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Microsoft365 Windows 11

Research: The Importance Of Digital Inking

UPDATE 29th March 2018: In addition to the school-led research below, Microsoft has conducted funded research into the impact of Inking on Thinking in schools in Victoria, Australia. you can read these here:

I am excited to see that increasing numbers of schools are conducting research on the teaching and learning practices within their own schools and aligning that with external, peer reviewed research. My previous post reflecting on how leadership teams could pivot their focus and prioritize this type of analysis and strategic visioning goes into this in more depth.

churchieLogoTo that end, I’m really excited to see a recent post from the Deputy Headmaster at Churchie School in Brisbane, Australia that shares data from a three year longitudinal study around how technology is being used in their classes with a particular focus on traditional laptops vs digital ink enabled devices (Surface Pro in this case).

Read the full report from Churchie here.

What helps is that Churchie has a clear vision of what they wish to achieve with the use of technology in the classroom:

Churchie’s teaching of technology in the classroom is a responsive one that seeks to use technology as a learning tool to unleash the transformative skills of creativity, critical thinking, problem solving and collaboration, and to enrich those experiences that are linked to enhanced student engagement in learning

Over three years and 100 observations of Churchie teachers, the school found there was clear trends around how technology was used based on the device interface (keyboard, touch, pen) and this is in line with the seminal work from Professor Sharon Oviatt. Churchie used the SAMR model as a way of measuring teacher and student use of devices. If you’re not familiar with SAMR it’s a four stage taxonomy that looks at the integration of technology into teaching and learning practices:

  1. Substitution
  2. Augmentation
  3. Modification
  4. Redefinition

This has been visually represented in many different ways but one of my favourites is:

samr-diving.jpg

SAMR is good because it is simple to understand for teachers and relatively easy to plan and integrate into teaching and learning plans and frameworks. I wrote about it a lot when at St Andrew’s College and you can see some examples here of it in action here. In Churchie’s study, they identified a clear trend towards higher order thinking and use of technology when a pen/ink enabled device was used compared to a traditional laptop:

churchie SAMR
Research from Churchie School, 2018

The preponderance of laptop use at Substitution reflects the wider research:

When typing, students do not engage those key generative thinking processors (summarising, paraphrasing and concept mapping) that encode external storage cognitive processes and that are linked to improved learning through the retention of new knowledge and the creation of schemas with existing understanding (Mueller and Oppenheimer, 2014). Quite simply, when we rapidly type, we are not thinking or retaining knowledge.

Furthermore, when observing how students were using their devices in class across a range of learning activities, the Surface Pro really stood out in the higher order thinking skills of Understanding, Analysing, Evaluating and Creating:

Churchie 2
Research from Churchie School, 2018

Again, I encourage you to read the entire report from Churchie here and they are explicit that their goal is to stimulate and promote ideation, problem solving and inferential reasoning and they believe the device interface has research backing showing the use of a pen / stylus and digital inking can achieve this. In 2015 I conducted research across a trial of teachers at St Andrew’s College on the value of then Surface Pro 3 shortly after it had been released to see the impact of Digital Inking and you can read the full results of this in the blog post I wrote at the time. Even then, teachers were seeing the immense value of the pen for digital inking:

sp3-pen
Research from St Andrew’s College 2015

Office365 – Think In Ink

The logical extension of the impact of Digital Inking is how well it is supported by a cloud collaboration suite. Office365 is uniquely positioned to support both educators and students with an unparalleled Digital Inking experience. A collection of links to get you started:

Inking

Finally, I do want to reference again a great article on digital note taking I blogged about back in August 2017 and it’s worth reading again because it has a whole section on Multi-Modal note taking that is front and centre for the team at Churchie:

  1. Digital Organization and Content Curation
  2. Multimodal Notes
  3. Concept Mapping
  4. Visible Thinking Routines

One of the telling passages towards the end of the article is:

Too often, educators project their own note taking habits onto their students, applying paper-based strategies to digital tools. With that mindset, it becomes far too easy for short-sighted studies to confirm previously held biases against technology. However, as students progress in an increasingly digital and connected world, one challenge for educators will be to view digital note taking as a unique, necessary and completely different skill set to be taught.

