A while ago, I came across a 'top 10 skills for the future' image, formed by the World Economic Forum following their Future of Jobs report.
It really caught my attention and a lot of other people found it useful too. After recently experimenting with creating images for our Twitter page (@refthinking) and this blog, I loved the idea of mixing it up a little and adding some images.
Feel free to share it, but please let us know by mentioning us if it's a tweet, as it's great to see it being shared even more!
For a large version, please click here.
If you have iPads in school and want to increase development of some of these top skills, try our tool, Thinking Kit: www.thinking-kit.com.
As researchers and creators of collaborative learning technology, we want to share useful articles, news and insights. Ahmed is a Research Associate at Newcastle University.
Showing posts with label Skills. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Skills. Show all posts
Tuesday, 14 June 2016
Tuesday, 19 January 2016
(20) 16 ways to use the Thinking Kit
(20)16 ways to use the Thinking Kit
The new year is in full swing. Teachers across the world are back to work, sharing thoughts, ideas and resources...ready for what 2016 may bring.
With this in mind, we thought when better than to share 16 ways to use the Thinking Kit. Using the Thinking Kit Creator (currently free), educational activities can be created on any browser. The user saves the activity, gets a code, then uses that code in the Thinking Kit App (free) to download the activity onto iPads (or get students to). This teams two really strong themes together - learning using iPads AND digital content creation, whether by teachers or the learners themselves.
Activities involve one main goal/objective/question and snippets of information or images to help learners complete/answer it.
The Thinking Kit App can be used individually, but works brilliantly as a group activity too. It seamlessly allows for multi-touch and engages learners in face to face collaboration as they learn. There is a dedicated Reflection Stage and lots of tools to help them become better problem solvers, critical thinkers and team players.
So, without further ado, let’s get started…
- Simple grouping tasks - add lots of images, pieces of text or both then get learners to sort them accordingly. Get students to use the ‘group tool’ to give groups a name and sort the snippets into them.
E.g. Lots of images of animals and facts on vertebrate and invertebrate - students must then create mini groups, e.g. ‘mammals’ and drag and drop the relevant snippets into them. - Reading - break up a large topic into lots of digestible snippets which students can read together to answer an intriguing question about the topic.
E.g. Introduce your class to a piece of literature by giving them key points of the book before they read the full text. Or do this afterwards as a reflection activity.
- Ordering task - Get learners to sort the snippets/images into some kind of order, whether that’s chronological, size or even relevance.
E.g. For history, add key moments in time and get students to arrange them correctly.
- Custom background - Add a map or image and get students to move the slips into the correct space
E.g. Use a map as the background and have students put countries in the correct place on it, or have a human body as the background and get learners to place the names of bones in the correct place.
- Problem solving - Have an engaging story based problem accompanied by an open question to answer.
E.g. A maths murder mystery - learners must piece together elements of the story and clues, do the maths involved and put forward an argument as to who could have been the killer. - Questions and answers - Add 10 question slips and 10 answer slips then get students to match them up. To make it a bit harder, don’t answer some of the questions - they can add them with the Note Tool.
E.g. A more ‘fact-based’ subject would go well with this, perhaps scientific reactions or checking understanding of storylines in a book.
- Quickly create an activity on breaking news - The Thinking Kit Creator is ideal for getting something together for the following day (or same day) if a sudden or unexpected event occurs which you want to address with students.
E.g. There may have been a natural disaster or a world crisis. Educators could use the current high awareness of it to create an activity and get students to understand it better/share their views.
- Learners on a school trip - With access to a camera, smartphone or tablet, students could take these devices on a trip and record their own evidence. They can then create a Thinking Kit activity and use their own images and notes to work on it themselves or as an activity for other groups.
E.g. An example is ‘Does Warkworth need a bypass?’ Students would go there, take pictures of the place, record some local statistics and possibly ask some locals’ opinions.
- SOLE session review - If you haven’t heard, SOLEs are “created when educators and/or parents encourage kids to work in groups that they form, and are free to change, to answer big, open questions by using the internet” (SOLE toolkit). The origins lie in Professor Sugata Mitra’s Ted-Prize winning talk here. For more information go to School in the Cloud. Give students a big question and carry on a SOLE session as usual. Following their research, the groups could make a Thinking Kit activity with what they have discovered. They could then ‘do’ the activity at a later date or get their fellow students to!
E.g. In the Greenfield Arts’ session, they used the question ‘What makes us human?’ Before/after the class discussion they had, to answer this question, groups could use their gathered information/views to create activities for each other.
