Transcript Document

Interactive Whiteboards
Cláir Bhána Idirghníomhacha
(CBIs)
05DA212 Promethean
05DA214 Cambridge-Hitachi
Admin and Housekeeping
 Beware
of loose cables
 Turn off Mobiles!
 Location of Fire Exits and Assembly
Areas
 Catering – break at 11.30
 Possible visits from DES, NCTE, ICS,
CESI, Centre
 Sign the Roll Book(s), twice per day
© David Kearney, 2005
Introductions:
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David Kearney, ICT Advisor, Drumcondra
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01 8576400, [email protected]
http://homepage.eircom.net/~ictadvisor (choose
‘Hardware and Software’ …choose Interactive
Whiteboard Project (click here for link)
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Bernard Nevin, Promethean and Catríona
Phelan, Prim-Ed
 Peter Kerrison, Cambridge-Hitachi and
Patrick Lennon, Meritec
© David Kearney, 2005
Teacher Introductions
 …and
what do you hope to get from this
course?
© David Kearney, 2005
Course Format
 Begin
with ‘cailc agus caint’!
 By Friday, you will be doing all the work!
© David Kearney, 2005
Our Work Schedule
Monday – AM Intro
 Tuesday – AM CBI Tour
 Wednesday – AM CBI
Tour
 Thursday – AM
Classroom
 Friday – AM Classroom
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Monday – PM Scoilnet
 Tuesday – PM CBI Tour
 Wednesday – PM
Classroom
 Thursday – PM
Classroom
 Friday - Presentation
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© David Kearney, 2005
Setting the Scene
 Does
ICT in general work?
 Adoption – Innovation
 Inspectorate Report
 Shift in Curriculum
 Do CBIs in particular work?
© David Kearney, 2005
Does IT work?
Swedish Färila8 Project This radical overhaul has contributed to the raising of
grades in one particular school from one of the lowest in the country in 1993, to
being a school boasting with one of the highest grades in 2000
- quoted on https://www.cs.tcd.ie/publications/tech-reports/reports.01/TCD-CS2001-05.pdf (accessed 1 June 2005)
SIP Projects
Control Technolgy - Empowering Minds
Liberties Learning Initiative
Papert: Maine project
Croom VEC
Special Education Needs
© David Kearney, 2005
Adapted from content in “SMART Board Gallery …Professional ….Strategy”
© David Kearney, 2005
Report of Chief Inspector,
December 2004
Under “2.2 SCHOOL INSPECTION AT PRIMARY LEVEL”…
The inspectors considered that the application of information and
communication technologies (ICT) required further development in
almost half the schools. P8
“2.3 SCHOOL INSPECTION AT POST-PRIMARY LEVEL”….
Schools were advised that greater use could be made of ICT in areas
such as preparation, classroom implementation, methods and research
and that students should be encouraged to use ICT constructively in
their study of relevant subjects. P9
© David Kearney, 2005
Context – more than just
Infrastructure
"Evaluations of ICT projects in schools provide strong evidence that
only when the organization of work has been changed can the
introduction of ICT fully support the learning of children." [ITiS
1997]
© David Kearney, 2005
Active Learning
Confucius
 I hear and I forget
 I see and I remember
 I do and I understand
Aristotle

