ICT Challenges and Expectations – Ministerial Address

29 12 2006

Jim KnightJim Knight, Minister of State for Schools and 14 - 19 Learners

ICT Mark for Schools Awards
Doug Brown, Deputy Director for Technology Futures Unit, DfES

This session will be Skypecast live. To listen to it you must have a Skypecast account.

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The draft of Jim Knight’s speech can be downloaded here.




Keynote: IT Culture is Changing Children’s Brains

29 12 2006

Dr Martin Westwell, Deputy Director, Institute for the Future of the Mind, Oxford University

Children today are exposed to a vast array of technology whilst they are growing up. What effect does this have on the way that young people think, behave and learn? Can we control the direction in which these technologies are taking us?

How do we ensure that the introduction of ICT will help to deliver learning objectives? When and why does it fail? Looking to the future, how will learning change modify our brainwaves through the use of computers? Scenarios such as this may sound like science fiction, but the technology is with us now or is just around the corner.

Notes on what was said:

You have more connections between your brain cells when you are 4 years old. While in old age we lose these connections. The more we use these connections the more we deveop them. What does this tell us about learning. Repetition is important as it reinforces these connections. Emotion is also important. Being motivated changes the biochemistry in the brain.

How do we turn information into knowledge, is we are going to have a framework for thinking , how can we incorporative this into learning, now we are in an information rich, rather thanan information poor, question rich society.

Too much information can be debilitating.

What we should be thinging about is think about using the information in a useful way. Why did you link those two sites togeth? As the internet moves on, the internet is moving away from provifing information, but for expressing your won interests in a motivating way. Socialisation – using it as a tool to facilitate social networking. The research splits into two stands – 1) it makes people more socially aare, 2) it makes them more socially inept.

Not the technology, but the way that you use it. – Cyber bullies just have a better way of bullying.

We get a lot of questions, from the media, and here are on the answers. Yes kids brains anre different today; kids do not read less due to internet use; kids that are internet users spend more time doing their homework;

Study taking 48 undergraduates, Group A and B were given the same video game to play at the same time. $100 at stake for each group to be the best. One was given a violent version and one non-violent.. Then they were given the prisoner’s dilemma – those playing the violent game were 7 times more likely to exploit than those that played the non-violent game.

Another study tested surgeons. Those that were video game players gave 37% fewer errors, and 27% faster. Ok games help with hand eye coordination, but there is something much more subtle going on here.

Study 3 – differences between Medal of Honor, and Tetris. Those that play Medal of Honor changes the way that you give attention to visual awareness – they are more able to assess a scene.

What this means for developing, say elearning and Learning Platforms, - we need to concentrate on increasing ‘attentional capacity’. But for gamers, the pot is only half full, they will look outside the task for more.

What we do know is while we are using your working memory, some of your executive control, and makes you more distractable.

Television – The Flynn effect. Back in the 130s the normal IQ was set at 100.. If were do the same tests in the 1930s, then the average is 120, and 25% would be exceptional. Where has this come from? If you plot height – taller people are ’smarter’. But this is not necessarily the case. What’s changed is that we are more able to think in a more visual way – perhaps due to television etc. The truth is the minds of people are different – the environment is different, we think in different ways. Television today is much more cognatively demanding.

Out brains are different to what they were in the past, it is as simple as that. Some say it’s all in the genes – it’s clearly nonsense. You are dealt certain cards, but these can be and are changed. Study of mice genetically altered to have Huntingdon’s. Those kept in an enriched environment meant less got the disease. Their brains were rewired and did not develop the disease.

What of the most stimulating thing you can do is interact with others. Parental engagement is all important of course.

Blue light – receptors in the eyes release a neutral transmitter to wake you up. Florescent light contains a lot of yellow, with little blue.

Multi-sensory approach clearly has an effect, but visual and kinaesthetic learning styles is nonsense;
Exercise – no basis for more exercise improves
Drinking Water – being dehydrated is poor, drinking more has no impact beyond this;
Science has nothing to offer what education is for – whether we are lighting the candle ot filling a bucket.

