The community will lead – from Stephen Heppell

The opportunity to hear Stephen Heppell again in a recent Keynote session was a winner for me (albeit via video)! He has long been a leader of learning, inspiring innovators the world over (including my own Director Greg Whitby) to move forward in response to the urgent needs of 21st century learning. I have had the pleasure of seeing Stephen ‘live’ for a conference Keynote for the International Association of School Librarianship in HongKong back in 2005. A rare treat for those of us from Australia.

Stephen mentions his mobile phone in this Scottish keynote. I remember spending a pleasant evening at the same IASL conference dinner with him….. and I remember a guy full of fun, and down-to-earth enthusiasm. Stephen used his mobile phone to help me do quick calculations during a fund raising auction at the conference dinner, and generally spent heaps of time talking with us about what he can do and what he will be able to do in the future with his phone! I love listening to Stephen 🙂

Ewan McIntosh alerted us to the keynotes for the Scottish Learning Festival which have been made available now in a version that will play on your video iPod or MP4 player.

It’s a great way to revisit the rich resource that each keynote address provides. You can right-click (or ctrl-click on a Mac) each of the links below to download these to your computer, and drag them to your iPod or into iTunes:Three of them are of particular interest to me:

but I want to focus on the last one for now.

Stephen Heppell explores the consequences of technology and change and reiterates that learning will get better and better, with a transparency in understanding, and with downsizing of schools and schooling. He talks of small schools at the end of each road addressing the personalized learning of students – genuinely responding to what I heard about ‘individuation’ from Yoram Harpaz.

He explains that the future is ‘massively about teamwork’ and collaboration. It is about stuff that is free, and people reporting, and huge amounts of real-time data helping us make judgments about what we should do and what we shouldn’t do. He asks ‘where are we with real-time data’? What are we doing with our mobile phones? etc. What we need is to allow pupil-centric approaches to learning to take over – technology empowering this all the way.

For Stephen ‘identity’ and ‘time’ are critical. Real time use of technology is extraordinary and evolving in amazing ways. In this context, doing the job of teaching is spectacularly complex and getting harder every day.One thing that is clear is that Stephen has moved well beyond the notion of system schooling, redesigning schooling, top-down structure etc. He talks about a learning world built from the bottom up.We’re a long way off from what we need – or are we?

Let Stephen explain.

Photo: School Bell
  • YouTube Australia

    Lots of partying, lots of stupid stuff, lots of weird videos about the launch . but hey! the future just keeps rolling on…’cause we now have YouTube Australia, launched on October 23.

    For locally generated and shared videos, this is claimed to help us with our viewing speed – because we won’t have to channel back through the small pipe to the US.

    True? I don’t know. It will be interesting to see how this goes. I just wish we didn’t have such poor bandwith in Australia.

    How will they connect the countries together – like eBay? Yes, you can choose from the dropdown menu to choose the country to search. And yes, you can do a global search too.

    How much stuff is there being stored on all those video servers – can you believe it? Just in time to fill our ipods with more stuff…..

    Photo: iPod 3rd Generation

    Write your thoughts….or stream that news!!!

    I’ve been playing around with the possibilities offered by tools such as Tumblr. I have to say, I think this little application rocks!

    Yes, I know that some people are using it very effectively as their ‘cut down’ blog, others are using it for creating a compilation of information sources through the power of RSS. Both good and very handy.

    But what about the option of using this as a blogging tools for kids?

    It’s quick, easy to use, and possibly a better starting point for teachers new to the blogging game and great to use for individual projects or themes.

    Obviously this is not as expansive a tool as regular blog platforms – but a cool tool nonetheless. I set up my test at Yellow Submarine. First of all I tested posts, links, images and videos, then set up an RSS feed of my delicious links which stream very nicely into Tumblr.

    Kids can blog really easily with Tumblr, making it ideal for primary age students. And imagine the value of packaging information for students or staff this way for the library, or for anything really. And what a neat way to share information being complied in your delicious links. We should be talking more about the possibilities of this clever little blog tool.

