DFI Session 7: Devices Agenda
This week it was all about looking at things from a learners perspective and entering the learning world they occupy via their chrome book and i-pad devices. The key word driving this session was ubiquity, or ubiquitous. It's a very alluring word, and when it rolls off your tongue it feels exotic, romantically foreign and almost musical. Meaning: being everywhere, constantly encountered, widespread. The connotation behind ubiquity in education is that barriers to accessing learning are removed, and in the digital world, all learning is visible to all learners at all times.
Learning is no longer bordered by the 6 hours spent at school, but continues beyond into the 24 hour day. In a world that has been heavily impacted by COVID-19 and regular lockdowns, the idea of learning being ubiquitous is gaining momentum in a way that it never has before.
All over the world educators had to rethink the delivery of learning as schools were forced to close and students had to stay at home for weeks on end. The digital world of learning made itself felt in the advantages it was seen to have over traditional chalk, talk and book learning inside the four walls of a classroom space. For some educators, it was a small step while for others it was a giant leap. Either way, the world of education was turned on its head and shaken.
Although no-one was prepared, the resilience of teachers, students and school administrators kicked in and mountainous efforts were made to overcome the challenges thrown at us by a tiny crown-wearing virus.
As we are asked to reflect on our own experiences during this time, after 7 DFI sessions, it creates an interesting perspective. Each time you gain knowledge, you realise exactly how much ignorance has been sitting on your shoulders, and how much you don't actually know. Despite that feeling, the questions put to us for reflection this week have provoked much pondering as I look back on the year that was.
I am most proud of the fact that at the end of the first and second lockdowns, I had families that were stress free and who had actually enjoyed the time spent at home with their children, not because the learning was ubiquitous and rewindable, but because they as parents and grandparents were not required to take on the role of teacher, and were able to participate in the learning activities themselves.
I sent out tasks that would not require new teaching, but instead were based on the previous years and terms teaching and learning. They were tasks that could be done together as a family, and because the learning was rewindable and familiar, parents were able to quickly pick up and work with their children on the academic revision and practice.
I found activities that were fun to do, including maths that was based around traditional Samoan recipes and crafts, that most parents and grandparents could bring their prior knowledge to. Yes, it was ubiquitous, and rewindable, but it was the simple joy of being able to work alongside their children that parents loved.
Our class Zoom sessions were usually sitting at 70-90% participation and were more of a touching base session to check in with families and the learning, ask questions of tasks we weren't sure about and to share our task responses. We began sessions with our morning routine in class (morning greetings and roll call, singing our national anthem and saying our opening prayer) and the sound of a cappella singing was a beautiful entrance into each week day. And the occassional weekend Zoom session that I was invited to!
For my learners, who just wanted the camaraderie of their peers, the Zoom sessions were an opportunity to catch-up with their peers, whom they missed terribly. We laughed, shared stories of our Covid life, and cried together when a beloved family pet died and one of our boys was left feeling quite bereft. We had grown used to seeing Otis bouncing up and down out the window, barking with excitement during our Zoom sessions, so we too, felt the loss.
Eventually my students were running their own zoom sessions in small groups or as a class in the afternoons. They abided by the rules established prior to this (must be in a family space, NOT in their bedroom, an adult had to be present, everyone was to be have the option to be included, must be live on camera, not using an avatar, and all language and interactions were to be positive and inclusive).
Our senior management were incredibly supportive of us as teachers and did not place any pressure on us to perform as teachers, running lessons from 9-3, as a few of my colleagues teaching in other schools were told to do. The main goal was to make the experience as stress free and enjoyable for our families as possible. Working as a team was definitely a plus.
I gathered both student and parent voice at the end of the first lockdown to inform what my class would do in case of a second lockdown, so that it was an authentic collaborative effort. (that paid dividends later on it the year when a second lockdown did happen!)



Kia ora Sophia. I enjoyed reading your reflections on distance learning. It's a great idea to drop in regular Google Meet sessions throughout the year. Your week 2 learning tasks look awesome. Are they visible on your class site so that students and whānau can dip back into them if they wish?
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