1 / 28

21C Teachers' competences and the request for new learning resources Leo Højsholt-Poulsen UNI • C The Danish IT Centr

21C Teachers' competences and the request for new learning resources Leo Højsholt-Poulsen UNI • C The Danish IT Centre for Education and Research Denmark. Pedagogical ICT competences and learning resources.

bette
Download Presentation

21C Teachers' competences and the request for new learning resources Leo Højsholt-Poulsen UNI • C The Danish IT Centr

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 21C Teachers' competences and the request for new learning resourcesLeo Højsholt-PoulsenUNI•C The Danish IT Centre for Education and ResearchDenmark

  2. Pedagogical ICT competences and learning resources • 21C teachers must have the competencesto use ICT and digital learning resources in education • National, and several European and international strategies for the professional development of teachers (on ICT) • It all comes down to simple questions: • What do we want the teachers to learn? • How do they learn this? • How do we evaluate/assess if they have learned what they are supposed to? Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

  3. International Society for Technology in Education National Educational Technology Standards(NETS) • ISTE NETS for Teachers (NETS•T) • ISTE NETS for Students (NETS•S) • See cnets.iste.org Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

  4. NETS for Teachers Curriculum and Content Area Standards Performance indicators • Technology operations and conceptsTeachers demonstrate a sound understanding of technology operations and concepts. • Planning and designing learning environments and experiencesTeachers plan and design effective learning environments and experiences supported by technology. • Teaching, learning, and the curriculumTeachers implement curriculum plans, that include methods and strategies for applying technology to maximize student learning. • Assessment and evaluationTeachers apply technology to facilitate a variety of effective assessment and evaluation strategies. • Productivity and professional practiceTeachers use technology to enhance their productivity and professional practice. • Social, ethical, legal, and human issuesTeachers understand the social, ethical, legal, and human issues surrounding the use of technology in PK-12 schools and apply those principles in practice. Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

  5. The Pedagogical ICT Licence • Basic ICT skills • Insight into the impact of ICT on • the role of teachers and students • the pedagogical and organizational development of the school • on the development of the subjects • Insight into and experience with team-based work in a net-based learning environment. Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

  6. Main areas and competencies, 1 Basic ICT skills • Use the computer as a personal tool, for individual work, for preparation and learning • Use different networks, e.g. local area network, e-conferences, intranet or the like Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

  7. Main areas and competencies, 2 Research and collaboration competencies with ICT • Collect, evaluate, summarize, put into perspective and present information with ICT • Work systematically and process-oriented in electronic learning environments • Master different methods of work with ICT Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

  8. Main areas and competencies, 3 Pedagogical and didactic ICT competencies • Plan, complete and evaluate ICT-integrated training • Reflect on learning processes with ICT • Relate to the development of a school with regard to application of ICT Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

  9. EPICT – European Pedagogical ICT Licence® A European standard that • Ensures adequate ICT-integration - at all levels across all subjects • Is economically feasible, a sustainable model • Of even and high quality • Is distributed across the country via distributed course organization • Applies E-learning, blended approach Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

  10. Modern ICT and media teacher training • ICT always with a pedagogical rationale • ICT, Internet and media as means, method and topic • use ICT as a personal tool and apply ICT pedagogically in education • Process and product • School based (local collaboration) • Teacher teams (peer learning) • Close and parallel to daily practice, concrete and relevant assignments • Keywords: school development, process and teamwork Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

  11. The Pedagogical ICT Licence EPICT – European Pedagogical ICT Licence® • Denmark, Norway, Hungary, Greece, Italy, Iceland, UK, Ireland, Austria (pilots/scaled) APICT – African Pedagogical ICT Licence • Ghana, Uganda, Cameroon – pilots AusiPICT – Australian Pedagogical ICT Licence • Tasmania, pilot • Controlled internationally by the EPICT Group (UNI•C is Secretariat) • Read more at EPICT.EU Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

  12. ”Impact of ICT on teaching and learning processes” • A number of independent studies: It works! • Most recent study in the Nordic countriesRamboll Management, May 2006E-learning Nordic 2006- Impact of ICT on education8000 respondents from Sweden, Norway, Finland and Denmark • ”ICT generally has a positive impact on the teaching and learning situation. • However, some people expected that ICT could in some ways revolutionise the teaching and learning processes at school, and compared with this view, the impact must be seen as more limited.” Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

  13. Digital learning resources • MANY titles • FEW users The learning ressourceof the 21 Century: Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

  14. “Types of software for learning” (LHP 1997) Standard software Presentations tools Laboratory software Information software Search tools Educational (subject oriented) software Big programs (courseware) Software with books and TV (and vice versa) Totally integrated software: TV/computer My software Virtual learning environments – Learning management systems ? Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

  15. A new digital learning resource should Include content • to help beginners Be open • to allow for new content Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

  16. Defining a learning resource • Peder Skyum-Nielsen, University of Southern Denmark has given 13 questions often used in the description of learning resources: • ” Who says [or understands] what to [from] whom with which intention, in which medium and dependent on which conditions, at what time and place and under the influence of which teacher persona and teaching methods and controlled by which formal regulations, and with which selection and use of concepts, with which verbal and textual practice, with which para- and non-verbal communications … and with what overall effect? ” Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

  17. “Digital learning resources as systemic innovation” Any digital resource that is actually used by teachers and learners for the purpose of learning System-wide impact New ideas that work (A UK Cabinet Office paper) Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

