Teachers TV has an excellent video on how the school laptop program can be implemented with full parental involvement and support.
This is a powerful way to conduct what should be a highly successful program.
Teachers TV has an excellent video on how the school laptop program can be implemented with full parental involvement and support.
This is a powerful way to conduct what should be a highly successful program.
This week is Reading Week on Teachers’ TV. There is a range of programs on good practice, libraries and reading aloud and all stages of schooling are catered for.
Hopefully there will be something to inspire everyone.
This Teachers TV video focuses on Web literacy in secondary schools.
The program synopsis says:
“This programme reveals the critical importance for teachers to provide guidance to their pupils when using the Internet for research.
A group of Year 9 pupils at Wortley High School in Leeds are asked to look at three websites. The subject matters are Martin Luther King, the holocaust and Victorian robots.
None of the websites are what they seem. The first two are fronts for racists and holocaust deniers. The last is a good-natured spoof. None of the pupils spot any problems with the validity, reliability or authority of the sites and many say they would cut and paste information from the sites for use in homework or other projects.
ICT expert James Green leads a lesson that reveals the truth to the pupils, passing on valuable tips on website cross-checking and validity.”
Comments left by Teachers TV subscribers are extremely positive about the usefulness of this video. It may well give you inspiration for ways of teaching Internet literacy in 2009.
Internationally renowned educator Professor Stephen Heppell presented an enlightening lecture at the State Library of Victoria on the evening of Monday 10th November. The topic of 21st Century learning and how we as educators address and change not only our practice, but mindset, is just one of the things that consumes Stephen.
One tool that Stephen discussed was Teachers TV (not to be confused with TeacherTube). UK in origin, it provides thousands of educational programmes on television and the Internet. Many of the programmes available are made by teachers for other teachers; they discuss new ideas that have worked well in their classroom. Teachers TV provides a subject guide to programmes, recommended videos and more. You can keep up-to-date with RSS feeds and if you register, you can download programmes to view later on, comment on programmes and access sneak previews.
Teachers TV is highly recommended as a free, reliable and credible source of educational videos freely available through the Internet. Teachers TV also provides links to educational websites that may be of interest.
More on Stephen Heppell soon.