teachers’ learning environments and technology

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Teachers’ learning environments and technology Petri Nokelainen School of Education

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Teachers’ learning environments and technology. Petri Nokelainen School of Education. Old thinking on learning and environments. From ancient Greece compulsory education has been subject centered . Learning, provided by professional teachers, has taken place in separate school buildings . . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

Teachers’ learning environments and technology

Petri NokelainenSchool of Education

Page 2: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

Old thinking on learning and environments

• From ancient Greece compulsory education has been subject centered.

• Learning, provided by professional teachers, has taken place in separate school buildings.

Page 3: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

Old thinking on learning and environments

• Subject centeredness does not model the reality of today’s kids ... yes, they have technology like smartphones and wireless networks enabling Internet and social media.

Page 4: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

Old thinking on learning and environments

• But they will also have real-life problems and challenges (e.g., health, economy, planet) relating to future.

• These complex problems need to be addressed with multidisciplinary teams of people who can also work outside of their ”own” subject area.• Working trajectory with multiple careers instead of

single career, no value for most of the knowledge learned from the school. (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zDZFcDGpL4U)

Page 5: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

(FNBE, 2011.)

Page 6: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

21st century pedagogy

• Engages learners in productive disciplinary engagement with adequate resources and tools

• Engages learners in the pursuit of authentic and complex problems

• Creates spaces of learning which value learner agency, authority and accountability in meaning making and knowledge creation

• Breaks boundaries between formal and informal learning contexts and between different communities of practice

• Promotes schools grow into networked and collaborative learning communities

(Kumpulainen, 2012.)

Page 7: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

New thinking on learning and environments

• How, then, about the school buildings?• We have recently seen many architectural

innovations in school buildings – but they are still school buildings.

• And in most cases there is no pedagogical planning behind the blueprints and structures.

Page 8: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

New thinking on learning and environments

• Who decides what a school should look like outside and inside (e.g., pedagogical interior design)?

• The question is an important one as physical premises affect pedagogical designs/possibilities and thus have an affect on our learning.

Page 9: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

New thinking on learning and environments

• Some interesting research and projects:• School building and well-being (Nuikkinen, 2009). • InnoSchool (http://innoschool.tkk.fi )• RYM - Indoor learning environments – Learning

spaces: The role of activating methods and learning environments from the perspective of life time concept in service provision to children and youth.

Page 10: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

(Nuikkinen, 2009, 94.)

Page 11: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

(Sulonen, 2009.)

Sports facilities

Auditory LibraryDay care center

Canteen

Parks, sports field

MarketsDay care center

Senior activities

Urban spaces

Community servicesCommercial

services

Other schools

Streets

School building

Page 12: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

Sports facilities

Auditory LibraryDay care center

Canteen

Parks, sports field

MarketsDay care center

Senior activities

Urban spaces

Community servicesCommercial

services

Schools

Streets

Healthy member of a

society

Page 13: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

Sports facilities

Auditory LibraryDay care center

Canteen

Parks, sports field

MarketsDay care center

Senior activities

Urban spaces

Community servicesCommercial

services

Schools

Streets

Healty member of a

society

21st century pedagogy

Page 14: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

New thinking on learning and environments

• Virtual learning environments – content management systems

Page 15: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

1. Self-report grades 1.44 Self-evaluation of learning outcomes, do we need tests?

2. Piagetian programs (logical, concrete, formal) 1.28Learning materials are adjusted to meet developmental stages.

3. Formative evaluation 0.90Feedback to teacher.

4. Micro teaching (mini lessons) 0.88Teacher-student (even short) dialogues/sessions.

5. Acceleration 0.88More effective than enrichment.

. . .71. Computer assisted instruction 0.37

(Hattie, 2009.)

