Friday, September 20, 2019

3 Hours of Sweating: Relief to see the back of the exam!

Ubiquitous learning links nicely to the Summer Learning Journey, and helps to reduce the summer slump.  What stood out from this was a notion that we discussed a few weeks earlier… if it’s worth teaching, then it’s worth capturing.  If it’s worth learning, then it’s worth capturing. So reinforces the visible learning, and ubiquitous kaupapa that Manaiakalani stand by.  Rewindable, accessible, equitable.

Image result for ubiquitous


Although rather gutted that this will be the last Digital Fluency Intensive session, I’m so pleased to have the 3 hour exam behind me.  During the 3 hours there were a number of multi-choice questions, as well as drag and drop parts where you had to match to the correct thinking.  Quite an even spread across the G Suite I thought. A couple of bits and pieces with Sheets, creating a filter and sorting data. Some questions and some components you needed to go and organise in your pretend account, which was more or less a matter of following your nose, and parts of the assessment relating to Youtube, fair chunk on Forms, Gmail, Tasks, Calendar, and Slides and Docs of course.


A huge thank you to all of the wonderful participants and facilitators of this Cohort Two DFI.  You have all made it so, so enjoyable. Full of laughs, and lovely times. Can’t thank you enough.
DFI Session 9 - 20.09.2019

Thursday, September 19, 2019

Professional Posting from a Sun Lounger

Bula!  Professional blog posting from the sun lounger I have found out is not my strong suit.  Too many distractions, including a great read... which I can't guarantee this will be.



For DFI week 8, Friday 13th September, I had a crack at the Google Site speed wero.  Not easy.  Just made it so I'm feeling good about pending 3 hour exam.  Plus I hear there'll be snacks.  Can't go wrong with team snacks.  Worked through the sample exam questions, one of which stumped me in terms of how to sort data from descending to ascending which I've done lots of thought was quite simple.  As it happens, after a bit of playing I've figured it out that I indeed meant to select all first, then work through the details like selecting the correct column, and marking if there's a header at all.  Sorted!  Ha.

Some of the DFI content could well have been my favourite, even though I was not there!  Fun fact, two of my all time absolute FAVOURITE famous New Zealanders are John Campbell and Nigel Latta, so empowered was just the missing piece of the puzzle for me, bringing visible, ubiquitous and connected together.  So pleased to see some TVNZ footage presented by these champions had made it to the Empowered slides... on my 'to watch' list certainly.

The digital portraits created through Drawing were AMAZING!  Briar kindly met with me and got me up to speed, showing me some tools I didn't know about... wow!  The potential uses of this Google App seem endless, and here I was thinking Slides was unbeatable.




Friday, September 6, 2019

Snazzy sorting with Sheets + getting fannatical with Forms, DFI Session 7

6th September 2019: Dealing with Data, DFI #7

Great to get back into Mymaps, having attended Gerhard's Toolkit about Geotools last week.  Nice to have another play and see how simple it is to add markers, and lines and little icons too.  I plotted some of the top mountain biking spots around the globe, and played around with importing data from a google sheet.





Had a play at creating my second ever Google Form.  Managed to use a range of different question types, from multi-choice to short answer responses, and now have embedded results below.  Sushi and Sunshine Brewery for the win!


A highlight for me was exploring Sheets.  Have learned some tips and tricks, including freezing a column... super helpful around data time.  Also, double clicking to use the same formula as you'd already programmed into a target cell... what a time saver.








The manaiakalani kaupapa we dived into was CONNECTED, and I have to say it's got to be a fave for me.  Forever stamped as an extroverted people person (which as an aside, I completely dispute), I highly value connecting with others, especially in our highly relational, interpersonal profession.  Definitely heartening to hear Dorothy affirm that there's no replacement for face-to-face interactions.  Sure, technologies help us to connect in times where we otherwise would not be able to.  I agree with Dorothy in that there's no replacement for in-person connections... looking into someone's eyes changes the whole conversation.



