e.
Planning the Work of Learners
In
the case study teacher's experience, planning the work of learners
on the web is quite straightforward. He has access to a room where
his class can share computers on a one-between-two basis, he knows
how to use a variety of CD's quite well, and he has copied some
material from various CD's and web sites into his own worksheets.
He has also by now looked at some currently active and relevant
World Wide Web sites and can show pupils the relations between
the services on these different resources.
Your
case might be different. Firstly, do you have access to a computer
room or learning centre where you can work on Communication Key
Skills lessons with a full group of pupils? Secondly, can you
run a CD - if you are able to access these services on a CD -
on all of the machines using your school's network? There are
other, technical questions, but these are less important than
the educational questions. Consider those below before you start
planning the series of lessons in detail.
- How
long will you take to deal with this area of work from start
to finish, including the production of homework if this is relevant?
- How
much of this time will you spend gaining access to the Internet
in a planned and structured way, and using word processed resources
of your own?
- How
do you want to order the use of ICT for learning and assessment
- do you want it blocked or staggered, and will you need to
circulate pupils around it in circumstances where not all pupils
can use computers at once?
- How
will you plan to ensure that all pupils are spending time using
ICT for the best purposes in their learning of Communication
Key Skills?
- How
will you ensure that pupils do not simply 'copy and paste' unreflectively
from the resources they encounter, and that they learn what
they should learn about the work?
- How
will you ensure that students avoid simply improving the presentation
of the work with ICT rather than learning better as a result
of using it?
These
questions are crucial at this stage, and you might want to discuss
them with colleagues and/or your mentor before you create a scheme
of work that includes the use of ICT, however rough the scheme
is at the beginning. Once you are happy that you have a plan of
how to use ICT effectively for the work you want to do on your
own area of Communication Key Skills, you should go on to consider
some lesson plans for actually applying it in the classroom.
Part
2: Teaching with ICT
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