This accurately highlights the challenges educators face in terms of not being unduly influenced by older learning styles and remaining open to leveraging newer technologies that will benefit students. However, these new methods need to be clearly articulated and presented to students. Using the old adage, they are “taught, not caught” – in my view at least, it’s not enough to hand off note taking to students and simply hope they settle on a technique that works for them.

With schools regularly acknowledging they are informed and led by research in terms of best practice in the classroom, the increasing evidence around the benefits of digital inking and the associated support for this in Office365 should stimulate some robust discussions amongst school leadership teams!

UPDATE 27th March 2018: Terry Byers from Churchie has just published other research from the school around the impact of the physical environment in schools on the use of technology. You can read this at the link below:

Empirical evaluation of different classroom spaces on students’ perceptions of the use and effectiveness of 1‐to‐1 technology

 

Categories
Microsoft365

Video: OneNote + iPad Pro + Pencil = Awesome

This is a really good video showing how OneNote works flawlessly on an iPad Pro with Pencil for an excellent digital inking experience. The only thing I would say about this video is that it uses an individual OneNote Notebook and not a Class NoteBook which would allow for even greater integration with a student/class/teacher workflow.

I have been at the SPANZ conference this week and talked to a number of Principals that self-identified their schools as  “Apple schools” or “Google schools” and thought they would therefore not be able to leverage the value of Office365. The reality is, as this video shows, Office365 is increasingly cross-platform and supports learners effectively on different devices.

Categories
General

Musings On Educational Leadership

Queenstown
A view across Lake Wakatipu in Queenstown – a great place to think and connect with Principals from around New Zealand

I’ve spent the first part of this week in the beautiful resort town of Queenstown attending the annual SPANZ conference for Secondary Principals of New Zealand. It’s always valuable listening to the presentations at an event like this, along with taking the opportunity to talk with Principals about what is top of mind for them in their schools and it seems like an accurate way to tap into the zeitgeist of education in the country.

A decade ago I quit my job in an IT company that was focused on the emerging Cloud hosting business and trained as a teacher of History and English – most of my peers thought I was crazy! I ended up as a Head of Department for Social Sciences before moving into a Director of ICT role in the Executive Leadership Team at a large K-12 Independent School. These experiences, coupled with regular chats with friends and former colleagues working in the education space (many of them sitting in senior leadership roles in both primary and secondary schools, most with aspirations to be Principals themselves one day) have informed my thoughts below.

Without wishing to be too contentious and with no desire whatsoever to be offensive, I thought I would share a few reflections on what I have observed and also make some suggestions for an alternative model for leadership roles.

The Typical Progression Into Leadership

As new teachers emerge from training colleges fresh, eager and at times overly idealistic, they are usually placed into a provisional registration program where they receive varying levels of mentoring and feedback to assist them in turning their theoretical knowledge into practical expertise in the classroom. If they have aspirations to move into senior roles and also increase their earnings, they’re generally confronted with a decision after a few years teaching about which pathway to proceed down:

  1. Pastoral Care – usually in a Deaning role of some sort and providing the link between the student, school and home (and often with external social support agencies as well)
  2. Head of Department – managing a team of teachers and overseeing everything from curriculum planning through assessment and moderation, to staff performance appraisals

leadershipIt is not surprising that the people with management skills (required or learnt in the second pathway above) tend to lead to quicker acceleration into Senior Leadership Teams (variously SLT or SLG). That experience, along with deep curriculum knowledge, normally marks out Heads of Department as future Assistant or Deputy Principals and, all progressing well, they go on to become Principals of their own schools one day.

Senior Leaders: Administrators or Visionaries?

It’s at this stage, when a successful teacher who has proven themselves a competent Head of Department or even an excellent Pastoral Care Leader and has graduated to a SLT role, that I see things becoming a little strange.