"For the things we must learn before we learn
them we learn by doing them"
© David Kearney, 2005
Interactive Whiteboards (CBIs) General benefits
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. versatility, with applications for all ages across the curriculum (Smith A
1999)
 . increases teaching time by allowing teachers to present web-based
and other resources more efficiently (Walker 2003)
 . more opportunities for interaction and discussion in the classroom,
especially compared to other ICT (Gerard et al 1999).
 . increases enjoyment of lessons for both students and teachers
through more varied and dynamic use of resources, with associated
gains in motivation (Levy 2002).
‘What the research says about interactive whiteboards’, from BECTA:
document wtrs_whiteboards.pdf - accessed on February 7th, 2004
© David Kearney, 2005
CBIs - Benefits for teachers
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. enables teachers to integrate ICT into their lessons while teaching
from the front of the class (Smith H 2001)
. encourages spontaneity and flexibility, allowing teachers to draw on
and annotate a wide range of web-based resources (Kennewell 2001)
. enables teachers to save and print what is on the board, including any
notes made during the lesson, reducing duplication of effort and
facilitating revision (Walker 2002)
. allows teachers to share and re-use materials, reducing workloads
(Glover & Miller 2001)
. widely reported to be easy to use, particularly compared with using a
computer in whole-class teaching (Smith H 2001)
. inspires teachers to change their pedagogy and use more ICT,
encouraging professional development (Smith A 1999).
© David Kearney, 2005
CBIs - Benefits for students
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. increases enjoyment and motivation
. greater opportunities for participation and collaboration, developing
students’ personal and social skills (Levy 2002)
. reduces the need for note-taking through the capacity to save and
print what appears on the board
. students are able to cope with more complex concepts as a result of
clearer, more efficient and more dynamic presentation (Smith H 2001)
. different learning styles can be accommodated as teachers can call
on a variety of resources to suit particular needs (Bell 2002)
. enables students to be more creative in presentations to their
classmates, increasing self-confidence (Levy 2002)
. students do not have to use a keyboard to engage with the
technology, increasing access for younger children and students with
disabilities (Goodison 2002).
© David Kearney, 2005
CBIs – Factors for effective
use
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. sufficient access to whiteboards so teachers are able to gain
confidence and embed their use in their teaching (Levy 2002)
. use of whiteboards by students as well as teachers (Kennewell 2001)
. provision of training appropriate to the individual needs of teachers
(Levy 2002)
. investment of time by teachers to become confident users and build
up a range of resources to use in their teaching (Glover & Miller 2001)
. sharing of ideas and resources among teachers (Levy 2002)
. positioning the whiteboards in the classroom to avoid sunlight and
obstructions between the projector and the board (Smith H 2001)
. a high level of reliability and technical support to minimise problems
when they occur (Levy 2002).
© David Kearney, 2005
Virtual Learning - IWBs
 http://www.virtuallearning.org.uk/iwb/ind
ex.html
 Osteniveness,
Ludic Elements,
Visualization, Bricolage, Granularization,
Modules, Mosaics

(John Cutthell)
© David Kearney, 2005
\continued
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So what makes the biggest difference …? Training, and the
desire to be Interactive with the new technology…
The visual impact was stunning and for the first time in my
career, I’ve seen students picking up negative enlargements
easily and even recalling them in an exam situation.
The work they completed in the eight weeks, was significantly
better than any work they had done before in Geography.
It is however, the confidence, creativity and imagination of the
teacher using the board that will have an impact on these boys
and others like them, rather than the board itself.
© David Kearney, 2005
CBI has five constituents…
Software
Computer
Physical
Connection
Screen
Data Projector
© David Kearney, 2005
Constituents - review
Computer – Mac or PC – Pentium, memory
hard drive space and speed, speakers
 Screen – physical size, mobile or mounted,
passive or active, touch or solid state, height
 DP – resolution, throw, brightness, noise, bulb
length, xga
 Connection – serial, USB - length, blue tooth
 Software – features, version
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© David Kearney, 2005
Three Activities
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On-line Discussion Forum
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Software
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To support the CBI Project, but also to support
other CBI users: www.cesi.ie/forum
Commercial ware, freeware, online: CBI as an
extension of the desktop
Scoilnet
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Using www.scoilnet.ie to locate “CBI-friendly”
resources (use document)
© David Kearney, 2005
Discussion Forum
 Visit
www.cesi.ie /forum
 You
can view the Public folder
 You can register
 You will receive an email to ‘Activate’
 Send an email to the Moderator who can
then add you to the Private folder
 Comments
from the ‘Winds’ project
© David Kearney, 2005
Using Scoilnet
 Visit
www.scoilnet.ie
 Hover
on the ‘Teachers’ tab and choose
your Level (e.g. Second)
 Choose a Course (e.g. Juinior)
 Choose a Subject (e.g. History)
 Choose a Material Type (usually Additional
Resource) …hit GO
 Search the Results page for ‘interactive’,
‘Flash’, idirgníomhach …
© David Kearney, 2005
CBI as a Desktop
Games …Solitaire
 Music …Finale
 Numeracy …Euklid
 ICT …Tangrams
 ICT …Tidy Up
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But a CBI can do much more than just run these
programs! (annotate, copy screen shots for
revision, record live video etc.)
© David Kearney, 2005
Tomorrow…
 We
get to work on the CBIs themselves
 Promethean
downstairs
 Hitachi upstairs
 Looking
forward to viewing all your good
work on Friday 
© David Kearney, 2005