    Tumblr has text, photo, quote, link, chat and video tools. I really like the flexibility of being able to change the name AND url of your Tumblr blog too! Just a few templates to choose from – but for the more experienced, you can custom design your own if you are used to fiddling with the template as we had to do in the original blogger version.

    For anyone thinking of using Tumblr as a way of providing a news feed or updates from the web, you’ll love the “share with Tumblr” widget that you can install on you browser nav bar, or equivalent dashboard widget for your mac. Find something interesting or fun – just hit the button, and quickly send the post to your Tumblr blog. That’s just what I did a couple of seconds ago on my test Tumblr blog Yellow Submarine – and it took less than 30 seconds!

    Now here’s a cool solution for ‘time-poor’ teachers. Well worth experimenting with. Don’t ever say you haven’t got time to run a blog now 🙂

    Photo: Wee Waterfuls

    Information [R]evolution

    This (rather fuzzy) video explores the changes in the way we find, store, create, critique, and share information. This video was created as a conversation starter, and works especially well when brainstorming with people about the near future and the skills needed in order to harness, evaluate, and create information effectively.

    Excellent companion piece to the Machine is Us/ing Us.

  • A [r]evolution in student’s learning needs

    Here is a short video summarizing some of the most important characteristics of students today – how they learn, what they need to learn, their goals, hopes, dreams, what their lives will be like, and what kinds of changes they will experience in their lifetime.

    Created by Michael Wesch in collaboration with 200 students at Kansas State University.

    Important things in this to consider for our school students too!

  • “Know How” focus on Flickr

    Don’t usually do this, but I would like to draw your attention to an article in the November issue of Netguide (Australia), which has an excellent ‘how to’ article “Share photos online with Flickr“.

    Very comprehensive, very user friendly guide – great for teachers new to the tool who will easily see the educational connection after reading this clear article.

    Links Flickr to blogging, which is an extra bonus compared to the usual ‘do this and then do that’ kind of guide.

    By the way, Netguide is quite inexpensive to subscribe to – a good recommended read if you are not a ‘techie’ but want to stay in touch with technology!

    More information on Flickr at:

    http://del.icio.us/heyjude/flickr

    http://judyoconnell.wordpress.com/tools/ 

    School leadership – the six secrets of success

    Michael Fullan provided us with pretty important secrets for leadership 🙂

    1. Love your employees as well as your customers – this is essential for productivity.
    2. Connect peers with purpose – this is how you give coherence and cohesiveness – We need direction plus flexibility from the centre. The secret glue of cohesion is peer interaction.
    3. Bullying backfires – identifying ineffectiveness without being punitive or pejorative in your actions.
    4. Learning is the work – be careful – PD is a good way to avoid change! It’s about professional learning not professional development. We shouldn’t learn outside and apply it. It’s the difference between prescription and precision. It doesn’t work to simply make teachers autonomous. Precision means that some things are non-negotiable – and there is no conflict between precision and creativity. It’s the way you gravitate to those things that we know are effective.
    5. Transparency rules – its about results and its about practice.
    6. Systems Learning – using your knowledge while doubting what you know. Using humility while you move forward.

    Photo: Success
  • Digital kids – learning their own way

    Michael Furdyk hit the mark, during the last morning keynote presentation at the ACEL/ASCD conference.

    Here we had (at last!) a clear articulation of the new expectations that are driving the learning characteristics of our students: multiprocessing; multimedia literacy; discovery-based learning; bias towards action; staying connected; zero tolerance for delays; consumer/creator blurring; social networking.

    Michael was supported by his own school to take time off during his school schedule to work on his own company! Would you do this?

    The opportunity for creativity and innovation was central to Michael’s life, starting right there at school. We need to allow students to grab opportunities, connect them with organisations in all fields that will support their keen need to explore and learn – it’s about a positive supportive learning community!

    Michael’s company was instrumental in creating ‘social networking for social good’ at Taking iTGlobal- Inspire, Involve, Inform, providing a window into another world. Using the familiarity of social networking, this site helps students develop an awareness and understanding of global issues and ‘take action’ through projects and collaboration. Explore this – it’s brilliant!

