03
Jan

I’m sitting feeling quite contented at the moment, but this morning I was in a state. Sunday is always a difficult day for me, because it’s the day that I devote to getting myself prepared for the week. I’m a planner at heart, and have to know what I’m doing, with a back up plan if needed- I suppose it’s a control thing.

I do ask myself the question, why does it take so long? I remember a head teacher who couldn’t grasp the time I was still spending on planning; after five years I should be resourced and set-up.

Over my teaching career I’ve tried to make myself more organised and productive, I moved from a paper planner to Word document weekly template, divided into individual days and lessons. I use this to fill in the details of my lessons, it also works as a diary, so I put in reminders of tasks to do during the day. I started to use red text as well to denote points of importance, such as students I wanted to speak to, or changes that I had made to the format of my lesson. With teaching multiple groups I also wanted a way to show what parts of the lesson I didn’t teach, so I now highlight these blue.

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I’ve been developing my model of planning over the last three years, so I now have a detailed record of how my lessons progressed on any week or day, because I can go back and look at what I was doing previously it saves time, I can now easily cut and paste lesson ideas ,and adapt them to suit the present class.

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I’m also a bit pedantic about my lesson resources, so tend to order them according to Key Stage, topic and lesson. I’ve also started to hyperlink between my planning template and individual resources and folders.

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As I change or adapt resources, the old versions  go to a more general thematic folder.  I also keep an external hard drive of resources at home, in readiness for new lessons, or as potential inspiration.

I suppose the planning part will always take time- each class often requires a slightly difficult approach or adapted resource, within Geography topicality can quickly influence learning- old case studies are dispatched for new, and about every two minutes a syllabus changes. :)

01
Jan

Just a personal reflection on the impact that technology has had on my professional life over the last ten years in my present teaching establishment.

Infrastructure

I’m lucky to work in a school where we have a stable network, that has been maintained and developed over the last ten years by a great set of support staff.

1999

2009

One admin computer within the faculty

Computer in every classroom

 

DVD drives within all computers

Internet access, mostly unfiltered

Data projector in every classroom

Humanities computer suite

External access to documents

External school email

External access to programmes, including Sims

VLE?

Still to be persuaded on the VLE- but I’m keeping an open mind.

Administration

Technology has had a huge impact on the time needed to complete administration tasks.

1999

2009

Paper notes taken during briefings

Daily emailed bulletin

Paper register

Electronic Sims Registration

Typed yearly reports

Sims termly progress checks

Sims yearly generated reports

Paper based pastoral referral system

Sims behaviour management system

Paper based classroom mark sheet

Excel mark sheet

 

Teaching and Learning

How I prepare to teach, and the media I use when teaching, have been influenced by technology.

1999

2009

Lesson research mainly paper based, textbooks, newspapers, journals

Lesson research mainly online

Paper-based lesson planner

Lessons electronically stored and adapted

Paper-based schemes of work

Electronic schemes of work- hyperlinked to resources

OHP and Chalk board

Data Projector and Interactive Whiteboard

Student work mainly paper based

Access to technology allows students to produce outcomes using a variety of media

Submission of paper- based work

Electronic submission of work, mentoring of students via email

Use of blogging as an extended learning resource

Sharing of resources via the Internet

 

Though technology has changed the format and materials I use  to ‘present’ lessons, access to I.C.T. resources still limits the experimental type learning that I would like to use within the classroom.

Professional Development

1999

2009

Mainly local, through ex-PGCE colleagues

A variety of scales through web-platforms such as websites, blogs, and Twitter.

 

One of the greatest impacts of technology upon  my professional development over the last ten years, has been the ability to access the resources and views of other practitioners.

It leaves me reflecting on the impact that technology might have over the next ten years…