"Think first about what you want to achieve, then find the technology to get you there."

Month: December 2019

Motivation to learn (and the treats that get you there)

Cocoa on a mossy log at Francis King Park. November 30, 2019.

Click on map to see CRD full size map.

Cocoa took us for a walk this weekend to Francis King Park. It is a favourite spot of ours with towering red cedars, mossy Douglas Firs, ferns, streams, mud puddles all the fun of a rainforest to explore.

It’s so important to get out and do these things I love. Making time for it even with the busy school and life commitments. The motivation to get out  comes from the feel-good part of the fresh air. That and the good company of my four-legged bud.

 

 

Motivation is such a key and something that is the most basic ingredient to teaching and learning. The motivation to learn. The motivation to teach what we teach.

And for Cocoa, what’s her motivation? According to the Dogthusiast, dogs can have a variety of motivations that can depend on breed, temperament and backgrounds.

Motivation can vary greatly and you can use it in all sorts of ways, good and bad. Your dog could be motivated by food (it’s tasty and he’s hungry), could be motivated to have fun (chase a ball), wants to get close to you because you’re fun (emotion and relationship), wants to get to safety/you (fear of something else), motivated to experience excitement (get to that park he knows is at the other end of that walk!), chase that squirrel (prey, fun, instinct, hunger!), or could be motivated to avoid pain (not get yanked on the leash, hear your yell). If you want your dog to do something, you need to work with motivation – positive forms of it.

Jen deHaan, What Motivates Your Dog? from www.dogthusiast.com

 

Cocoa is most definitely motivated by food, which has helped training efforts for the sing challenge, but it must be that high-calorie, extra special treat or she ain’t in to it. Dried liver, kidney, beef chews, cheese, and, though I hate to say it, the delicacy she goes crazy for is freeze dried lamb lung. That’s the good stuff.

Chilling at Francis King.

 

 

Learning is Learning – Verena Roberts and Distributed Learning

Week 11 ~ intro to distributed learning and guest speaker, Verena Roberts.

Michael met us via video-conferencing from the sunny shores of Tofino. Good times! In fact, he was next door using the video-conferencing. Michael did a great job of introducing the special guest for the morning.

 

Dr. Verena Roberts, whose @verenanz Twitter handle says she is a “K-12 & HEd Educator, Open Learner, Elephant in the Room Examiner”, video conferenced in to us to speak about Open Learning Design Intervention (OLDI). Unfortunately, the connection was not great and we had to cut the dialogue with Verena short. Below are my notes from what time we did get to spend with Verena and she kindly passed on her slides for further review.

Education technology and open ed possibilities

How many different ways an we teach beyond the classroom walls?

OLDI – Open Learning Design Intervention

What: K-12 students have opportunities to access people, context, gain ideas

Why: There are real and preconceived barriers to accessing digital networks outside K-12 classroom walls

How: Not all teachers have experiences open learning and they are looking for ideas and examples of expanding learning

Learning is learning

In classrooms be reflective

  1. Building relationships
  2. Co-designing learning pathways (teacher and student)
  3. Building and sharing knowledge
  4. Building PLN

Start in classroom > community > networks

Start with:

  1. How do I search and communicate online?
  2. Who is my online audience?
  3. How do I solve a community problem?
  4. What is my story and how does my story inform my identity?

Teach kids how to search online, how to read data and compare it to their own lives. Connect class to home life to make it relevant.

Distributed Learning

Classrooms have evolved from the face-to-face classrooms where if you’re there you’re there, and if you’re not, you’re not, to a more flexible style that breaks down those physical and spatial barriers to have classrooms that have different configurations than just having the holder of knowledge at the front of the class.

Consider the arguments against this recent Ontario government suggestion to take high school classes online: Mandatory online courses for high school students ‘a terrible idea’ experts say.

Today’s classrooms can include online environments where teachers are never seen in person, and all learning is done via chats, emails and skype to a blended learning environment where there is a mix of both in class and online learning.

Synchronous online classrooms and multi-access classrooms can help students who are not able to attend school in the traditional sense because of exceptionalities, physical health, learner needs, anxiety, physical barriers, remote/rural locations and time constraints. Opening up the classroom to a more flexible teaching style and environment does have many pros for those who can relate to the above comments.

 

 

 

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