SLAV Elluminate training

For School Library Association of Victoria members who are interested in learning how to use this online conferencing system, there are a number of sessions planned in Melbourne and regional areas of Victoria. SLAV plans to deliver professional development online via Elluminate in terms 3 and 4.

  • Ballarat Branch training to be held on Wednesday 5 August
  • Central Metro Branch training to be held on Wednesday 29 July
  • Geelong branch training to be held on Tuesday 18 August
  • North East Branch training to be held on Thursday 3 September
  • Southern Metro Branch training link to be held on Thursday 30 July
  • You are welcome to attend meetings as well as participate in the revision session planned for Thursday 25th June. All links for sessions are above, however the training session links are only accessible on the day and time of the training. Please be aware that if you plan to attend a meeting and/or revision session you will need a set of headphones/microphone and depending on the school network, may need to bring your laptop with Elluminate already installed on it. Please contact your branch convenor for clarification. To install Elluminate on your laptop and/or desktop, click here and follow the prompts.

    Some more Elluminate resources are accessible below:

  • Elluminate home
  • Elluminate online support
  • Elluminate Participant Reference Guide
  • Free Elluminate Access
  • Moderators’ training and documentation
  • SLAV Elluminate branch training powerpoint presentation part 1
  • SLAV Elluminate branch training powerpoint presentation part 2 
  • Further sessions will be scheduled for areas not yet listed.

    21st Century learning?

    If you are having trouble convincing colleagues about the need for technology in schools, this video entitled Mr Winkle Wakes might just change their minds…  It would be a great way to begin a meeting or presentation on ICT in schools. (If you don’t have access to TeacherTube at school, consider accessing it at home and dropping it into Vodspot. It is well worth the effort.)

    It is certainly food for thought and is true in many schools, despite the best efforts of many! Thank you to Sharon Brennan for sharing this one.

    Teaching fellowship @ SLV

    Linda Angeloni, the Education Programs and Offsite Learning Manager, Learning Services at the State Library of Victoria has kindly sent Bright Ideas the following information.

    The State Library of Victoria’s William Buckland Foundation Teaching Fellowships provide teachers in the first five years of their career with a rare opportunity to further their curriculum planning and professional research skills in a world class cultural institution.

    Recipients receive the opportunity to work within the Library’s Learning Services Division for one semester and contribute to the development of innovative learning programs and research projects relating to the Library’s collections and resources. Funding will be provided to fill the applicant’s position at their school during the period of the fellowship.

    For more information, application information or to attend a free information session on April 30th, please email langeloni@slv.vic.gov.au or call 8664 7015.

    Will Richardson podcasts

    The podcasts from Will Richarsdon’s presentations at the  SLAV Perspectives on learning v2 – March 23, 2009 are now available:

    – “Network literacy: leveraging the potential of a hyper-connected world” – Conference keynote

    (Link to weblog
    Link to .mp3 audio file Part 1 – 14Mb approx.
    Link to .mp3 audio file Part 2 – 16Mb approx.
    Link to .mp3 audio file Part 3 – 16Mb approx. )

    Prepared by Will Richardson (Connective Learning)

    – “Podcasts, vodcasts, screencasts, livestream nation ” – Featured address

    (Link to weblog
    Link to .mp3 audio file Part 1 – 14Mb approx.
    Link to .mp3 audio file Part 2 – 11Mb approx.
    Link to .mp3 audio file Part 3 – 13Mb approx. )

    Prepared by Will Richardson (Connective Learning)

    – “Weblogs in schools ” – Plenary session

    Link to .mp3 audio file Part 1 – 15Mb approx.
    Link to .mp3 audio file Part 2 – 16Mb approx.
    Link to .mp3 audio file Part 3 – 17Mb approx. )

    Prepared by Will Richardson (Connective Learning)

    Free professional learning @ SLV

     A few more interesting events are coming up at the State Library of Victoria, all of them are free of charge (but bookings are required), which in this financial environment has got to be good.

    On Tuesday 5th May, there is a forum on ‘The Web 2.0 World’. The forum will examine the use of Web 2.0 technologies to find, engage and collaborate with users. Click here  to book.

    On Tuesday 19th May, The Learning to Learn series focuses on ‘Today’s Kids,  Tomorrow’s School.’ This session will look how students need to learn and what impact new approaches to education are having on students and their futures. Click here  to book.