Often, the classroom excellence, teaching innovation and educational vision that they have demonstrated in their careers to this point gets stifled in their new roles of Assistant/Deputy Principals as they are loaded up with ownership of a multitude of what can best be described as ‘administrative’ tasks. What does this look like? In my experience and talking with aspiring Principals, often their duties include things like:

  • Co-ordinating the school photos
  • Managing the day relief teaching when teachers are sick/away
  • Timetabling of classes
  • Managing the various specialised programmes a school may choose to run e.g. enrolling of students into Duke of Edinburgh etc
  • Running discipline events such as after-school detentions
  • A variety of other non-educational tasks that certainly need to be completed but do not necessarily require deep educational expertise

too-busy-to-improveAll of these task are necessary and certainly they all need to be handled professionally for the smooth running of any school, however it seems to me that in assigning these roles to SLT members they are effectively turned into highly paid administrators. Most, if not all, of these tasks could be successfully managed by a competent administrator who understands processes and systems without requiring a deep understanding of education.

With the exception of perhaps the Principal, most SLT end up focusing very heavily (if not exclusively), on the smooth day to day running of the school. There is scarce time available for deep educational reflections, consistent strategical planning and review, or ongoing mentoring of staff.

What Does Your Work Week Look Like?

A wise Principal once offered the following advice when prioritizing strategy and planning versus the day to day fire-fighting of issues in my role at a school I worked at. They suggested breaking down my day/week into three categories:

  1. ‘Business as usual’ activities that need to be done.
  2. Reactionary activity to something unusual that has emerged unexpectedly
  3. Long term strategy and planning

For this leader, they split their time over the three categories above as follows:

  1. 20% – planning presentations to parents, assemblies, involvement at school activities etc.
  2. 10% – being involved in student discipline, community emergencies, staff issues etc.
  3. 70% – thinking and planning deeply for the future success of the school.

By contrast, they suggested that a typical teacher with a full teaching load was more likely to look like:

  1. 80% – the bulk of their day is teaching in the classroom, marking assessment and planning for upcoming lessons as well as co-curricular commitments.
  2. 10% – perhaps responding to a student incident, parent complaint or something else going wrong.
  3. 10% – re-thinking how they might teach units, introduce new units or assessments and professional development

I would hazard a guess that for many SLT (excluding Principals) their split might look something like:

  1. 60% – doing all of the administrative tasks listed above such as day relief, managing events like Assemblies, co-ordinating photos etc, teaching 1-2 classes.
  2. 25% – responding to things going wrong e.g. discipline issues with students, education outside the classroom trips having problems, staff departing/hiring etc
  3. 15% – vision and goal setting for the school.

vision-innovation-strategy-400x218The above numbers are, of course, going to vary from school to school and leader to leader but I suspect they are broadly accurate because of the ways schools are typically run. Reflecting on this, I have wondered if there is a better way to utilize the particular skills and motivations of educators. I know first hand that when you’re operating in a job outside of your gifting, interests and motivations then it is very quickly draining and stressful. This article from September 2017 led with the opening statement:

The principal of a top Taranaki school has resigned after 12 years in the role – and says other school leaders have congratulated him for getting out of an increasingly stressful profession.

Charles Gibson is one of five Taranaki principals and deputy principals leaving their posts this year.

Meanwhile, this article from EducationHQ in January 2017 stated:

Kiwi primary school principals and deputies are suffering high levels of stress and burnout because of heavy workloads and a lack of support, a survey has found.

I am not sure any young education graduate imagines the pinnacle of their career is going to look more like an administrative role or running a business than being an inspiring educational visionary.

A Bold Alternative For Educational Leaders:

So what is to be done? Unquestionably schools need to run smoothly and the ‘day to day’ business as usual jobs need to be efficiently taken care of. My thoughts, as intimated above, would be to:

  • As much as possible, offload the administrative tasks to those who do it best: trained and/or experienced administrators who are ‘process people’ that can adapt their existing knowledge and experience into an educational environment, without necessarily being educational experts.
  • Free up SLT members to focus exclusively on what they know and do best: educating future generations for the changing requirements of the 21st century workforce and mentoring existing teachers to be the most effective they can in the classroom.