On that connected note, as much as I'd love to visit Splash Planet with you all:



Friday, August 30, 2019

Coding in the dark!

If ever I’ve felt like a dinosaur, today is the day.  What is coding?  Imagine I would have given a fairly tragic description prior to today, as we plunged into some challenging learning with Tōnui Collab.  We explored the revamped Digital Technologies Curriculum, which includes examples in action such as coding Makey makey to make sounds from bottle caps, encryption, decryption, video analysis, computer simulation, program robots, using presentation software or creating QR codes...  augmented or virtual reality.  Strewth, it sounds like I’m using another language.  Feeling rather green, to put it kindly.  Coding using Cospaces?  For now I will stick to my neighbour's Sega master-system I used approximately twice when I was eight... or batdown cricket.  I don’t think I’ll be developing or coding the next fandangled video game to go viral, or any grand exciting animation.  What I don’t know about this area of the curriculum, and the tools we used today could fill a warehouse.  So the hunches of inadequacy will be popped to the side, and I’ll come back to all of this another day when my brain is fresh, and try to reduce how much I don’t know, don’t get, don’t understand.

Enjoyed Dave’s piece of visible, a key component on the Manaiakalani kaupapa.  Putting more learning into a visible place, so that learners know where they’re going.  The interactive whiteboards are now in the hands of the learners.

A highlight from today was a collaborative Tangram activity which saw us competing against other teams, and leaning on our computational thinking.  Shannon suggested perhaps our local Menzshed may be able to make some tangrams for us to use in class.   Ooh, also, coding with Briar and Cheryl.  We designed the code to get the blindfolded person to the finish spot.  Well done Briar on your brilliant instructions.  Specific language made it possible to reach the destination with minimum debugging required.  A round of Kahoot helped us to think really carefully about e-Learning, ICT capabilities and Digital Technologies.


Friday, August 23, 2019

Friday 23rd August DFI 5 - Enabling Access

Sharing… from a cup of coffee, to tears.  Sharing is an important part of connecting which has been around since the dawn of time.  How social media impacted the way we share is huge. Many of which were established in 2005.  Youtube followed this… their tag line is BROADCAST YOURSELF. Yet another option for sharing, which may quench that compulsion to share that many of us have.  Manaiakalani work throughout the country to create more opportunities for learners to share with a wider, authentic audience… one of Manaiakalani’s original goals.  Connected learners share. Positive thoughtful Helpful. Traditional modes of sharing are limited. In the digital age, it is unlimited and can been seen and shared anytime, anywhere, any place however with this freedom comes responsibility.  Compulsory audience vs authentic audience… ‘people who choose to listen to you’.


Reasons Manaiakalani have stuck with Blogger:  Blogger is functionally similar and visually
resembles the kinds of social/sharing spaces that young learners badly want to be part of. 
Blogger is a safe, toyota corolla style of online platform.


Something else Gerhard presented about which made plenty of sense was having sharing
as a motivation for task completion… and that’s the hook.  Share, to encourage the
completion of the learning process. Sharing what they’ve finished is exciting!
The prospect of receiving meaningful, thoughtful, helpful feedback is exciting, too.  


Sharing to LEARN!  Sharing the process is very important, rather than just sharing the
finished product.  Encourage learners to share along the way.


I learnt about blog gadgets and analytics which inform you about your audience and who
is visiting your blog.  Gaining a greater audience takes mahi, you can’t ‘sit back on the
beach and wait for them to come’ Gerhard explained during our Google Meet today. 
I watched the 1Direction parody about Cyber Smart sharing - funny! Main message
was to keep your address and number off the internet! One important message from
One Direction.


WOW - THIS SITE.  Enjoying the visual appeal as well as the usability.  
This Pt England Example… wow, slide four is a child’s perspective of a well functioning
Site.  I learnt that it is helpful when you’re designing your Site, to think about if you
want a theme.  Consider how the learners will be viewing the Site ie. chromebook or iPad.
Do a plan!  This way your collaborative team is more likely to be happy with the result.
Racquel’s Site is so eye-catching and I love all of the learning clips on there… helpful!