  18. “Digital learning resources as systemic innovation” New study by • OECD’s Centre for Educational Research and Innovation, CERI • First phase: Nordic countries and Switzerland Case studies – which DLRs have documented systemic impact? • National educational portals • Other suggestions from Denmark: • Learning resources not designed for learning • Subscriptions to digital learning resources • Unconventional learning resources • Government policies and initiatives • User-driven content and exchange (e.g. lektion.se) • VLE – LMS ? • Final report and conference late 2008 Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

  19. Digital learning resources – Public vs. Private Learning resources for schools are paid by ‘public’ money Numerous national support programmes. Public support to digital learning resources • To providers? • To end-users? In some countries Government provides a free set of digital learning resources, e.g.: • Korea ( - www.edunet4u.net) • Hungary ( - sdt.sulinet.hu) Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

  20. Repositories help finding the learning resources Google is not enough • Repositories address the missing knowledge of users about opportunities and resources(“where are the learning resources”)from content providers (“where are the users”) • Repositories are key disseminators of information of available learning resources. • In repositories users search or browse for relevant resources (text books, websites, digital learning objects etc.) among the vast supply on the market. Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

  21. Repository functionality overview External bases with collections and materials Repository Teachers, librarians, students etc.: Search, browse, download (upload, comment) Producers: Register, update, upload, search, read statistics on usage Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

  22. What is an educational repository?- the Danish situation illustrates the broad concept of educational repositories • The national repository of Danish learning resources • Materialeplatformen • 20.000 learning resources of all types (books – digital media – museum exhibits etc.) • from professional publishers to teachers • Learning resources from Danish museums and science centres • E-Museum • The national link repository • Fagenes Infoguide • 10.000 links to websites for education • categorized by type of school and subject • evaluated by experienced teachers • There are many different types of educational repositories in various countries Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

  23. EdReNe – Educational Repositories Network • EdReNe brings together members from • web-based repositories of learning resources with • content owners and • other stakeholders within education • The members share, develop and documentstrategies, experiences, practices, solutions, advice, procedures etc. on the organisation, structuring and functionality of repositories. • The overall goal is to improve the provision of and access to learning resources. Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

  24. UNI•C (Denmark) EUN – European Schoolnet (Europe) EENET - European Expert's Network for Education and Technology(Europe) Menon Network (Europe) EDEN - European Distance and E-Learning Network(Europe) FWU - Institut für Film und Bild in Wissenschaft und Unterricht (Germany) EAPC - Public Administration School of Catalunya (Spain) TLF - Tiger Leap Foundation (Estonia) UNI-LJ-FMF, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, Uni. of Ljubljana (Slovenia) ITC - Centre of IT in Education (Lithuania) MSU - The Swedish National Agency for School Improvement (Sweden) ENIS Austria (Austria) NCTE –National Centre for Technology in Education (Ireland) Kennisnet – Sticting Kennisnet Ict op School (The Netherlands) Becta - British Educational Communications and Technology Agency (UK) CNDP - Centre National de Documentation Pédagogique (France) Giunti Interactive Labs (Italy) BFU- Brancheforeningen for undervisningsmidler (Denmark) bit media eLearning solutions (Austria) AIE - Associazione Italiana Editori (Italy) EduLearn (Portugal) sDae - Sociedad Digital De Autores Y Esitores (Spain) IML - Umeå University Department of Interactive Media and Learning (Sweden) Associated members Utdanning.no (Norway) Utdanningsdirektoratet (Norway) VETAMIX (Finland) Lektion.se (Sweden) EdReNe – thematic network of central actors Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

  25. EdReNe arranges (2007 – 2009) 4 strategic seminars • where decision makers meet and exchange information – feedback from expert workshops will be presented, discussed and condensated 10 expert workshops • for expert level representatives and invited external experts • specific aspects of repository “life” will be discussed • 4 sub-themes: • Repositories and resources, general level • Standards and interoperability • Engagement of producers and users, operational level • Rights issues Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

  26. A basic list of issues sets the agenda • How do you establish a repository of learning resources together with producers and users • Everyday organisation and management of a repository • Optimising number of titles and users • Quality frameworks and criteria • Networking repositories • Functionalities and features of a repository • Pedagogical metadata and links to curriculum • Management of IPR screening and clearance • Role of repositories in the new web environment Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

  27. Next workshop in First series of expert workshopsWS 3.1 - Issues that top the agenda Repositories and resources, general level - First workshop Brussels, Belgium, 4 – 5 December 2007 • Quality assurance strategies (editorial policies, technical quality assurance) • Connecting and cooperating with existing repositories • What are the additional benefits of repositories in a Google world • Identifying successful policy actions (government support, public-private partnerships) • Metadata only or content repository? Pros and cons of hosting content • Sustainability of a repository in the long term • Barriers to cooperation and interoperability = Language? Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

  28. Do you wish to join EdReNe? • EdReNe invites all stakeholders interested in sharing experiences and opinions on repositories of learning resources to join the network as associated members. • An associate member participatesin the work and events as any other member. • Consult www.edrene.org • Contact Tommy.Byskov.Lund@uni-c.dk or Leo.Hojsholt-Poulsen@uni-c.dk The network is co-funded by the European Union, through the eContentplus programme Stockholm 2007 EDEN Open Classroom Conference

More Related