Professional development in the global classroom

Designed into these learning stories:

Narrative

Legislative and economic pressures mean that certain methods used to teach difficult science, mathematics or technology topics are no longer possible or practical. Teachers need inspiring ideas to cover these gaps. There are pockets of innovation in classrooms around the world. Social media and online collaboration tools can help teachers get connected with each other and share innovative teaching practice and resources between schools in the same community or across the globe.

Narrative

I am considered by my peers to be a “connected teacher.” I often know how to find answers to hard teaching problems through being well connected to teaching communities and online resources.

I was not always like this. In the past I was more of an observer on an online community of teachers but I would certainly never post anything online or talk with teachers outside my school about what I do in the classroom. I learned to become a follower on Twitter and had a few colleagues as friends on Facebook but I often struggled on my own to find answers to hard teaching problems.

One day, I was struggling to find a new approach to teaching a difficult topic (gravity) and I wrote about it in my Facebook status. One of my Facebook friends put my status message on Twitter, and one of her followers then let me know about a TeachMeet (self-organized blended professional development workshop) for physics and science teachers held at a school nearby.

I attended and was inspired by the five-minute presentations, in particular a presentation given remotely by Ms Maria Gonzales, who got her students to create simulations of the motion of the Earth and Moon using the Scratch programming environment. I contacted her through her Facebook profile.

I prefer to try things out on my own and so am experimented with Scratch myself, using the online resources available. I also asked Maria on Facebook for help. We also use Skype to give one-to-one support to each other.  We recently worked together to perfect a lesson activity where students worked in pairs to create Scratch simulations of the motion of comets around the Sun. We often share resources between each other, adapting them for use with our own curriculum.

Maria and I also arrange for our two classes to meet online with Skype and get our students to present their simulations and share their Scratch programming experiences with each other. Other teachers in the science department sometimes attend and recently the principal of my school asked us to give a short talk about our use of Scratch and how we came to learn to use it at a professional development forum for secondary schools in my local authority.

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This post is also available in: Turkish

One Response to Professional development in the global classroom

  1. Adil Tugyan says:

    I like this narrative so much and I totally agree what is presented here.Thinking the pas it was hardly possible to bring two different classes together to do a mutual project and it was impossible to find a partner from other countries but luckly we have internet and lots of tools that enable us to work with a partner from other end of the world and share experiences, ideas so we dont need to travel places to learn things to enhance our personal and professional development thatks to all these technology. As soon as ı find a partner for itec ı will do a collaborative lesson like the one mentioned above .All the best 🙂

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