In closing, highlight of the day has to be the complimentary colour schemes website
such a handy tool to copy and use the hex!  I may have already bookmarked it and chosen
my favourite mustard...




Prodigy Maths is described as a free gaming site which incorporates maths.
Google Takeout is a tool which helps you to transfer docs to another Drive outside your
domain… handy! Tim wanted to see the customised buttons I'd made so here you go.
Congratulations on doing yours, they look great!


Friday, August 16, 2019

DFI FOUR - Devices, Friday 16th August

In the week gone, I’ve managed to customise buttons on the new Google Site I created, pleased with that.  Just need to check how to make buttons usable for navigation. 


Maria presented about being Manaiakalani feels it’s vital that children are at home in a digital world.  This means that being Cybersmart is paramount, and explicitly teaching digital citizenship and children’s understanding of their digital footprint is required.  How you behave online needs to be worded positively… when we are online we are kind, we are helpful, we are responsible. Fits really nicely with our schools PB4L kaupapa.


Rewindable learning allows learning to take place at any time, any place, at ANY PACE.  Learning is ubiquitous.


Manaiakalani help to implement the Kawa of Care in schools, so that across whanau, community, staff, learners and different schools the understanding and language used is the same.


Interesting to learn about what the Hapara tool can do. It allows the teacher to focus on the learning, rather than needing to manage the technology.  You have visibility into what the children are doing, you can give feedback, and differentiate what you ask children to do. Allows you to see in their Drive.  I like that you can hover your cursor over their docs and see a thumbnail of what they’re doing. Great for monitoring the speed at which they’re working, and of course insight, feedback in real time etc.  You can also read blog comments and delete any inappropriate content should you need to. You can send messages to individuals, or groups. So you may want to send a URL or clip to a particular group, you can do this through focus session.  Useful that you can reset passwords for learners if they forget, plus you can remove learners if they leave the school, or if other children come. You can reduce the view of a folder to one item, that way you can see all learners folders, so you can see who has and hasn’t filed it in the correct folder… say you want them all to pop an item into their Cybersmart folder, you can view it to see exactly who has and hasn’t.


Had a good session exploring iPads, specifically Explain Everything app which I am already familiar with.  Expensive, but sooooo many great features. The lasso tool for custom crop on Explain Everything is a neat tool to alter an image so it transforms into exactly the way you want it.


Got a lot out of Robbie’s reflections around the use of devices in schools, and being very conscious of the SAMR model, and where your programme is sitting when delivering teaching and learning in a digital environment.  So often teachers are heard saying, learners are putting it on their blogs. My wondering is though, how often is this purposeful sharing in order to add value, and connect with an authentic audience? Is the ‘share’ to add an extra layer of meaning… or actually are the lines blurred and the process morphs into sharing for accountability?  Something I was to keep in mind.


Screencastify has to be one of my highlights of the day - rather user-friendly tool and so handy to show your screen.  I’ve completed one of the Digital Dive we did, exploring all sorts of things using Chromebooks (so many shortcuts), and one showcasing elements of the Smart Footprint component of being Cyber Smart.



Huge thank you to Pia and Ange who we spent some time in a Google Hangout with.  Great tips on the Google Certified Educator exam, any help is appreciated so thank you!

Two other great takeaways: Internet Awesome and ‘make kindness go viral’.

Thanks for reading,

Friday, August 9, 2019

DFI Session Three -

Friday 9th August

What has worked well for me since our last session:
Pinning tabs is great - I use for Drive, Mail and Keep.  Successfully commented on a couple of blogs.  Finished Scavenger Hunt - fun.  Continuing to use Keep Extension, so good for sites/URL you like, but you have no time, or images etc - just one click!