-
Encourage discussion on difficult issues - An activity can be created on a more sensitive issue in a ‘different’ way to the norm. The snippets could include different points of view, facts and engaging images. Working through these in small groups will be less intimidating than as a whole class, it will be easier/less daunting for students to speak up and those at the end who feel more confident, can then engage in a whole class discussion.
E.g. Topics such as bullying or sex education can be broken down and discussed as small groups as an introduction. A ‘scenario’ can be given through a Thinking Kit activity and students can begin to understand ‘taboo’ subjects through relatable stories and even ‘give advice’ to the characters in them.
- Work on different strands of the same topic - Split the class into groups of three, then give each group a different strand of topic to research. They then create an activity themselves to share this with other groups, so they learn through each other.
E.g. The topic may be key figures in history - each group focuses on one, creates a Thinking Kit activity, and gives the code to another group for them to learn about a different strand to what they created theirs on.
- Ice breaker activity - Thinking Kit could be used to help students get to know each other better, whether that’s because they have just met (new class) or they have had a long break. Students could create an activity about themselves for others to use or get into pairs, then their partner creates one about what they have discussed.
- Revision - Educators could create an activity for students to ‘do’ when early on in the teaching of a topic. They could do it upon completion of teaching of that topic, then again a few weeks later to see how much they have remembered. Alternatively, students could create one on their own. Understanding, interpreting and then reiterating points in their own words can be great for retention of information. When they do this a few weeks later then again nearer an exam, the information will be more likely to soak in.
- Record of learning - Use the ‘reports’ feature of the Thinking Kit App to review how students have done in a particular task. Students can print or email these reports too, which include the list of content of an activity, screenshots of the process of doing an activity and anything they have added, e.g. named groups or notes.
- Whole class discussion - When students have completed a session on the Thinking Kit App, one (or more) group’s session can be played to the whole class as a point of discussion. Using this dedicated Reflection Stage on a projector for example, can open up the class to share their views and get into a debate.
- Differentiation - If learners are at different levels of their understanding of a topic, or you would rather lightly ease some groups in, you can create different versions of the same activity. Just get the core of information in, save it, add more things (whether they are images/information to make the task easier… or more complex things being added to broaden the activity) then click ‘Save As’.
We hope these have been interesting to read through and that you enjoy creating your own activities or getting students to themselves.
Thinking Kit is out now. The Thinking Kit App is always free, and the Thinking Kit Creator has a completely free 30 day trial. All you need is your email address and your name! Register at www.thinking-kit.com/signin. No other details are required to sign up.
It's fascinating for us to hear about all the ways Thinking Kit is being used. Let us know how you've used Thinking Kit by emailing info@reflectivethinking.com.
Friday, 16 October 2015
Helping primary age children learn about Remembrance Day
It’s that time of year… waking up to darker mornings, thick coats and scarves
coming out plus pumpkins (and snowmen) adorning the shelves of the shops.
Half term is nearly here, and before long, poppies will be all around us
– many will wear them, whether at home, school or on the television.
Students will even sell poppies themselves to raise money. Remembrance Day is on the horizon, but how much do young people know about the real story behind it?
With the topic fresh in people’s minds, it makes it an ideal topic to teach students about ‘events beyond living memory that are significant nationally or globally’ or relatable ‘significant historical events, people and places in their own locality’. What better way to teach history than a topic that is bound to have a direct link to many of the students in the room – whether that’s in their current day or their grandparents’?
Our classic mystery 'Remembrance' by an excellent teacher has been made into a FREE iPad app (usually £1.49) - search 'KS2 Remembrance' on the App Store to download or click here. It is a relevant, story-based task consisting of 24 illustrated slips which pairs or threes work through together. It has the key dates of the world wars and hints at how they link to our lives now, but all through the eyes of a young person like them, Sarah.
Students read through the slips, create groups and give them names (to drag and drop slips into), add sticky tape to link similar slips together or use the note tool to add thoughts they have along the way. They do all of this, with the goal of answering "Why did Sarah attend the Remembrance Service?"
The process involved in this free app, and the fact that there is no one right answer, lends itself to helping students develop key skills of collaboration, higher level thinking and retention of information.
For more information, please go to the information page on our website OR download the app now.
Students will even sell poppies themselves to raise money. Remembrance Day is on the horizon, but how much do young people know about the real story behind it?
With the topic fresh in people’s minds, it makes it an ideal topic to teach students about ‘events beyond living memory that are significant nationally or globally’ or relatable ‘significant historical events, people and places in their own locality’. What better way to teach history than a topic that is bound to have a direct link to many of the students in the room – whether that’s in their current day or their grandparents’?
