Happy Steve

Innovation and Learning

Start with clarity of intent.

Now build it out with an evocative vision. Improvise progress by tinkering: with lots of trial and lots of error. The not knowing is the best bit: the mysteries the surprises, and from time to time the windfalls! 

Hello there, I'm Steve Collis! 

Click on "contact", won't you, and wave right back at me?

Video: Ewan McIntosh's Keynote Presentation at the ELH Conference 2010

I am delighted that the Ewan McIntosh was more than happy for me to both broadcast live his keynote presentation at the Expanding Learning Horizons conference, and even record the web stream as it went out.

I highly recommend this video. It's always a good sign when I am scrambling to write down ideas and links to sites and projects. 

I will continue to broadcast from ELH wherever I can, and you can tune in at: http://www.ustream.tv/channel/technology-in-education-show 

Without further ado, ladies and gentleman, Ewan McIntosh:


Project Based Learning: Running An Internet Radio Station

ELH Conference 2010 Presentation, 22nd August
2010. 2pm AEST (GMT+10)

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IMMEDIATE ACTIONS YOU CAN TAKE ARE HIGHLIGHTED YELLOW THROUGHOUT THIS POST

Follow me: www.twitter.com/steve_collis and subcribe to my blog (via button on right)

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Here is the core information from my presentation, along
with lots of links you can follow depending on what grabs your interest! CHALLENGE: For those who just want action - go to www.makeavoice.com/shoutcast right now, sign up for the 128kbps / 30 listeners plan with your credit card, record an MP3 using Audacity & upload it to the server, and you'll have your own functioning station by the end of this hour. You don't need policy, or a plan, or a program. Just act now!

Anyway, see below for:


  1. The chat system so you can text chat during the presentation. Swap your own ideas! Disagree with me! Say 'o hai'!

  2. A text version of what I'm going to say. Please follow the links until your heart is overflowing with joy, even while I blabber.

  3. Right down the bottom of this post - a list of things to do during the session.


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Collaborative Whiteboards:

Each of these can take between 8 and 16 people, and is a great place to do the brainstorming task described later on.

http://ietherpad.com/internetradio1

http://ietherpad.com/internetradio2

Open one of them in a new window and start adding your ideas, useful links, opinions, etc.


Integrated Chat System

Use this to chat with people both physically present and absent from the conference:


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Starting Point: What
World Will Students Grow Into?

Imagine predicting 2010, one hundred years ago!

- In 1910 Robert Sloss made some astonishingly accurate predictions about the "wireless telegraph". Read his predictions here: http://www.bullfax.com/?q=node-robert-sloss-predicted-iphone-1910

His essay has been reprinted in recent this recent German book: http://www.amazon.de/Die-Wet-Jahren-hundert-einhundert/dp/3487083043


Die welt in 100 jahren
 - But Robert Sloss was not a prophet, he was just lucky! 

- Would YOU have been able to predict 2010, back in the year 2000, only 10 years ago? Wikipedia is a year off before even launching; MySpace and Facebook four years. Yet these sites have changed the nature of knowledge, and privacy, respectively. Of course you couldn't!

- And so we are preparing our young people for an unknown future.

(By the way, the famous video "Did You Know" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cL9Wu2kWwSY which claims that the top 10 jobs in 2010 did not exist in 2004, is wrong! See http://hearingvoices.com/news/webworks/didya-know/ for a general analysis and sometimes debunking of the video. This doesn't undermine the point: history is speeding, and 5 years is a long time!)

So we need to assist students develop skills that are flexible.

Need
our students to be:


  • entrepreneurs

  • project-managers

  • self-starters

  • independent

  • problem-solvers

  • inquisitive

  • resourceful


But 'doing school' is about pacification. The key unstated notion of success in many teachers' minds (I too am susceptible) is am I in control of my class? Docility is rewarded, and the kids who rock the boat and refuse to conform get sanctioned. We pacify our students. An ordered classroom is perceived as a good classroom. But:

1. Since when does order correlate with learning?

2. Since when does learning have to happen in a room?

(

STOP HERE! What unstated meta-language / unspoken narratives / mythology secretly drives your agenda as you enter a classroom? Use metaphors and imagery. Now, speculate on what language, metaphors and imagery (positive or negative) you COULD use. Be playful. e.g. my danger has been to unconsciously have 'warfare' imagery - I must, first, subdue my students, and THEN teach them, i.e. language of conflict. Confess in the chat system!