-0.2 -0.1 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0 1.1

NEGATIVE EFFECTS STUDENT MATURITY

TEACHER EFFECT POSITIVE EFFECTS

Page 16: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

New thinking on learning and environments

• Social media learning• Blogging, micro-blogging (Twitter), collaborative calendaring, podcasting, RSS

(Rich Site Summary) readers, collaborative mindmapping, photo sharing, screencast sharing, presentation sharing, social bookmarking (Diigo, Delicious), collaborative document editing (Google docs, Wikispaces, Etherpad), social networking (Facebook, LinkedIn), …

Page 17: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

Sports facilities

Auditory LibraryDay care center

Canteen

Parks, sports field

MarketsDay care center

Senior activities

Urban spaces

Community servicesCommercial

services

Schools

Streets

Healthy member of a

society

21st century pedagogy

Technology

Page 18: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

(Kumpulainen, 2012.)

Page 19: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

Studio learning (technology-enhanced active learning)• MIT has shown with university level engineering students that

studio learning easily scales up (at least) to classes of 100 students (http://web.mit.edu/edtech/casestudies/teal.html).

Page 20: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

Entrepreneurial learning

• Proacademy (Polytechnic) has carried out team learning for more than 10 years (http://www.proakatemia.fi/en).

Page 21: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

Vocational skills competitions

• Finland is active in both national (Taitaja9, Taitaja) and international (upper secondary level) vocational skills competitions (EuroSkills, WorldSkills).

• Skills competitions as learning environments have been studied in the University of Tampere since 2006:• Modeling of Vocational Excellence (2006-2008)• Actualizing Vocational Excellence (2009-2011)• Pathways to Vocational Excellence (2011- )

(Nokelainen et al., 2012.)

Page 22: Teachers’ learning environments and technology
Page 23: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

Fiskarin malli – monialaisen oppimisympäristön kehittäminen

Page 24: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

MoMath – matematiikkaa kännykällä (Pirkkalainen, 2012.)

Page 25: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

MoMath – matematiikkaa kännykällä (Pirkkalainen, 2012.)

Page 26: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

Sports facilities

Auditory LibraryDay care center

Canteen

Parks, sports field

MarketsDay care center

Senior activities

Urban spaces

Community servicesCommercial

services

Schools

Streets

Healthy member of a

society

21st century pedagogy

Technology

Page 27: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

References

FNBE. (2011). The school of opportunities – towards every learner’s full potential. Helsinki: Finnish National Board of Education. Retrieved from http://www.oph.fi/download/134584_the_school_of_opportunities.pdf

Hattie, J. (2009). Visible Learning: A Synthesis of Over 800 Meta-Analyses Relating to Achievement. London & New York: Routledge.

Kumpulainen, K. (2012). Learning process tomorrow: Transforming the choronotopes of learning in 21st century education. Retrieved from http://congress.utu.fi/CELE2012/5 -CELE_Kristiina Kumpulainen.pdf

Nokelainen, P., Smith, H., Rahimi, M., Stasz, C., & James, S. (2012). What Contributes to Vocational Excellence? Characteristics and experiences of Competitors and Experts in WorldSkills London 2011. Madrid, Spain: WorldSkills Foundation. Retrieved from http://www.worldskillsfoundation.org/downloads/WSF_MoVE_Global_report_WSC2011.pdf

Page 28: Teachers’ learning environments and technology

References

Nuikkinen, K. (2009). Koulurakennus ja hyvinvointi. Teoriaa ja käytännön kokemuksia peruskouluarkkitehtuurista. Acta Universitatis Tamperensis 1398. Tampere: Tampere University Press.

Pirkkalainen, L. (2012). Lukion matematiikkaa kännykällä. Retrieved from http://peda.net/img/portal/2485962/uusi_MoMath_LP_012012.pdf

Sulonen, J. (2009). The usability of contemporary finnish schools - InnoSchool. Retrieved from http://innoschool.tkk.fi/innoarch/dokumentit/the usability of contemporary finnish schoolsPIENI.pdf