So Learning Platforms needs to think about what education is for?

What about over enrichment? Eg a talking story, with a ‘read me’ mode and a ‘let me play’ mode. The children preferred the latter. Even though this increased motivation, but it did not increase cognition.




Keynote: Making Space for Learning – Creating Physical and Virtual Environments in Schools of the Future

29 12 2006

Steve Moss, Strategic Director – ICT

What does a 21st Century Learning Environment look like and how might schools’ practice be changed by the availability of the next generation of online learning environments and buildings in which ICT infrastructure is ubiquitous?

Drawing on the experience of the BSF Pathfinder authorities and innovative developments in other countries, Steve will explore the issues and opportunities created by the Building Schools for the Future programme.




Lead Presentation: Are VLEs up to the Job of 21st Century Learning?

29 12 2006

Professor Steven Molyneaux, Director of Learning Lab

This keynote will address the issues regarding Virtual Learning Environments and their possible unsuitability in providing support for 21st Century Learners. It will look at the characteristics of the Neo-Millennium Learner and offer debate as to the suitability of current software applications in exploiting these characteristics.

The session will challenge some of the current DfES/Becta thinking in this area and stimulate debate between practitioners, vendors and policy makers.




Lead Presentation: Do Current ICT Policies Support Learner Choice?

29 12 2006

Clare Johnson, ICT Programme Director

This session will set the scene for the range of curriculum sessions in the Theme “Curriculum Choices, Pedagogy and Assessment” by reviewing research evidence and trends, current accountabilities and agendas, and begin to explore a definition of curriculum.

Evidence and practice will be drawn from a number of areas including QCA agendas and policy statements e.g. White Papers




Lead Presentation: Latest Research into Effective Pedagogy in ICT CPD

29 12 2006

Richard MillwoodRichard Millwood, Director Core Education UK
This session will share the progress made in the Naace/Core Education UK DfES funded project to develop new continuing professional development approaches for teachers using inquiry-based learning, online community, patchwork assessment, exhibition and personalised learning.

Where Naace stands on ICT CPD for Members
Roger Broadie, Broadie Associates Ltd and Member of the Naace Executive Committee




Becta Vision for Learning Platforms

29 12 2006

Robin Ball, Manager Learning Services and Andy Tyerman, Assistant Director Content, Becta

Following the Learning Platform Services framework announcement I will focus on engagement and implementation for schools and institutions. The deployment of Learning Platform technologies, a central theme to the delivery of the e-Strategy, needs to be carefully planned and manager through a clear statement of requirements for the institution and its learners. We will address the development of a strategic vision using available tools and resources to support the process of change management




14-19 Curriculum Review, Impact on the Offer and Learner Choice

29 12 2006

Margaret Wright, Adviser for ICT, QCA

The Education and Skills white papers proposed reviews of the ICT curriculum and ICT general qualifications in schools, including GCSE and GCE A Level. In addition, two new qualifications were proposed, one for functional skills in ICT and another, the specialised diploma in ICT. These changes are due for implementation in 2008 and 2009. This session will explore the curriculum and qualifications proposals and prompt thinking about what they might mean for the learner.

Update:

Thanks to Leon for filming this session on this Learning 4 Life website (see comment)

Download link
Credit: Leon Cych on behalf of Naace




Lead Presentation: The Future; Multimodal Literacy – Examples of what this means for Teachers and Children in the Near Future

29 12 2006

Niel McLean, Executive Director, Becta

ICT CPD: Gathering Evidence from Members to Inform the Naace Strategy
Christina Preston, Chair MirandaNet Fellowship; Margaret Danby, Education Consultant and John Cuthell, Director Research and Implementation MirandaNet Fellowship




The Learning Platform Landscape

29 12 2006

Chris Wood, Portal Manager, London Grid for Learning

Learning platforms have the potential to touch every aspect of the way schools communicate and organise their data. This session some of the latest developments and issues.







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