Then be playful, what language could you use (good OR bad):

A classroom is... a circus? a $2 shop? a stage where the students perform? a publishing house? a cesspool? a chaotic ocean? fecund pond? a dance? an artifice-ial play defined by social codes? a brainwashing machine? OK OVER TO YOU. You'll find the more you are deliberate and evocative, the more you have control over your subconscious schema for 'schooling'. Language BINDS US!

)

This is not teaching a man to fish!

Of course private schools are often the most guilty of this, pinning their reputations on strong achievement in exams that do NOT measure the flexible skills the students will actually need in the unknown future.

Without such skills, private school students don't flourish at university, where self-directed learning is required, in the same way non-selective public school students do. Note this graph from a Monash University study:


Uni graph

(from http://elecpress.monash.edu.au/pnp/cart/download/free.php?paper=236)


At my school, Northern Beaches Christian School, in Sydney, students in years 5, 6, 7, 8 spend large proportions of the week working in a new way, where students define their own path through the curriculum, to varying degrees with boundaries defined by teams of teachers, who act not as deliverers of information but as coaches, mentors and trouble-shooters. This is now very much part of the culture of our students. 


Quest

In the live presentation I'll show a video of some of this in action.

Let's now zoom in close on a very specific example of this sort of open-ended, student-centred, project-based learning.

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Students Running Their Own Internet Radio Station

In Term 2 I created a new Year 9 elective subject for students to run their own internet radio station. My time being already allocated, I don't directly supervise the students, but mentor them in snatches of time. For the moment there are only 4 students in this subject, but the project replicates much of what we're doing across the board in our other programs. 

Here are the specifics so you can replicate this idea.

1. Well, first of all, have a listen: Copy this URL and open it in iTunes, Windows Media Player, RealPlayer, or whatever: http://174.123.20.131:8120/listen.pls 

2. The website: http://makeavoice.com/shoutcast/ 


Notice the $7.95 US per month for 30 listeners at 128kbps? This is ample quality, and it is what we signed up for. There are lots of other companies who offer a similar service at a similar price, believe me I tried them out, and this is the best in my experience.

3. How it works:

You log into the website and upload sound files. You put them in the order you want, and BANG they are broadcast over the net as a playlist, on a loop. If you want to get technical you can broadcast LIVE but we haven't tried this yet. The beauty is, it's simple... all you need to do is get some sound recordings, and send them to the website. Low maintenance = sustainable!

4. How the students work:

The four students mix and match their responsibilities, but we've defined four roles:

- Manager (keeps an eye on everything and meets weekly deadlines)

- Reporter (roves the school during class, and during breaks, and attends special school events, to capture what's happening)

- Editor (Takes the sound files and tidies them up, or formats them. Makes jingles. Strings together different segments. Sends me the files for uploading.)

- Promoter (Gets the message out to our staff that the reporter is bookable to come visit their class. Advertises the existence of the radio station to teachers, parents, and students).

5. Ideas for practical implementation:

My four students have three 70 minute blocks a fortnight. I can see the project working in large classes, small ones, young students, (even Kindy kids) Year 12s. Any combination of students could contribute MP3 sound files of any genre. Science students reporting on Science, History students reenacting key moments or debating topics, English students making pretend advertisements, PDHPE kids giving 'health minutes', Music recordings, Maths 'rap' versions of formulas and rules. 

In the chat system brainstorm other genres or spoken 'text types' that would suit your context. Practically how would it work for you? You may have 30 kids in your class, or 7, they may be 6 years old or 17.

6. What equipment and software to use:

Ok you have various options, depending on your situation.

- students record onto their computers with a plug-in microphone, using free software Audacity (

http://audacity.sourceforge.net/download/)

- if you want a class set of microphones, I recommend this one:


Microphone
They only cost $3.60 from www.rockrock.com.au (the product code is "Microph-3"). Expect them to last about a year before breaking. Don't invest in $50 microphones that have very similar sound quality but cost so much more!

