Back to Exc-el
0 Comments Published November 5th, 2006 in East Lothian, Exc-el, interactive whiteboardsFor the last few weeks, I’ve been putting interactive whiteboard posts on this blog, as I knew that old exc-el site was going to be transferring to a wordpress system. That transfer has happened, so I’m going to put interactive whiteboard and specifically mathematical stuff back on my exc-el blog from now on. If this fragmentation bothers you, why not just subscribe to this feed which is combination of the feeds from the two blogs, courtesy of rssmix? Aah - can’t you feel the Web2.0 goodness?
Tags: Blogging, blogs, Exc-el, interactive whiteboards
Port Glasgow session
0 Comments Published September 30th, 2006 in Education, interactive whiteboardsThis morning I got up at the ungodly hour of 6am in order to be ferried to Haddington (thanks Elizabeth!) and thence in a Don Prentice bus to Port Glasgow for a morning of workshops on the effective use of interactive whiteboards in maths.
The first session I attended was run by an enthusiastic chap (whose name I’ve failed to record). He spoke to us about the way that his department is using interactive whiteboards to support formative assessment developments: waiting times, questioning techniques, self/peer assessment, group/pair work etc. It was a fascinating session - these points stood out for me:
- Sharing learning objectives on first slide - flip back at end of lesson
- Pair work - one minute silent, then one minute discussing with partner using clock
- Pupils making up question - make up a trinomial that factorises!
- A thick white pen over text can be rubbed out to expose the text
What really shone through the session was the extent to which the presenter’s thinking was grounded in the reality of the pupils in his school. In Port Glasgow, in appears that pupils are by-and-large quite happy to traffic light and admit to weaknesses in front of their classmates. This is so different from the culture at North Berwick, where most pupils are uncomfortable about admitting to needing support.
During the coffee break, John Connelly from Musselburgh Grammar shared the following technical tip with me: a button exists in the toolstore that disables the right-click on the pen. Very handy - thanks John!
After the break, I went to a session run by John and [will insert name here once I find it] from Promethean. They showed us some technical tips - I learned about the action icons that are already in the library, and about work with layers.
On the way out, and on the journey home, I think I heard both Tim Schmitz and Paul Goodall saying that they were planning to start blogging about their use of the interactive whiteboards (amongst other things). This is great news - go for it guys!
Tags: Education, interactive whiteboards, iwb, mathematics, maths
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