Monday, 22 January 2018

Education - Online and Distributed Leadership & Blended Learning


Week 7 - Online and Distributed Leadership & Blended Learning


The flipped learning for this week was to complete the 7 Step Twitter Challenge to become a more connected educator. The steps for newbies were to create an account, update your profile, follow some other tweeters like @nzMindLab, tweet, reply, find interests and explore. There were also some suggestions for people who already use Twitter such as participate in a Twitter chat event such as #edChatNZ. I am pretty much a novice when it comes to Twitter I basically use it as a place for professional learning and use Facebook for my personal connections with family and friends. So it kind of keeps my professional life a bit separate to my personal life. I use Twitter to read and upskill on tech and teaching ideas and follow some interesting people and organisations.

We were also asked to read an extract from James Spillane’s book ‘Distributed Leadership’ chapter 1 - How does my situation impact my leadership? One quote stood out for me ‘from a distributed perspective, leadership involves mortals as well as heroes. It involves the many and not just the few. It is about leadership practice, not simply roles and positions...leadership practice is about interactions, not just the actions of heroes.' This kind of leadership has been linked to improved engagement in teaching and learning.

We were also invited to complete a task using Edpuzzle.com. Basically a video had been prepared that talked about flipped classrooms and differentiation. The facilitator had added in extra narrative and questions to answer during the video at particular points. We were then asked if we had done this before, I myself have made videos before to use with students in class but not no much expected them to view them before the next lesson. It was a good reminder about using class time to apply and refine knowledge and teachers having more time to then to go around and give individual support as some prior learning has been done prior to the class.

I had completed the homework tasks and was ready to go for class. We started out with some discussion around Flipped vs Blended learning. Blended basically involves some online learning activities and some other traditional learning activities. Flipped is more about a subset of blended learning primarily focused on videos that have been created in advance for students to access. Videos are great for conceptual learning as a base and then in class time can be focused on more creative tasks as Salman from Khan explains in this video.

We discussed a number of tools that could be used for flipped and blended learning such as:
  • TEST Teach with Blendspace
  • TedED
  • EdPuzzle
  • Commonlit
  • PlayPosit
We then moved on to digital discussions and what tools we could use to facilitate discussions such as:
  • Todays Meet
  • Disqus
  • Blogs
  • G+
  • Twitter
We also checked out this video about leadership Distributed Leadership by Professor Alma Harris who discussed many of the pros and cons of distributed leadership which is definitely worth checking out.

We finished by looking at wicked problems and the NMC/CoSN Horizon Report for K12 which looks at the future of education, trends and technologies that will disrupt education and society. We were also asked if education is a wicked problem.

We had some great group discussions about the politics, multiple stakeholders, changing views, society, research, etc. Education is a very complex beast with many stakeholders, views, outcomes and systems in place. There is no silver bullet or ‘right way’ to ‘do’ education that would ensure it is beneficial for all stakeholders. It will probably continue be an awesome challenge for the stakeholders involved for many years to come and much like distributed leadership it is probably more about the interactions between the stakeholders than the actions taken. This has reminded me of one of my favourite whakatauki:

Unuhia te rito o te harakeke kei whea te kōmako e kō

Whakatairangitia rere ki uta rere ki tai

Ui mai koe ki ahau he aha te mea nui o te ao

Māku e kī atu he tangata, he tangata, he tangata!

Remove the heart of the flax bush and where will the kōmako sing?

Proclaim it to the land proclaim it to the sea

Ask me ‘What is the greatest thing in the world?’

I will reply, ‘It is people, people, people!’

So it’s currently the beginning of 2018 and our new school I guess is no longer so new as we are heading into our 3rd year of being open. I’m excited as it’s been a very crazy couple of years with loads of personal challenges and growth involved. I’ve also just realised how awesome and relevant it is that our focus for the first semester is whanaungatanga (relationships). I look forward to reconnecting with the staff and students and meeting the new staff and students. I'm also excited to continue the awesome journey that this AUT Mindlab course is taking me on. Woohoo for the first blog of 2018!!! Ka kite anō.

References

Spillane, J.P. (2006). Distributed Leadership. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.

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