c.
Helping Learners Develop their own IT Capabilities
Whenever
the pupils in the case study are using a computer to learn, they
are of course not only developing their Language skills but also
their ICT skills. It is important to distinguish between one thing
and the other, and also for us as Modern Languages specialists
to know when a pupil is learning to use ICT as well as learning
the language.
If
pupils used all possible resources - and maybe one or two extra
that you thought of - the very least they would have developed
is the following range:
- Accessing
the World Wide Web
- Searching
for information
- Basic
skills of mouse and keyboard manipulation
- Printing
- if the pupil was allowed to print from the World Wide Web
- Using
e-mail corresponding with a pen friend
- Using
a word processor - if pupils undertook copy and paste activities
It might be interesting to look back over your own lesson plans
to see where these things happened, and even to look at the IT
curriculum as it applies to pupils at Key Stages three and four
to see what they are doing in your subject that is contributing
to their development in the IT arena. All case studies in all
subjects in this series make this same statement, so crucial is
the pupil's awareness of and use of ICT to his or her own learning
in other subjects using it.
It
is worth trying this exercise:
- Identify
what pupils are doing with ICT in the Language tasks you have
set them.
- Identify
whether what they are doing is a basic motor skill such as moving
a mouse, a technique where they have to follow steps or a higher
order skill where they have to plan and make decisions.
-
Identify the areas of the IT curriculum at the pupil's key stage
to see whether work you are doing with him or her can be linked
to learning in the IT area.
d.
Assessing Learning
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