- if you want something better quality, jump up to the Samson C01U (about $150) or C03U (about $179), google them to find a store. They plug into the computer's USB and give fantastic crisp sound quality:


C01U 



C03U
 
 - for roving reporting, to save students having to carry around a laptop, you could get a little MP3 recorder. I purchased the Sony ICD-UX200F for between $150 to $200 (

http://www.priceme.net.au/Sony-ICD-UX200F/p-884094034.aspx)


Sony ICD-UX200F

The importance of backing off and giving the students space.

We have to give the students space to make their own decisions, for real. This is what I am trying to do with the radio station. This semester I have defined "KPIs" for them to meet. Students definitely need feedback, and a regular guiding hand, but fundamentally it must be student driving the learning, not the teacher.

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WHAT TO DO IN THE SESSION (from home or at ELH)

1. Explore all the links above. 

2. Make your own plan for setting up an Internet radio station. How many contributing students? (Lots is fine, you just need some editors!) How will it work? What specific actions will you need to take for it to work and be sustainable? Which allies will you need? (Hint: don't ask permission, ask for forgiveness!) 

3. Engage with my challenge to rewrite your unspoken language architecture for 'schooling'. (See earlier in this post).

4. Install and play with Audacity (on your conference CD, and also at:: 

http://audacity.sourceforge.net/download/)

5. Have a listen of the radio show: Copy this URL and open it in iTunes, Windows Media Player, RealPlayer, or whatever: http://174.123.20.131:8120/listen.pls (copy the text of the address, open your player, then click 'open URL').

6. Explore the wider idea of 'student publishing': an internet radio station is a platform for publishing what students are doing. The wider notion of publishing whatever the students are creating, freely and openly on the net, is very powerful. Check out all our wider publishing projects at our website www.realaudienceproject.com and discussion at http://realaudienceproject.wikispaces.com

7. Leave a comment on this blog post with your ideas, reactions, questions, experiences and so forth.

8. Come grab the equipment I've discussed and have a play.

9. Go to 

http://www.makeavoice.com/shoutcast/ and sign up right now! They set up the server instantly for you, for only a few dollars. Record some sound now and have your server broadcasting by the end of the session!

10. Explore the million other crazy things we're doing at my school by browsing my blog website. Subscribe to my blog using the button in the right hand margin!

11. Bored? Check out the lolcatz Bible: http://www.lolcatbible.com/index.php?title=John_1


ELH Conference 2010 - Tune in Live

The Expanding Learning Horizons Conference is taking place again, from tomorrow (22nd August 2010) for three days. I will be there broadcasting via webcam where I can.

In particular, come back to www.happysteve.com tomorrow (Sunday 22nd) at 2pm AEST (GMT+10) for my session. I'll be talking about project based learning and specifically, running an internet radio station. Hopefully I can broadcast my own session live, and in any case all my notes and a live chat system will be here.

My colleague Mark Liddell will be speaking on "Maths is So Boring - How to Change the Attitude of our Students Through the Use of Technology" at 10.45am on Monday.
And my colleague Chantelle Morrison will be speaking on "E-magazines for the Faint Hearted" at 11:45am on Tuesday.

If I can I will broadcast the keynotes and whatever other sessions I can.

You can see the program here: http://elh2010.ning.com/ (you can also join the Ning and connect with attendees that way).

Check the Twitter hashtags #elh and #elh2010 to follow the twitter conversation.

What if a school subject was 3D?

Read on to see how Tim Barrett is creating a school subject in 3D virtual form, so that students literally walk through the course in a virtual world.

You may be aware we established a new 3D virtual island using free software called "Open Sim". This is open source software, meaning it was created by volunteers who allow anyone to use it without paying. Admittedly, we do then have to pay a company, "Reaction Grid", to run the software for us. This is as cheap s $75 a month, and they take much of the hassle out of actually getting your virtual world to work. This is much less expensive than Linden Lab's Second Life, where we run our original island.