    On Tuesday 9th June, ‘The Web 2.0 World: Play’ gives participants the option to experiment with Web 2.0 tools and technologies. (The link for booking this session is not yet available. It will be added when ready.)

    These sessions are not only relevant to teachers/librarians, but can count towards the VIT PD requirements.

    Games ‘valuable learning tool’

    A very interesting article has been published in today’s edition of The Age Green Guide entitled Games ‘valuable learning tool’.  Written by Jason Hill, the article says, ‘Education experts say computer games boost a range of skills in children’.

    April 9, 2009

    Education experts say computer games boost a range of skills in children, writes Jason Hill.

    Computer games can be a positive learning tool for children as young as three, according to Australian education experts.

    Patricia and Don Edgar, authorities on children’s media, education and social trends, recently wrote a paper for the Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority in which they argue that there is growing evidence that games are effective and valuable learning tools.

    Skills developed from games include comprehension, decision making, multitasking, collaboration, concentration, leadership and communication.

    Dr Patricia Edgar says it is not surprising some parents fear the impact of games on their kids, because many “fear the unknown” or are concerned about violence.

    “Anyone with children knows how absorbed and passionate about games kids can become,” Dr Edgar says. “Parents worry about something that takes over their kids’ lives as games do – games which they can’t see much point to.”

    Dr Edgar, whose latest book is titled The New Child: in search of smarter grown-ups, encourages parents to “sit with kids, let them explore and learn”.

    “Parents have to put in the time. Then they will know the content of the games, and their involvement will help the kids to learn.”

    Dr Edgar believes games can also have an important role in the classroom, although more research and investment is needed to produce educational games that enable kids to learn at their own pace and collaborate with others. The games also need to be fun, she argues.

    “Kids always learn best when they are entertained. Entertainment should not preclude education, but somehow we have this notion that if something is educational it has to be serious and can’t be fun.”

    Dr Edgar says some educators have had their distrust of new media vindicated over the past decade as “the entertainment industry has commercialised childhood and turned kids into consumers producing material for its merchandising potential”.

    “(But) I think we are about ready for a change in these values, which could lead to some healthy, profitable, educational entertainment to bridge the divide.”

    She believes it is a positive step that libraries are now offering computer games, both for their learning potential and for attracting children to the institutions.

    Lalor Library in north-eastern Melbourne has enjoyed success through introducing consoles such as the Xbox and Wii into the library, as well as networked PC games. Branch manager Felicity Macchion says her priority in introducing gaming three years ago was to offer disadvantaged community members access to new technology, and she has been thrilled with the results. “Implementing video-gaming into the library environment has increased memberships, borrowings and has created an enjoyable atmosphere for all ages.”

    Earlier this week, the State Library of Victoria hosted an event enabling gaming newcomers to get hands-on with the latest releases and discuss how the games can be used positively in public institutions such as libraries and schools.

    For several years the library’s Experimedia section has featured locally developed games.

    For the latest gaming news, visit www.blogs.theage.com.au/screenplay

    As per previous Bright Ideas posts on the State Library’s Press Play initiative, Getting video games on the school agenda and the Department of Education and Early Childhood Development’s video games trial games are well worth investigating as part of a total pedagogy that caters for today’s children and encourages engagement and attendance.

    Press play review

    On Tuesday 7 April, the State Library of Victoria hosted “Press Play: a get into video games” event. It gave attendees access to award winning games like Little Big Planet as well as Guitar Hero, Wii fit and Brain Training. Offering a range of consoles such as Wii, Playstation 3 and Nintendo DS, there was something for every one.

    A further event is planned for later in the year, so if you are curious about how gaming can be used in schools and libraries, please consider attending. It is highly recommended for taking games for a test drive and thinking about how they could be used in educational contexts as well as having a chat with experts in their fields. 

    On the topic of gaming and libraries, Christine Mackenzie, the CEO of Yarra Plenty Regional Library wrote this on her blog on 6 April.

    Installing screens, games and tvs is our way of showing that education, learning, recreation and culture can come in all different kinds of media and are all equally appropriate in a public library. We hope you agree!

    Christine has outlined the idea that learning can encompass many formats and many educators agree with her, yet so many still violently disagree with the idea that learning should progress as society has.

    If you think about the changes to society, industry and communications over the past 200 years, why is there such a resistance by some people for education to keep pace with these changes? It is true that there are some very violent and inappropriate games on the market that may make some people shy away from this particular media as a learning tool. But as teachers, we would no more consider using such games as we would showing inappropriate films to our students. 

