Connecting with and engaging learners during lockdown is no easy task. It can seem too challenging when there is a shortage of devices for learners and limited internet data. Even knowing where to start as a teacher is a challenge. I want to share the journey, setbacks and successes of one teacher and her class as we worked together to connect and engage learners over a lockdown.
The teacher's school does not currently have 1:1 devices; in fact, far from it. "We'd be very blessed if we had a device per child in a house, and that's not our reality," principal Jason Swann says. "Our reality can be no devices, no connectivity, right through to a phone being the only device that people are using." 1 Each student might have a device for a short time for learning each day or possibly not at all.
Learners do not have individual Google accounts. However, when school is face to face, they share iPads across many classes. So students use a single Google account across classes with named folders in the Drive. Shared accounts work for the scenario of shared iPads as one user signed in on an iPad is ideal. However, it is more difficult when the students are learning via distance as it is hard to tell who is doing the work and students need to remember to file their work. However, a shared google account is familiar for the learners, so we stay with the status quo.
Teachers have a growing level of digital fluency. Most are using a class site to lead learning. All learning is on this site, and students know to always go to the site. Teachers plan activities that require students to create a digital learning object to show their learning. Learners file digital learning objects in individual Drive folders. The teacher can then share what learners are creating on the class blog. As teachers follow this process, they are increasing their digital fluency.
I facilitate teachers to implement a Learn, Create, Share pedagogy using Google tools. Visible teaching and learning empower this pedagogy. We use public class sites and blogs. Visibility allows sharing, which is essential. I work as a facilitator with many teachers across various schools in Te Purapura Ngātahi o Manaiakalani, an outreach cluster that uses The Manaiakalani Programme. Learn, Create, and Share is a simple yet powerful teaching method.
Planning
We started copying what other teachers were doing on their class sites. The public class sites meant we could see what these teachers were doing. The sites showed how to set out the activities on one page. We could find learning activities that might work for her learners. We got a sense of the way to offer simplified learning activities. The teacher added content to her class site each day. She published the teaching on the class site and rang whānau (families) to let them know. She informed whānau she would add more content regularly. Copying what others were doing was a great place to start.
We worked on a dual plan for learners with or without a device. Many learners might have Mum's phone for 10-15 minutes to see what was on the class site and then get on with the learning on paper for the day. Then, when the tasks were complete, the learner sent photos to the teacher. A small number of learners had a dedicated device. Learners with a device could create content digitally and share it via the Drive folder. We planned each learning task to be done either online or on paper.
Connecting
Challenges
Connecting with Learners
Certificates
Flying
The teacher and her learners are now flying with their learning. They each know how to teach and learn, whether they're physically together or apart. They can achieve well if some of the class is at home and some at school. As well as this, learners maintained social connections with the teacher and one another over an extended lockdown. Learning continued, and the transition to school after the lockdown was significantly more manageable.
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