Awesome reading Robin Sutton’s blog - highlight has to be disruptive technologies and rethinking and re-imagining as the new creativity.  Re-imagining as the new improvement programme.  Certainly, we need children who want to take risks and disrupt the status quo, not solely in response to problems.  Because as Sutton points out:

The difficulty is that there may be no apparent problem, nothing that immediately presents itself as demanding a response, yet things are changing, and changing faster and more profoundly than we realise. There are massive disruptive influences in play around us every minute of every day. These disruptive influences may be technological innovation. They may be such fundamental issues as climate change.

As we reflect on the importance of creativity, he is a passionate principal who blogs about creativity, aspirational teaching and learning, visible learning and future focused thinking.

Soft skills that are developed through CREATE, which often is not emphasised enough in primary schools.  Valuable!

Creative kids with problem solving skills who can communicate and collaborate… these are the kinds of soft skills children need to be equipped with through primary school.  Like Sir Ken Robinson points out in his famous Schools Kill Creativity conversation - We now need to use our imaginations and creativity wisely, to face an uncertain and problematic future. We may not see this future, but need to equip our children to conquer it.

My favourite of the slides, links well with work we’ve done around the year six leaver:

Throughout history, we as teachers have been creative people, create professionals who model learning through creativity.

Create often gets the squeeze in NZ classrooms.  National Standards seemed to be blamed for a time, and creativity which was ever-important sixty years ago, became no longer the flavour.  Some leaders from many years ago in our local region, featuring in the heART of the matter.

Creating as a doing word, a verb.  Heart - hands - mind - voice - feet - we use the whole body/whole person as we create 


So many children need to ‘do’ something as they learn - they need to get the juices flowing in order for the learning to connect with their mind.  The create pedagogy very much affirms this learning style.

Interesting reading Making Progress Possible: A Conversation with Michael Fullan by Naomi Thiers where Fullan affirms that “It's the teacher with a degree of autonomy interacting with other teachers, figuring out the best things to do to get results for the particular students they're working with.”  It is this kaupapa which places me in a great place for learning at the DFI, having experts alongside, and other teachers also, who all want to bring about positive improvements.

Sisimo co. anecdote is quite powerful, about sight, sound and motion, and connecting these concepts back to the create component of the Manaiakalani pedagogy.  Saatchi + Saatchi used these techniques through marketing in order to create emotional connections.

Deep Dive - what it means to be multimodal.  Different kinds of sharing.
ENGAGEMENT:  hook the learners in through different opportunities, drawing them in using a range of different skills, hooks, attractions.  Pt England School spend a lot of time and energy at the beginning of each term, hooking learners into their ‘big idea’.  In the first term of Manaiakalani, the device itself is new, so that helps engagement.  Beyond this, effective teaching is needed, and other ways of behaviourally and cognitively engaging them.  Visibility and rewindable learning helps with shifts and acceleration.  UDL and the idea of teaching to the edges of course benefits all learners and is accessible for all.  Personalisation and differentiation, rather than one size fits all.  Using just ‘Drawings’ google app as an example, is just using one app, one mode, and narrows the parameters for all learners to engage.  Providing video, audio and opportunities to move so that different ways of learning are all supported is a multimodal way of fostering learning.

Great example shared from Pt England School, the way they’ve used Sites, and laid it out to engage learners… amazing to see the way their design has progressed over the three year period shown.


So visual:




Had a browse through a Site, the hook was theme parks.  Not so sure how effectively multimodal this one is.  I found PIGEONS to be much more engaging.  Many links, logos, diagrams, video clips and voice clips plus HEAPS of pictures which really draw your eye in.  The Site provided many opportunities for learners to create and collaborate… love the fast finishers group challenge!  I think this site would work well to promote engagement.  The Lightning Site was also well built.  They included screenshots as models, as well as invitations to learners to contribute other findings which can deepen their understanding as well as support others’ learning.  Not entirely sure about the GARDEN model, does not seem to include as many visual, or audio hooks however it does have a link to another blog site which looks like a good blog.  My pick of the bunch for me:  READING TUMBLE as an opportunity to decrease paper and laminating pouches!  A neat, clean digital example to scaffold children.