Our classic mystery 'Remembrance' by an excellent teacher has been made into a FREE iPad app (usually £1.49) - search 'KS2 Remembrance' on the App Store to download or click here. It is a relevant, story-based task consisting of 24 illustrated slips which pairs or threes work through together. It has the key dates of the world wars and hints at how they link to our lives now, but all through the eyes of a young person like them, Sarah.
Get this iPad app FREE - click here or search 'KS2 Remembrance' on the App Store
Students read through the slips, create groups and give them names (to drag and drop slips into), add sticky tape to link similar slips together or use the note tool to add thoughts they have along the way. They do all of this, with the goal of answering "Why did Sarah attend the Remembrance Service?"
The process involved in this free app, and the fact that there is no one right answer, lends itself to helping students develop key skills of collaboration, higher level thinking and retention of information.
For more information, please go to the information page on our website OR download the app now.
Edited re-post from November 2014 (last year's was about our Windows version)
Friday, 4 September 2015
How can you engage students in literacy this month?
Tuesday 8th September marks International Literacy Day. If you didn’t know already, this is a day recognised and supported across the world, every year.
This is one of the reasons this day is held; to raise awareness of such shocking figures and help in whatever way we can to reduce this figure. There are several ways to get involved.
Recommended by World Literacy, you could host an event in school. Not only will this complement the brilliant work already happening there, but it can help promote the wider cause. This gives the opportunity for parents to be more involved, possibly other members of the students’ families, and it could be made into an event for a cluster of schools in your area or even a community thing. It may also be worth contacting your local newspaper, radio or TV station too.
Some suggestions by International Literacy Day are:
What about us?
We have made three of our collaborative learning iPad apps completely FREE for September. These can be used to engage students in reading and writing, and we hope you enjoy them...
This app asks the students “Why didn’t Amy go to school today?” On screen, the children (in pairs) are given 15 illustrated slips which each have a bit of information on them. These snippets are a lot easier to read than a bulk of text. They must work together to think of names for groups that the slips can go into and then they write a short answer at the end.
8-11s: Cup and ring marks
For slightly older students, this app looks at Neolithic and Bronze Age traditions and the mystery of cup and ring marks. It breaks up a good amount of information into easily-digestible pieces for students to work through together. As the apps are designed for working on in pairs, there’s valuable support from each other as they read the snippets and think about the topic.
Download on the App Store: bit.ly/DMCupRing
Get more information on our website: bit.ly/RTCupRing
11-14: WW1 Trenches
This is a brilliant tool to encourage writing. Students are immersed in the story of fictional war veteran Tommy Murphy. They’re told how his diary, from his days in the World War One trenches, has been found . There are two objectives the teacher can choose from. One is to ask students to discuss/write an answer to whether the physical or mental dangers in the trenches were more serious. The other is to put them in a reporter’s shoes: “Your editor has asked you to look through the diary and some history books to write an article about the trenches.”
Summary
As you know, literacy is such an important skill. You’re already helping make a difference. If you are hosting an event, remember to register on online! This doesn’t commit you to anything, but ensures you get a pack including things like a certificate for winning students and a sponsorship form.
Note
You can also get an extra free trial to our new creation tool for iPads – it can be used by teachers and students. Click here to find out more.
"Approximately 775 million people- 64% of whom are women- are
functionally illiterate. In other words, they lack the basic reading and
writing skills to manage daily living and employment tasks."
World Literacy
World Literacy
This is one of the reasons this day is held; to raise awareness of such shocking figures and help in whatever way we can to reduce this figure. There are several ways to get involved.
Recommended by World Literacy, you could host an event in school. Not only will this complement the brilliant work already happening there, but it can help promote the wider cause. This gives the opportunity for parents to be more involved, possibly other members of the students’ families, and it could be made into an event for a cluster of schools in your area or even a community thing. It may also be worth contacting your local newspaper, radio or TV station too.
Some suggestions by International Literacy Day are:
- Readathon
Inspire students with a reading challenge. Students may have to read as many books as they can in a week, or try something from a different genre perhaps. Parents and families could sponsor them! - Writing competitions
Encourage your class/school/community of young people to bring out their creativity and imagination. It could be on a specific theme, they may have to include certain words or it can be open. - Open mic night
This can link to the above point – students could share their work. An alternative would be a mixture. Teachers and students may be invited to read out what they’ve written, act out a play/show they have drafted or perhaps simply read out their favourite piece, whether that’s a poem, a page of a book or something else. - Host a speaker
The focus here could be on how literacy has had an impact on their lives. If this isn’t possible, a Skype conversation with them and your class/school could work wonders. - Book sale/exchange
This one is quite self-explanatory. World Literacy suggest funds of this (or the sponsored readathon or open mic night) could go towards building a library for children in developing nations.