If SLT were not spending hours a week on assigning relief lessons to temporary staff, running detentions for misbehaving students, or performing other administrative tasks, what might their role look like instead? Well, here’s a few thoughts:

  • Deep and meaningful mentoring and coaching of all teachers, not just those in the first couple of years of their professional careers.
    • How many teachers regularly have another, experienced educator observe their lessons and provide constructive feedback? Not many I would suggest. Better yet, perhaps some co-teaching could take place allowing a full time classroom teacher the benefit of observing and teaching alongside an expert educator.
    • Most businesses are increasingly trying to implement effective mentoring/coaching and it makes simple sense for education to follow suit, with the ‘best and brightest’ who have risen to SLT status to share their experience and insights
  • Spend frequent time thinking strategically and reflectively on the direction of the school, the approach to teaching and learning and how they’re implementing one of the most forward thinking and flexible curriculum in the world.
    • Find any statistic you like, invariably it will suggest that the majority of students in schooling today will be going into jobs that don’t exist or will look vastly different to what they do today. Therefore, it’s axiomatic that preparing students for that world is not easy. It requires thought, planning, strategy, agility, and a willingness to change direction as appropriate. I wrote about this in October 2017 when I reflected on the “Teachers of Tomorrow”

Knowledge and skills have become the global currency of 21st-century economies. But there is no central bank that prints this currency; we cannot inherit this currency, and we cannot produce it through speculation. We can only develop it through sustained effort and investment by people and for people. And no school system can achieve that without attracting, developing and sustaining great teaching talent. Andreas Schleicher (emphasis my own)

Another telling insight from Andreas Schleicher that I quoted in the blog post above reflects the unique and inherent challenges that education institutes have in trying to be agile and nimble:

Even the most effective attempts to push a government-established curriculum into classroom practice will drag out over a decade, because it just takes so much time to communicate the goals and methods through the different layers of the system and to build them into traditional methods of teacher education. In this age of accelerations, such a slow process is no longer good enough and inevitably leads to a widening gap between what students need to learn and what teachers teach. When fast gets really fast, being slow to adapt makes us really slow. (emphasis my own)

  • Engage and grapple meaningfully with the issues presented right here and now around things like digital assessment and equity of access to all learners.
    • Karen Poutasi
      Dr Karen Poutasi

      I listened to Dr Karen Poutasi (CEO at NZQA) at the SPANZ conference this week and she was talking about the accelerating rate of assessment and the use of Micro Credentials that are focused on providing “just in time” qualifications and relevant skills that employers are wanting. They are trialing this already in Otago – have a look at this link for more information.

    • The vision of NZQA is to build on the strengths of the current learner focus but to do so by using new tools and in doing this they will be ‘learning locally, leading globally’.

Final Thoughts:

There will be many naysayers who would look at my musings here and declare them out of touch or unrealistic, perhaps even uneconomical. However, a school could economically employ administrators at a ratio of 2:1 or even 3:1 in relation to their Senior Leadership Team. This would reduce the size of their Senior Leadership Teams but in doing so, increase their focus on educational transformation and doing what they love the most.

Significantly, the status quo may not be viable in the short to medium term. Not only is the average length of teaching service reducing (under 5 years from completing training as I understand it), there is an increased drop out rate of trainee teachers as well according to this article from May 2017

Poor pay, high stress, and better career options are being blamed for fewer people completing teacher training.

Figures released by the Ministry of Education show the total number of people training across the early childhood, primary and secondary education sectors fell from 4830 in 2014 to 4220 in 2015 – a drop of 610.

The number of students finishing initial teacher education had declined since 2012, while the number completing secondary teaching qualifications has steadily dropped since 2009.

There is a need to empower educators to do what they’re passionate about – educating and inspiring learners, whilst ensuring that their schools are agile and adaptive to the rapidly changing needs of the workforce of the future. Technology plays a significant role in this, however teachers and senior leaders are the key to effective education. Removing the administrative workload to allow them to be visionaries and forward thinking is the key to enabling our education to continue to be world leading.

Categories
Microsoft365

Free Training On Microsoft Teams

Teams Conference.PNG

Last November I linked to the free OneNote Online training that was being co-ordinated by Jared DeCamp and I had very positive feedback about these sessions from the educators that tuned in for them.