This new Open Sim island is 8 times as large as our original, and we have a great deal more control over it, including the ability to allow our young primary students to access the world.

I've been spending some time preparing the island for a huge influx of students. I've already granted some students access, and also created an account for every member of staff at our school (they've been wandering in out of curiosity and having a walk around!)

The next step is for me to recruit student leaders from every grade and train them up rigorously to be 'moderators' of the new virtual world. They will protect the space against misbehaviour, cyber-bullying, or vandalism. They will set the tone and culture of the virtual world.

I've been busy 'terra-forming' our virtual world, adding trees, streams, and a huge mountain, so students have something to explore when they first log in. I've disabled flying so they have to walk around, unless they program for themselves a car or plane.

When they first log in, this is what they will see:

They have an invitation to follow a forest path through to a 'sandbox', which is an area of the virtual world where any student can start building.

They also see another arrow:

You see, I don't want students to feel forced into doing the training immediately. They can walk through the forest for a bit, if they want, but they'll be told they have to do the training before they wander far!

So, the student follows the arrow towards training, and sees:

There are some simple posters telling the student to approach the booth and click on it. What happens next is quite magical: the Open Sim software sends a signal to our 'Moodle' course management software and links the students virtual world account to their general school learning account. Many thanks to my colleague Grant Harbor for his input and assistance in getting this to work!

From this point onwards, a whole variety of 3D objects will recognise them. These 3D objects are virtual manifestations of learning materials that would have otherwise just been listed on a Moodle subject web page in our school poral.

Let me give you an example. I've not yet created the rest of the training course, I've just put in a proof-of-concept test object. Let's look at it:

In Moodle, I created a student survey question – do they prefer cats or dogs? Then, in our 3D world I made that survey question appear in 3D form. This means the student can answer the question in the virtual world, rather than in the text-based environment of a Moodle page. The student clicks on the coloured bar indicating their vote. Over time the two bars, red and green, will grow to show the proportion of students voting for each.

Contrast this 3D virtual world learning format to a bog-standard Moodle page, which looks like this:

And, of course, Moodle by itself, even though very text-based, is powerful and at our school has thoroughly disrupted the role of teacher-as-distributor-of-information and even teacher-as-director-of-students and recast their role as a mentor or coach. With learning resources at their fingertips, students are free to work at their own pace and in their own way, and we've seen them really thrive because of this.

However, as great as Moodle is, do you see the possibilities of a virtual-world manifestation of Moodle course activities?

Rather than working down a text web page, students could literally walk through a course. The subject could be set out like a village. Lessons could be cast as buildings in specific genres: shops, museums, banks… meeting halls, fiery lakes with a rickety bridge, mountains defended by dragons (defeat the dragon with learning!), and so forth.

The student might start with a map, and find their own path through the course. The starting point could be a crossroads with four signs. Students follow the path they choose. The road could fork. Students could be required to collect 'tokens' indicating mastery of each subject module. It's study, Burke and Wills style!

For Maths and Science students could undertake their own construction projects, creating 3D objects and simulations.

In History, great moments and turning points could be re-enacted by avatars, or even rewritten speculatively, with the enactment recorded as a video for online publication and teacher feedback and assessment. An assessment might be for a full three-week role play, where students are assigned social roles, (peasant, merchant, king, priest) and a context and must interact authentically for the historical context. This would also be a great spur for reflective writing.

In English, the 3D space would become a role-play space, a performance space, a publication space, an inspiration space. Chapters of texts could be recreated by students, so the book becomes alive with living landscape and personalities. Watch now as a Year 11 student meets Pip or plays the role of Miss Havisham. So too might King Lear rage at the storm. (Cue 3D storm now! And… action!).

And don't get me started about Visual Arts! What a match!

Don't get me wrong on one point: our new island will NOT be content-driven. As with our original Second Life space, students will be the major 'owners' of the space, literally building the world & the online culture over the coming months.

But they won't be the only builders!

Our first steps into true virtual 3D courses are beginning immediately with my dear colleague Mr Tim Barrett: http://twitter.com/tim__barrett
http://www.chaplaincymatters.org/

Tim is our school chaplain and has been teaching 'Studies of Religion' for a few years now in an entirely online mode, and in a face to face mode.