Google Sites is very new for me, having not used it in many years.  I cannot believe this is the same platform, it’s drastically different with so very many improvements.  Impressed by how functional and cohesive the exemplars are that I’ve seen, specifically the multimodal examples which include a range of buttons, visuals, graphics, screencasts, embedded clips, screenshots and more.   Have begun to make personalised buttons using photos of learners.  Work in progress!

Friday, August 2, 2019

DFI session 2 - WORKFLOW

Friday 2nd August 2019 DFI session 2 - WORKFLOW

WHAT HAS WORKED WELL SINCE PREVIOUS DFI:  Toggling between tabs!  Efficient/helpful. Remove.bg another helpful wee tool.  Tried hard to use Learn-Create-Share pedagogy so learners feel what they have learned/created is going somewhere, and has a meaningful,authentic audience.  Fixed up photo on my professional account so that it’s appropriate, just me - no pets, no kids etc

WHAT HASN’T WORKED OR MADE SENSE?  Have not done Scavenger Hunt as yet.  Can’t figure out how to bookmark, back to top etc.  Can you help me to move a file into my own Drive using the shortcut we learnt about?  I didn’t achieve this when I tried.

WHAT DO YOU NEED HELP WITH?  Accessing and commenting on others’ blogs can now be done as I’ve got the links..  Using Docs voice typing in class effectively. Amie will be coming into school to demo use of Sunshine online as a tool to support fluency in reading.

I enjoyed connecting with Manaiakalani kaupapa and the reassurance that it in no way is throwing the baby out with the bathwater.  References to Blooms and SAMR model, hoping to modify or transform learning for our tamariki… turbo charge!

Rewindable learning:
The concept being that if it’s worth teaching, and worth learning, then it is worth capturing and putting on your Google Site so that learners can access it any time, and rewind to it when they need to.  If it’s worth teaching/learning, it’s worth sharing.

We had a delve into Hangouts and Meet.  You can present what is on your screen to the group.  You can include many people in the group. Can access through gmail, calendar, hyperlink or apps.

Screen castify - thanks Ubby and Briar for the tip!  A great way for learners to record their reading, so you can see all their behaviours, and they can measure their progress from week to week.  Ubby shared her Site. A great hub where all of her planning for EVERYTHING is available. Learners go there, using it as a hub for their reading books and activity, word work, writing material, websites with practise activities etc.  Really enjoyed seeing this very slick model - organised in such a meaningful way. She spoke about very high levels of engagement using this model, as well as the sense of safety and predictability providing children with sound routines.

Briar kindly put me on to yet another clever shortcut; Ctrl + shift + t which re-opens the previous tab you just closed.  Pretty quick way to keep organised, I can see myself using this one. Also, the ‘starred’ feature in Drive will prioritise key documents making them more accessible.  This makes them quick and easy to open.  

Toby Mini is a Chrome Extension to tame your tabs.  ‘Save your session’. Could be good if you open all sorts of sites relating to a particular study or focus (termly integrated study as an example) for planning, then save and share with other collaborators.  Essentially a collection of URLs. Could be good/quite useful at a team level.

I can see the workflow benefit of pinning tabs, the ones you like to keep open most of the time, Drive, Keep, Gmail.

For the CREATE component, we worked in collaborative teams of three to record some discussion around a child’s blog we read, sharing an activity from The Summer Learning Journey.  Not without its connectivity issues, we had some quality, critical discussions as well as lots of laughs. 
 
Turns out soft skills aren’t a big focus at high school, I’m told.  Who knew two men could be so chatty. Lots of fun in our group, and a great opportunity to practise using Hangouts, presenting screen content, and recording using Quicktime screen record feature.

Through lunchtime I was able to delve back into the scavenger hunt… you can do so much without leaving Docs!  Loving the ‘explore’ feature.  