    Photo: Window into another world

    New imagery for schools and schooling

    I am fortunate to be attending the ACEL/ASCD conference in Sydney where I have the good fortune to be able to hear in person from some of the key thinkers in education from around the world.

    I wish I had the time to share the inspiration – but I am busy helping with podcasting and interviews (follow up chats) for ACEL.

    It would be hard to pin down my favourite presentation or workshop. How can we make choices when we are hearing from so many.

    A highlight of day two was a very reflective talk from Peter Senge. He used narrative as a way to help us reflect on the changing shape. You know, it’s not about education any more – its about changing society, and changing the way we support our young people to grow in knowledge, competence, understanding and responsibility for a safe and viable future world.

    John Connell followed with an excellent keynote presentation, which also captured the pervasive media world of our students, and the imperative that we allow creativity to drive change and development. Drop over to John’s highlights of the conference, to see how vital the discussion at this conference really has been.

    The final sessions of the day were a particularly fine opportunity to hear Andy Hargreaves and Michael Fullan debate the future directions in effective school development – where we maximize the capacity of teachers and leaders to create relevant and authentic learning for each of our students.

    A comment at the end from Andy reminded me of one thing that was of interest to me at this conference. Andy reminded us that we don’t know just how the technological and social networking dimensions of our student’s online immersive lives will influence the shape of the education delivery in the coming years.

    Lets not lose sight of this, inbetween the new school structures that we are building. It seems that with the exception of Greg Whitby, John Connell and Westley Field, we have inadequate coverage of Web 2.0 as platform, of social networking, of creativity in the real world of our students.

    I hope that those in senior educational roles do not lose sight of this while they are discussing assessment, ‘effect size’ measures, curriculum mapping management styles, leading learning etc.

    Overall a great conference – yet a starting point only for re-shaping schooling for 21st century learning.

    Lets not forget that that some of the social networking tools that are driving our student’s experiences were developed by young people – out of school, and as an aside to the learning that education seems to be involved with. Lets meet online in these spaces for the next ACEL conference 🙂

    Photo: Valley between buildings.

    Participatory networking – an eye on Twitter and Jottit!

    I’ve enjoyed my week at the NavCon2K7 conference, where I am pleased to see that we some workshops showing people how to engage in participatory networking – cool tools for cool news and professional interactions.

    It was a real buzz to find that Heyjude was being used as part of a demonstration workshop about setting up iGoogle. So nice to meet people who read and enjoy this blog, or share in the Heyjude del.icio.us network. It was great that Leigh showed folks how to get into Facebook – because it has already expanded the conversation spaces amongst my colleagues.

    But it’s what I learned from Lenva that excited me – a new strategy for ‘working’ a conference to share and collaborate! Here’s the story……

    Amongst other things, I used Twitter to tell my professional network a bit about what was going on at the conference. Because I mentioned Twitter in question time (posing a question to Leigh from the twitterati, as well as from myself) Lenva discovered me and we became ‘friends’.

    Lenva and I both posted links and comments to Twitter while Adam Lefstein was presenting his Keynote address. Lenva Shearing is a Principal who passionate about learning. Some of Lenva’s school team were attending the Ulearn conference in NewZealand at the same time – so the twitter conversation between them was showing up in my Twitter feed. She was actually participating in what was happening in NZ, while they were participating in what was happening in Sydney…….and I was becoming a bit of an observer. 🙂

    But here’s the best tip of all. Lenva and other colleagues were taking notes (as lots of us were). The difference? Forget scribbling with a pen, writing a word document, or composing a blog post. Their notes were immediately shareable with each other via twitter or their blogs using Jottit.

    Check out Lenva Shearing and her notes from Adam Lefstein and others (which she posted up on Twitter almost as soon as sessions were over) and Allanah’s Note page which she was using to share her Ulearn conference experiences. Ewan McIntosh and Leigh Blackhall would be proud of them all! Right? Now if only I had been at the Ulearn conference amongst such a buzz.

    As for Lenva? – what a fantastic Principal – leading, doing, and engaging everyone – participatory networking bringing life to 21st century rhetoric.

    Image: Mon Oeil