my pop3 mail into gmail, I need to be able to send from through that account as well.

In fact email is in need of a big shake up. Users need to consolidate mail onto a single “Point” for want of a better word and be able to access it through which ever device/client they want. You could say point of presence but I don’t want to confuse that with the POP3 protocol. IMAP perhaps fits the bill. I heard about IMAP years ago but no one has yet convinced me to use it – I am about to try IMAP and have been researching it but I think most of the things I want IMAP for would be served by using GMail as my exclusive client, cos I get extra searchable repository benefits.

I’ve noticed that I send stuff from my POP3 accounts to my GMail account so that it will be safe and searchable. Searching through Outlook I do as a last resort – its painful: slow and inaccurate and I also have the responsibility of backing it up – and I have lost things when loosing/changing machines and email clients.

Another thing I’ve started doing is to sending things to my GMail to see what ads or related pages it brings up. For example today I was researching IMAP providers, so I sent a mail with fusemail.com and fastmail.fm and GMail bought me up a whole load of competitors. I could have copied the list into the normal google seach box, but at the same time I am archiving and saving my search…

After I do get to point my mx record at GMail, I would then probably want IMAP access too. I might need asynchronous access on a laptop, or from a light client on a phone – but this is hypothetical as my laptop went walkabout, then my smart phone went into a glass of wine and I’m really enjoying the small, bouncable, non crashing and above all SIMPLE replacement. I normally can get to a web browser.


Napsterization

November 9, 2004

Garbage Company sue hiphop artist for for trademark violation This story is a classic example of the friction that takes place when history experiences a paradigm shift. The shift is from a world where you have intellectual property rights to a world where you don’t.

I believe that in 50 years time we will look back and wonder how anyone ever tried to protect intellectual property, seeing that it is technically practically impossible to stop others copying your stuff. So get used to it and work out how to change your business model. Normally this will mean a move away from sale of products towards provision of service. It might also involve the creation of a community to develop a product rather than simply creating the product itself.


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