Sunday, August 1, 2010

IWB Conference, Auckland, Day 1 and 2 : Best of the rest

The second IWB conference here over the past 3 days did not for me have the same impact as last years' conference. That's not to say it was poor - it just seemed to me that it was possibly a little smaller than last year and the trade show was a little smaller ... And perhaps there were not for me as many stand out sessions as there were last year.

That said - yes I got some value out of it and here are some of the highlights for me.

Craig and Tania Lineham are a husband and wife team from James Hargest College at the bottom of the South Island. They gave a thoughtful presentation about how they are charged with training and support of teachers in their school, and then they both had separate sessions - Tania is Head of Science and Craig head of Health and PE. More about Craig's session later.

In this joint session they shared their observation chart they use when they drop in to asses how their whiteboards are being used in class - accountability it would seem is alive and well in their school. They run drop in sessions each Wednesday after school for staff too - we used to do this several years ago but stopped it due to lack of interest - they say sometimes they have no one turn up, but they still offer them.

They are big on Blooms revised taxonomy - good to see that a school has a clearly identified pedagogy and that it keeps coming up in what they do.

I can't help but think that so much of what these guys are showing reflects the buy in that their school has - it's clear that their school has a culture of learning that their staff share.

I attended several sessions that were specific to Promethean's ActiveBoard - the software that comes with their boards. In reality there seems little difference between this software and Smart NoteBook. Perhaps the ActiveInspire software interface is a little more cluttered?

Without question the highlight for me was the session Craig Lineham, HOD Health and PE from James Hargest High School. His session had little to do with interactive whiteboards and more to do with ICT in health and physical education in general. For a great example of using technologies in PE, he was inspiring. Some of his ideas...

1. Orienteering - students create the courses they taken their cell phones with them and photograph evidence that they had actually done the course - they show the photos to their peers when they return as proof that they did the course.

2. VisibleBody.com have a great subscription based web service for anatomy - $20 per license for 6 months.

3. They use MentalCase to create flash cards for student cell phones - then key messages they want students to learn they save as a series of jpg files.

4. Mindjet Mind Manager Pro for mind mapping.

Overall comments:

1. there are a lot of activities that you can do well on an iwb but that take time - a lot of time - to develop. But as Craig Lineham has said though - it is an investment. An investment in the future.

2. One nagging thing - the term interactive whiteboard used to refer to the fact that to use the board you had to interact with it. More and more over the past year or so I hear that the interactive part comes from the way that a "well used" board promotes interactivity within the students in the classroom overall. I can't help but think is this true, or is this a way of deflecting the fact that maybe these boards don't deliver everything they promised in an interactive way?

3. Not withstanding what I said in 2), put a tool like an IWB in the hands of an already good teacher, then they will do some pretty amazing things with it.

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPad

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