He will be our pioneer at taking everything we've learnt about student learning in Moodle, and recreating the learning in a 3D space.

It might blow up in his face! Maybe it won't work! This is an experiment – our first steps!

But imagine, students walking through mosques, cathedrals, churches, temples, monasteries, or recreating scenes or situations at Medina, Galilee, Bodh Gaya. Consider: the imagination gives us the power to connect with 'otherness', putting ourselves in others' shoes and gaining insight into the universal human condition. In Tim's course, students will literally walk in the shoes of others. Not a bad thing, since many of our students are from the culturally monolithic northern beaches of Sydney.

I'll keep you posted (and I am sure Tim will too, over at http://www.chaplaincymatters.org/). To hear what happens next, subscribe to my blog – look for the button in the right hand column of this page.

As always I welcome and will be delighted by your comments!

I'll finish with some more images of our work-in-progress virtual island:

 

 

 

 

 

Sydney Morning Herald Report

Some weeks ago Sydney Morning Herald reporter Megan Johnston visited my school to investigate ways we're using technology to disrupt and improve learning.

The report came out today, and I have to say she did a very good job of taking everything we threw at her and simplifying it without losing accuracy. 

The article refers to our virtual worlds program. She describes our approach to safety "all student activity is recorded and student moderators enforce the island's behavioural code". She refers to its popularity, "the island has become so popular it is now running out of space", and goes on to mention our new Open Sim project, "a second island [...] is being developed". 

Actually I have exciting news regarding our new virtual island. This is 8 times the size of our original space, and uses the open source software Open Sim:

Booralie 2 opensim_001
 

Our new world will be accessible by our Primary students. I can't wait to see their creativity come out in the world.

My colleague Tim Barrett is about to launch on an experiment to create a 3D version of his online Studies of Religion course. The idea is that students will literally walk through his course, journeying from location to location and immersing themselves in the relevant places, contexts, and moments in history. Instead of 'writing about' they'll 'role play', and when I say 'role play' I mean enter a 3D mosque, or cathedral, or temple, or church, and gain insight into how people's view of the universe is projected onto their buildings.

You can see Tim's blog here :http://www.chaplaincymatters.org/ and follow him on Twitter:http://twitter.com/tim__barrett

The same article, and a further one by Margie Sheedy in the same paper, refer to the 'Real Audience Project' - I've blogged a plenty about this. It's our name for taking student work and throwing it on the net. Not just in ONE class, but heading towards EVERY class in the school having an online 'stage' where student thoughts, essays, poetry, songs, videos, insights are put forward for the world to seeand respond to. A couple of prime examples: http://learningin10.wordpress.com/ (6 year olds talking about war), http://nbcsnews.wordpress.com (with 16,000 visitors), and 

A hidden jewel in the article by Johnston refers to "one group of HSC students recently debated politics with teenagers at an international school in Vietnam". This is a twist on the Real Audience Project. Why learn about the issues in the 'Society and Culture' course via a textbook, when you can interact directly with students from Vietnam? Students from this class report profound new insights that have arisen from this approach. The teacher of this class is Mrs Shani Hartley. Her students blog here: http://saclife.edublogs.org/. She blogs here: http://shartley.edublogs.org/ Follow her on Twitter here: @shhartley .

Shani is an inspiration, and a very active member of our school's innovation unit, the "Sydney Centre for Innovation in Learning". Have a look at the blogs and twitter feeds of some other of my colleagues:

Mark Liddellhttp://markliddell.wordpress.com/

Grant Harbor (who drives Real Audience Project with me): http://gharbor.wordpress.com/ (Grant is also a Moodle guru)

Chris Woldhuishttp://edwoldblogwold.blogspot.com/

If you'd like to visit our school and see some of these, and other projects in practice, drop us a line. See www.scil.nsw.edu.au/pd for more information. 

This is just the beginning. You can subscribe to my blog (see the right hand column of this page) and you can join us on this journey. I'd love to hear from you, and I'll keep you in touch with where we go next.