Where in the World are we Going With Digital Resources?

One incredible challenge in being a leader of 21st Century leaning is how to approach the use of digital resources in classrooms. I believe that Alberta Education and many school jurisdictions are also struggling with this issue as well. Do we purchase and license resources? Do we try to collect suitable resources for teachers into repositories? Are online textbooks the answer? How do we manage the volume of resources available? These are just a few thoughts that I have in relation to this incredible challenge that is ahead of us.

Part of the answer to this challenge can be found in the competencies found in our Portrait of a 21st Century Learner. Collaboration and innovation are critical to a solution to this question. In addition, using the online applications that are available to us to collaborate digitally. This is evident in the direction that many of the Post Secondary Institutions around the world are demonstrating with their leadership in this area.

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) was one of the first schools to put all of their courses online for free in their MIT OpenCourseWare (OCW) site. When they first started this it was to provide the global community with an opportunity to have access to first class courses. Soon they started a consortium as part of this site that now incorporates over 250 universities and organizations around the world to make available over 13,000 courses in more than 20 languages, unprecedented access to learning for our global community.

Recently, Kevin Wttewaall Director of Technology, showed me a relatively new site for open couse sharing called Coursera (these are MOOC environments ). Coursera only started about a year ago at Stanford University. Presently they have over 3,000,000 users and over 60 universities and colleges, including the university of Toronto, providing course content. These courses can in some instances be used for college credit. Finally, there is Massive Open Online Courses (MOOC) which is a massive list of free online courses.

Why do I reference these initiatives a a solution for our challenge of how to manage digital resources. I believe that this example of open collaboration can serve as a model for what we can potentially achieve in Rocky View Schools and beyond. This approach by the universities is a real movement towards the democratization of knowledge globally. They have used the digital platforms available to them to collaborate globally on an unprecedented level. We can also use the digital applications and platforms that are available to us provincially and within the jurisdiction to share our resources on a new scale.

Many of you have recently been made aware of the Collaborative Online Resource Environment (CORE) project where RVS in working with four other school jurisdictions to develop an online environment to access and share digital learning resources. One of the features that people may not realize is the ability of staff and eventually students to post digital content, videos, moodle content, lesson and unit plans and other resources. Our own ability to share content openly.

Many of our high school and middle school teachers are familiar with the power of Moodle as a learning management system. Realistically, we could be using it far more effectively. We need to work to ensure that the instructional design of our online courses remains high. This is best done collaboratively. Within the RVS moodle site their are many teachers building content for the same courses. I refer to this as engaging in parallel play. We need to develop a master course as a starting point for these online courses. A master course that is in a good instructional design format with many of the interactive aspects of the course already built in. This will give teachers a starting point to build even stronger online courses to support student learning and their courses. We need to pull these courses to the moodle hub and make them available in an open format. Teachers need to have the confidence that the materials and courses that they are developing are worth sharing in this format.

If we are able to move in this direction we will not have to rely on licensing agreements with large corporations to maintain quality digital resources. E-textbooks would not really be necessary as the content for our courses collaboratively developed and placed in object formats either in CORE or a LMS like moodle. The resources are already available to us through resource collections found on the internet. Sites such as NASA, NFB, Merlot and others have highly reliable course content. Through collaboration we can access the best digital resources from these sites to populate our courses.

Flipped Classrooms – The Future of Education?

The concept of Flipped or Inverted classrooms has been around for a number of years. Some universities have provided instruction in this format since 1996. With improvements in technology we have seen a resurgence of this idea starting in about 2004. It is a relatively new ideology that has a variety of methods to implement it into today’s classrooms. It relies on digital technologies to develop a blended instructional environment enabling students to access quality instructional resources 24/7.

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RVS Framework for Student Learning

Alberta Education has recently confirmed their Framework for Student Learning Document and graphic model have been approved by the Minister of Education. The document and the model are a framework for implementation of the new vision of education that emerged through the Inspiring Education and Setting the Direction initiatives. Continue reading

SWC’s Complete Amazing Work for RVS!

Rocky View Schools has a number of Superintendent Working Committees (SWC) that come together to work on important initiatives that emerge from our Three Year Plan (3YP). I have the pleasure of representing the Education Centre of three of these committees.

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Rocky View Schools as a Change Agent!

Alberta Education has spent a great deal of time and effort to engage the greater community in seeking feedback on how to change Alberta’s Education system. In 2008 they began one initiative, to examine the current delivery and supports for special education students within the province. They travelled the province asking stakeholders what was working with the current system and how we could make that system better. This initiatives led into the development of Action on Inclusion, which was one of the action agendas that was then rolled out through Inspiring Education – Inspiring Action. http://education.alberta.ca/department/ipr.aspx

As part of the Action on Inclusion initiative Alberta Education made a call for school jurisdictions to assist with the change through participating by becoming a Change Agent for Action on Inclusion. Continue reading

Rocky View Schools (RVS) Leadership in the 21st Century

The question of how to lead in a 21st century learning environment is a critical one to moving jurisdictions forward with this concept. One strategy that Rocky View Schools (RVS) has used to inform our leadership team is to organize professional learning opportunities at our Leadership Team meetings. This year we have introduced a forty – five minute learning opportunity around emerging technologies. Continue reading

RVS ‘s Classrooms have changed!

Guest Author, Dave Morris – Rocky View Schools in 2007 took part in a large consultation process to assist in the development of their three-year plan. At this time Rocky View Schools (RVS) overhauled their Vision, Mission, Motto and belief statements along with a re – branding. Additionally, this saw the development of a new logo and new mascot for the school jurisdiction.

The stakeholders groups were asked about current educational practice and challenged to determine what students needed for their learning for 2007 until 2011 and beyond. What we found was that students wanted education to be relevant and to engage them. Furthermore, the students needed to think critically, be self – directed learners and be contributors to the global community.

In response RVS developed its Portrait of a 21st Century Learner. This identifies the attributes students need to be successful in the future.

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Rocky View Schools have engaging classrooms!

Guest Author, Dave Morris – Rocky View Schools (RVS) has been focused on this question since the inception of our first three – year plan. To answer this question we must first ask who are our learners and what will they need to be successful in their future? Next year half of the students in RVS will have been born in the 21stcentury.  These students are digitally aware, media savvy and will live in a global information rich world. In essence, we are working with students who are true 21st Century learners. Continue reading