Monday, July 29, 2019

DFI Session 1 - Core Business

Reflection 26th July 2019

I was able to understand a lot more about the kaupapa of Manaiakalani, including where it all originated from in East Tamaki back in 2006.  I enjoyed hearing about the story, their journey to date, and the four main goals that were established at the beginning where they set out to pioneer a programme which could engage their tamariki.  Now that I have a greater understanding the pedagogy, including the Learn, Create, Share model, I am excited about what I can learn throughout the Intensive.

PARTNERING, not buy-in.  Manaiakalani were able to make string partnerships with whanau who were happy to support their children having access to positive opportunities and devices like those living in higher decile neighbourhoods.  Another thought that Dorothy spoke to is the concept that the device is the pencil, not the book.  Sustainable approach, future focused, and relevant.

As I saw the statistics and research outlining the success Manaiakalani has had with accelerated learning, but also extending learners who are already excelling in a range of learning areas, I felt excited as to how this learning could enrich the outcomes of children that I teach.

The Learn Create Share model has fostered high levels of motivation and engagement, and brings a strong sense of meaning to children’s learning.  They know that they have an authentic audience keen to see a snapshot of what they’re learning.  “This writing they’re going to do, is going to then allow them to CREATE something”... paint something messy, voice their favourite sentence, publish their best bit, create an artwork gift showcasing the best part.



There were a number of tips and tricks which I learned to improve workflow and efficiency in the way that I work professionally.  These include:


  • Simply type in the name of the app, and then .google.com to get to an app faster.
  • Google groups quite effective, like a blog, in the sense that you can use tags (blogs call them labels)... for example instead of searching and searching for agenda you can just go directly to Groups and it’s all stored there in one central location.
  • When setting up a Google Group, it is a better idea to Direct add, don’t invite to groups.  However, on the google exam, invite students to the group is the correct way to do this.
  • Omnibox is the proper name for the place where you type in a URL!

  • Don’t use underline which you think is a way to add emphasis.  It is dated and shows your age.  These days, it is only meant to be a hyperlink, don’t use it as anything else.
  • Use shft+Z to move someone else's file and reorganise to your own Drive, but still in the original folder for all to access.
  • Never COPY and PASTE.  CTRL+shift+v - this does it without yucky formatting.  Better living.
  • Use kids initials first to name Google Docs, so that Hapara can recognise it and file it efficiently… in the right folder from the start.  Never too late to stop the class, and start from the beginning again.  Not wasting time, it’s investing in solid routines and strong foundations to build from.
  • Toggle through tabs - ctrl + whichever #
  • Get on with the mahi - Tell the kids that they can bling it later.
  • Google Docs - voice typing… what an amazing tool!  Use paper cups to help their voices.
  • Styles is a tool that I have underutilized in the past.  Can add in contents and then go on to indent with a sub-clause.
  • Give them ONE document, so they don’t have to spend HEAPS of time setting it up each time.  Work on this, and use it for a while until they’re proficient.  The trick is to keep MOST RECENT writing at the top of their page.
  • SEND THE URL TO THE PLACE WHERE YOU WANT PEOPLE TO READ.  There is a unique url code for each particular part of the document you need their attention to.  For example ‘map’ part of the cross country organisation.  Or executive summary of a professional reading you want to share.  AMAZING.
  • 'Back to top’ bookmark quite handy.
  • Checklists for Google are out of date the day that they are created.  Don’t get into it.  Keep up to date with features that are released as they're rolled out.
  • Google form from the Doc to Form extension I just learned to use could be a handy resource to help gather student voice from children in my class.
  • Scavenger Hunt is a resource which I will be able to come back to and explore with children in my class

Extensions and Add-ons:
  • Draftback (also eZnotifications) is a great way of ensuring a more robust revision history.  
  • Kaizena really awesome verbal feedback that they can hear.
  • Texthelp
  • Excellent and free tool for removing backgrounds of images - https://www.remove.bg/

Wonderings and things I can sort out/learn about:
Voice over, Video Capture and microphone on my laptop.