What about us?
We have made three of our collaborative learning iPad apps completely FREE for September. These can be used to engage students in reading and writing, and we hope you enjoy them...
Under 8s: Amy
Download on the App Store: bit.ly/DMAmySchool
Get more information on our website: bit.ly/RTAmySchool
8-11s: Cup and ring marks
Download on the App Store: bit.ly/DMCupRing
Get more information on our website: bit.ly/RTCupRing
11-14: WW1 Trenches
Download on the App Store: bit.ly/DMWW1T
Get more information on our website: bit.ly/RTWW1
Summary
As you know, literacy is such an important skill. You’re already helping make a difference. If you are hosting an event, remember to register on online! This doesn’t commit you to anything, but ensures you get a pack including things like a certificate for winning students and a sponsorship form.
Note
You can also get an extra free trial to our new creation tool for iPads – it can be used by teachers and students. Click here to find out more.
Wednesday, 2 September 2015
Getting kids thinking

The article, 'Appreciating the value of skills: Evaluation beyond subject-specific knowledge', looks at how we can evaluate, measure and reflect on important skills rather than only students' level of knowledge on a topic.
To read the piece, please click here.
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Tuesday, 30 June 2015
SOLE with a twist
After planning it before Christmas, we were very much looking forward to visiting Greenfield Arts’ SOLE Room 13, again. They do amazing work with students of different ages, and are one of the schools chosen to host a SOLE (Self Organised Learning Environment) area. When last there, we observed a ‘SOLE Grannies’ session (more info on these here), but today was going to be a little different. We were running a session of Digital Mysteries within the SOLE room – with some features of SOLE, but not quite the same.
Mrs Pattison, two colleagues and her year five class walked along the road from Byerley Park Primary School. They often make visits to Greenfields for SOLE sessions, and do really well. If you don't know SOLEs very well, these are “created when educators and/or parents encourage kids to work in groups that they form, and are free to change, to answer big, open questions by using the internet” (SOLE toolkit). The origins lie in Professor Sugata Mitra’s Ted-Prize winning talk here. To find out more, go to School in the Cloud.
Students were provided with mini iPads, enough for half of the class. It is deliberate that they only have one between two, as mysteries are designed to be worked on together and they can both interact with the screen at the same time. The whole process is designed to encourage discussion throughout – so they’re always engaging with each other.
Pip the Dog – 5 minute intro
Since students have not used our app before, we started with a little introduction with Digital Mysteries: Pip the Dog, a fairly simple PSHE/Citizenship app. It didn’t need much explaining but we went through; how to resize a slip, how to progress from one stage to the next and what each stage asks from you.
After about 5 minutes we asked if everyone was ready to begin the full session, and there was lots of shouts of ‘Yes!’, it was time to move on.
Theo in Ancient Greece
Since the students had covered Ancient Greece in another term, we chose Digital Mysteries: Theo in Ancient Greece as the task for this session. This was good to re-jog their memories at the same time as collaborating, thinking, learning new things and reflecting.
The main question in this app is ‘What is Theo most proud of about Ancient Greece?’
Set up
While it wasn’t a traditional SOLE session as such, we were in SOLE Room 13. It’s a flexible working space, with brilliant decor and different places to sit. In traditional SOLEs, the students are free to sit wherever, move around and have full control over their learning. One of the walls is clear glass – so it is a small way of observing what is going on.
What we did, was integrate some elements of a SOLE session. We stayed within the room for a little while until we knew the students were settled into the task (as well as for taking some pictures).
Reading Stage
Students are asked to create at least three named groups to sort the slips into. There was a good mixture when having a look at the end. One pair did only have two (relevant, not relevant), but even this helped see how the students thought (that's why we call it Brains on the Tablet).
Reflection Stage
As mentioned, there would usually be a Sequencing Stage, but due to the nature of the session and the time restrictions, the students then went straight to typing in their answer. The Reflection Stage then followed. For the groups that got to this point, it was so good to see the enthusiasm and pride on many of their faces.
The two in the video finished before everyone else, and the benefit of this set up in Room 13 was how freely they could move around and show other pairs bits of their process. This was excellent to see. One group, when asked how many groups they had made and what they were called, started talking about theirs, and used the Reflection Stage to emphasise their point. This ‘Stimulated Recall’ was interesting.
Back to us…
Katy Milne (Director of Arts and Creativity) and Mrs Pattison very kindly asked the students lots of questions at the end. These involved thinking about the setup, the content of the app, the usage of the app, what they’d learned and whether they’d do it again.
Some questions asked:
How many groups did you create?