I see Jared’s now organising a new event that will run from April 3rd to 7th 2018 focusing on how to get the best out of Microsoft Teams For Education.

Click here to see the event page

I’ve blogged a lot about Teams including:

This five day event looks like it is going to walk users through Teams in a guided approach, starting with the basics and then developing more advanced concepts:

  1. Day One: Getting started with Teams
  2. Day Two: Working with Teams
  3. Day Three: Innovate with Teams
  4. Teams and beyond!
  5. Real-world case studies of using Teams

There is going to be live Q&A and a hashtag running for the event on #LTC18 so encourage you to tune in. You can see the full agenda here.

In my experience, these ‘on demand’ events can prove very valuable for educators as they can pick and choose the most relevant sessions and then watch them at a time that best suits their schedules. If you’re responsible for driving the uptake of Microsoft Teams For Education in your school, then it could be a good idea to get this in your calendar and encourage your staff to identify relevant sessions for them.

Categories
Windows 11

Minecraft:Education Edition Webinar

minecraftEE webinarf

Last month I recorded a 35minute webinar about Minecraft:Education Edition with my colleagues Anne Taylor (Teacher Engagement Manager) and Crispin Lockwood (Microsoft Learning Consultant). You can register and view the webinar here:

VIEW WEBINAR HERE

We deliberately started the webinar in a very simple way assuming the viewer knew nothing about Minecraft:Education Edition whatsoever and Anne walked through how to get started and also what resources were available to support educators and students to get started.

In the second half of the webinar, Crispin and I demonstrated how the game can be played, from a basic maths lesson on fractions and decimals, through to using MakeCode.com to build a TNT Cannon before using Mixed Reality to export a model from Minecraft:Education Edition and display it in the room.

Crispin.PNG
Crispin demonstrating how Minecraft works in a Maths lesson

The ability to export models from Minecraft:EE and use in Mixed Reality is a great feature that really appeals to students and I demonstrated this at the Microsoft Elevate event in Auckland this month, where we took the Beehive model we built in MakeCode.com and touched it up in Paint3D before projecting it amongst our audience. I first started experimenting with exporting models in my own time and taking the odd selfie photo:

Donna.jpg
A model church exported from Minecraft:EE and projected onto my desk using Mixed Reality

If you’re new to Minecraft:Education Edition and wondering how you can integrate this into your teaching and learning then I strongly encourage you to check out this webinar where Anne, Crispin and myself walk through how to get started with downloading the game and finding pre-built lessons to engage your students in game based learning. Simply click the link below to get watching:

VIEW WEBINAR HERE

 

Categories
Microsoft365

When Life Gives You Lemons… Eat Dog Food

LemonsI have been in Singapore this past week at the APAC Education Partners Conference which was a great event and an awesome time to connect with many new partners and also re-connect with the colleagues in my team based in Singapore that I have not seen for a few months.

I ran a bunch of sessions including a Minecraft:Education Edition three hour training event to 30 partners. Being Asia, a group photo after the event was mandatory:

IMG_7258

I also enjoyed the usual sights and sounds of Singapore:

One of the true highlights was visiting the Tanglin Trust School for a couple of hours on Friday morning where we were hosted by Steve Morgan who shared the school’s journey from students almost exclusively using MacBooks to now using ‘touch and pen’ enabled devices and Microsoft OneNote. This was quite the transformation and involved significant planning, trialing and communication but as I wandered the halls looking into the classrooms it was evident that virtually all of the teachers had embraced OneNote in a serious way – it was everywhere!

https://twitter.com/stevesingapore/status/971995253031895042

I liked the following educational take on ‘The Ten Commandments’ that was on the wall in the school:

IMG_7261

The Problem – Being Given Lemons

On the day before I was to fly out I was asked to help configure 60 Surface Pro 4 devices in preparation for the Microsoft E2 Educators event being held the following week (12th March – follow along live here). I discussed the challenge with my colleague Amit Pawar who was also asked for how best to achieve the required outcomes which were essentially:

  1. Office365 ProPlus needed to be installed (with latest version to support inserting 3D Models into PowerPoint)
  2. Minecraft:Education Edition installed
  3. Paint3D (meaning at least the Creators Update of Windows10, otherwise would need to install it via the Microsoft Store)

Not knowing what state the devices would show up in meant we had to make some assumptions, so we prepared a handful of USB drives with the ‘Click 2 Run’ O365 installer (along with a .bat file to execute the install), along with the Minecraft:Education Edition Win10 Installation file.