    Congratulations to the State Library of Victoria and Hamish Curry and his team for a fun and interesting evening.

    Two Web 2.0 presentations

    Recently Donna DesRoches, a Learning Resources Consultant from the Living Sky School Division in North Battleford, Saskatchewan, Canada shared two of her presentations with the International Association of School Librarianship (IASL). Donna has agreed to share her presentations with us here at SLAV’s Bright Ideas as well.

    Selection 2.0: Using RSS to enhance print, multimedia and web-based resource selection

    (Description) RSS, a web-based application that allows the training of information to come to us, can be used to carry-out the professional selection responsibilities of teacher-librarians. This workshop will explain RSS, demonstrate a variety of formats for organizing incoming information and provide a number of sources for print, multimedia and web-based resources.

    http://www.netvibes.com/donnadesroches#General

    In this session I showed teacher-librarians how to use delicious feeds to create updated lists of resources for teachers and students. I suggested using NetVibes and using the private pages as the ‘messy’ pages where the feeds from things such as book blogs, and other tools with RSS feeds e.g. CM, Open Culture, Librarians’ Internet Index and Larry Ferlazzo’s Websites of the Day – much like the pile of selection tools that ends up on our desks.

    As teachers find sites that meet the learning needs of their staff and students they add them to their delicious account tagging them appropriately. The feeds for the specific delicious tags are added to their NetVibes public pages resulting in a collection that could look like this….

    Using Emerging Technologies to Build a Personal Learning Network

    (Description) Teacher-librarians are specialists with unique learning needs that are not always met through school or division-based professional development. This workshop will provide teacher-librarians with the tools and the knowledge to create networks that will lessen the isolation and provide global connections that will enhance their own learning and benefit the teachers and students with whom they work.

    My slide show and supporting links can be found at http://teacherlibrarian20.wikispaces.com/pln

    If you have questions about the presentations – please contact Donna.

    Thanks to Donna for sharing her presentations with us here in Australia.

    One to one professional learning

    Have you had a tough time getting Web 2.0 tools on the agenda at your school? No matter what you try, those in power aren’t listening? Then why not try the idea of ‘one to one professional learning’. The idea here is that you chip away at people until they give in to the power of Web 2.0 – one by one.

    One to one professional learning can be held during spare periods so that staff do not feel that this is ‘just one more thing to deal with after school’. By teaching one person at a time, the sessions are casual and fun, without the need to monitor large groups who need their hands held. And one of the philosophies behind the program is that the person you teach goes on to teach another person that particular tool. This takes the strain off library staff and empowers learners to teach and reinforce their learnings. This survey  may help you to introduce the topic to staff via a group email. Good luck!

    Will Richardson @ Perspectives on learning v2

    For everyone who attended the School Library Association of Victoria’s Professional Learning program today at Etihad Stadium (formerly Telstra Dome), or for those who were unable to attend, here are the links to Will Richardson’s  sessions:

    Network literacy: Leveraging the potential of the HyperConnected world.

    Podcast, Vodcast, Screencast, LiveStream Nation.

    Weblogs in schools.

    And here are the podcasts of these sessions:

    Perspectives on learning v2 – March, 2009

    – “Network literacy: leveraging the potential of a hyper-connected world” – Conference keynote

    Link to .mp3 audio file Part 1 – 14Mb approx.
    Link to .mp3 audio file Part 2 – 16Mb approx.
    Link to .mp3 audio file Part 3 – 16Mb approx.

    Prepared by Will Richardson (Connective Learning)

    – “Podcasts, vodcasts, screencasts, livestream nation ” – Featured address

    Link to .mp3 audio file Part 1 – 14Mb approx.
    Link to .mp3 audio file Part 2 – 11Mb approx.
    Link to .mp3 audio file Part 3 – 13Mb approx.

    Prepared by Will Richardson (Connective Learning)

    – “Weblogs in schools ” – Plenary session

    Link to .mp3 audio file Part 1 – 15Mb approx.
    Link to .mp3 audio file Part 2 – 16Mb approx.
    Link to .mp3 audio file Part 3 – 17Mb approx. )

    Prepared by Will Richardson (Connective Learning)

    A link to Jenny Luca’s session on Now you know Web 2.0, what next?, a link to Adrian Camm’s companion wiki  and a link to Judith Way’s presentation on Bright Ideas.