b.
Managing Learning in the Classroom
We
have touched on the question of the practicalities of using ICT
in the classroom, and the question of planning to make the best
use of the hardware and software to do more than the job in hand.
The next question is how to manage the people, the space and the
equipment/resources in a way that maximises learning.
Whether
you are using ICT or not, but perhaps more when you are, your
first question here is how to arrange pupils. You may wish when
using expensive or dangerous equipment or processes to keep difficult
pupils apart, because there is so much individual and independent
learning going on as well as some risks that need to be managed.
You might also like to mix abilities, both subject specific and
IT literacy levels of ability.
This
is one for discussion with your mentor - how will you sit pupils
when you have a space where all pupils are using ICT, and how
will you arrange them when resources are more limited so that
only some can use ICT?
The
next question is how to deal with the peaks and troughs of intervention,
and how to ensure that reasonably equal progress is being made
across the whole class. The mixing of abilities in IT literacy
helps with this in our case study, but you will need to decide
what is best for you. Another one for discussion with colleagues
and your mentor.
Finally,
you have to face the question of what happens when one, some or
all of your ICT facilities give up the ghost. Here you must imagine
the worst happening and ensure that you are prepared for it, and
you must do this without making so much work for yourself that
the efficiency saving of using ICT is lost.
In
summary, you have four issues to consider in managing learning:
- The
mixing of abilities when you set pair or group work.
- The
arrangement of people in the room, including yourself.
- Keeping
on top of intervention, and ensuring that all pupils get equal
attention.
- Managing
a room full of pupils waiting to use ICT to learn when the power
fails.
As
you are going through the process of planning and using ICT in
this and the other case studies, your mentor will advise you on
these matters.
c.
Helping Learners Develop their own IT Capabilities
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