After returning from the visit to Tanglin Trust School on Friday morning, we found to our dismay that the units had still not arrived meaning we were going to be severely pressed for time. When they did eventually arrive mid-afternoon it was evident our original plan above was not going to work. The devices all had various versions of Windows10 installed on them, different versions of Office365 with multiple language packs (but not the latest version that included the support for 3D models in PowerPoint) and other gremlins that suggested the devices were not going to be the most functional.

The Solution – Making Lemonade

Surface
Some of the Surface Pro needing configuring

It became clear that a Plan B was going to be required to get these devices ready in the very short period of time that we had available and so Amit and I conferred and decided we would need to change tact. Our solution was to:

  1. Create a demo tenant here – https://demos.microsoft.com/ – this gave us temporary demo licenses for M365 A3 and A5 meaning we had temporary O365 ProPlus and Intune liceneses.
  2. Map a domain name to the demo tenant to make it easier to use (fortunately, my forward thinking colleague had a spare one handy).
  3. Create sixty demo user accounts in the Tenant using Excel and FlashFill
  4. Download the ISO and create Windows10 installation USB drives. Fortunately, being in Singapore there is a local Microsoft Data Centre only a few kilometers down the road meaning it did not take long to download the ISO. I had my ‘always travel with’ USB of Win10 so we could get a head start with that one.
  5. Amit then configured Intune for Education in the demo tenant to automatically push out Office365 and Minecraft: Education Edition to any users who signed into the Tenant that were connected via AzureAD and Intune and were licensed appropriately (see step 1 above).

Configuring the above did not take long, with the biggest wait being having Windows 10 reinstalled on the Surface Pro devices.  When the first couple of devices were complete they presented us with this screen in the Windows10 setup steps:

setup-for-personal-use
We chose to “Set up for an organisation” meaning we could automatically enroll the devices into Intune

By choosing the first option of “Set up for an organisation” we were presented with the option to sign in with an email address and password where we used the user names we created in step 3 above. Because the users all had AzureAD P1 and Intune Licenses they were automatically enrolled into our demo tenant (based off the domain name of the email address) and then the magic started to happen:

Office365 ProPlus applications and Minecraft:Education Edition started to immediately download to the device with no need for any further intervention. Intune For Education took over and recognised the configurations of Amit had set up and automatically pushed out the applications to the correct users.

We could then test the first few devices to ensure that Minecraft:Education Edition could be signed into and that when launching PowerPoint it had support for the 3D Models and as an added bonus, the user was automatically signed into Office365 and activated it based off the temporary demo licenses in the tenant – there was no need to manually activate Office.

Selling The Dream – The Lemonade Stall

At this point, I may be stretching my analogy around life, lemonade and lemonade stalls, however what excited me about this was it proved, in a real-world time-sensitive and under pressure situation, that the modern device management (MDM) dream can work very effectively. Intune for Education and AzureAD worked exactly as intended meaning once the initial configuration was completed, it was as easy as signing into the devices with one of the demo user accounts to complete the deployment. In the end, I had to leave at 5:30pm to catch a flight home out of Changi Airport and my colleagues all had other events to get to. As a result, they had to come in on the Saturday morning to finish the re-installation of Windows10 which was the longest part of the whole process, and then simply sign into the freshly installed Surface Pros with the new user accounts and wait a few minutes for the download and installation of Office365 ProPlus and Minecraft:Education Edition to complete.

This was a very satisfying solution and conclusion to a busy week and a great example of ‘eating your own dog food‘ (if you’re not familiar with this curious phrase, have a look at the explanation here).