One pair created six different groups/categories, which was interesting, and several others: four or five. As mentioned, there was one pair who created two groups.
What did you learn in this session that you didn’t know before?
A few students talked about the main character Theo. An answer included ‘We learned that Theo has a statue of him’. We then made it clear that Theo was a fictional character who was created in that time frame to help them learn about what it would be like to be someone at this time.
Another answer was ‘that builders used columns called Doric, Ionic and Corinthian to hold up roofs’ and that ‘the British Museum in London is built in a classical Greek style’ (interesting that this student used the iPad (on the app’s Reflection Stage) to point to this fact.
What was Theo most proud of about Ancient Greece? (The main question)
There was many answers but the majority said that it's Theo and his father being in the Olympics. An addition was that one of his favourite foods is olives and ‘because he won the Olympics, he got a prize of an olive crown, so he would have been proud of that’ – the connecting of two separate pieces of information was good to see. A different answer was that Theo would have been most proud of his uncle’s building work. On the Hard level of this mystery, additional slips about democracy would have been added – this could have brought in a different slant.
What did you think of how you were grouped together? Do you prefer how you usually work in a SOLE session, in bigger groups, or were you pleased with working in pairs?
Following on from the success we’ve seen in the bigger groups before, it was surprising to note that the students who spoke up, really found benefit in working in pairs:
“When you’re in pairs, you just listen.”
“I like it in little groups more, because you concentrate better.”
When Katy then asked if they felt free to move around (a big benefit of SOLE), one students said they did when they were finished: ‘Well they didn’t really get it, so me and Ryan sat and helped them’.
If you could think of a way to improve the app/mystery, what would you suggest?
It can of course be difficult for students to put their hand up and say something they feel may upset someone, but we tried to encourage them as much as possible, because feedback can only help us improve. One student did say it would be good if there was some way you could get rid of any notes and sticky tapes that you didn’t need any more/you’d done by accident – there is in actual fact, a ‘Trash’ group where you drag and drop stuff you don’t need. So although you can’t get rid of it entirely (the idea is that all thoughts/notes/actions are there if needed), you can remove it from main view and concentrate on the bigger picture.
Would you use Digital Mysteries apps again?
This was met with many enthusiastic exclaims of ‘yes’ and ‘definitely’, and when asked if they thought they could do a fresh mystery without any ‘instructions’ next time, they were very confident. A few highlights:
‘I thought that it was a bit different to any other game. In a good way.’
‘It was new.’
‘I liked it because I never knew you could do, like, this type of stuff on it.’
‘It was easy to use.’
Recap
It was a brilliant afternoon. We want to say a big thank you to Katy who organised the session, as well as James Brady for ensuring that all of the tech was running smoothly for the students.
Also a big thank you to Mrs Pattison and her colleagues for bringing the students in, asking questions and being supportive of the task. Of course, another thank you to the Byerley Park year five class who came in. They were a pleasure to work with, came up with some great ideas and were very polite at the end, coming up to us to say thank you.
At some point in the future, it will be great to do it again!
To read Greenfield Arts' blog post on this session, click here.
To try Digital Mysteries, go to our Developer's Page on the App Store.
Mrs Pattison, two colleagues and her year five class walked along the road from Byerley Park Primary School. They often make visits to Greenfields for SOLE sessions, and do really well. If you don't know SOLEs very well, these are “created when educators and/or parents encourage kids to work in groups that they form, and are free to change, to answer big, open questions by using the internet” (SOLE toolkit). The origins lie in Professor Sugata Mitra’s Ted-Prize winning talk here. To find out more, go to School in the Cloud.
Students were provided with mini iPads, enough for half of the class. It is deliberate that they only have one between two, as mysteries are designed to be worked on together and they can both interact with the screen at the same time. The whole process is designed to encourage discussion throughout – so they’re always engaging with each other.
Pip the Dog – 5 minute intro

After about 5 minutes we asked if everyone was ready to begin the full session, and there was lots of shouts of ‘Yes!’, it was time to move on.
Theo in Ancient Greece
Since the students had covered Ancient Greece in another term, we chose Digital Mysteries: Theo in Ancient Greece as the task for this session. This was good to re-jog their memories at the same time as collaborating, thinking, learning new things and reflecting.
The main question in this app is ‘What is Theo most proud of about Ancient Greece?’
Set up
- Mostly pairs, one three, then as the time went on, a few working on their own.
- Medium difficulty (each app has Easy, Medium and Hard settings – this usually determines how many slips and hints the group are given). In this case, Hard would have brought in an extra topic to consider – democracy.
- Two stages – reading, then grouping the slips, followed by typing in their answer and then the Reflection Stage. By default, there would usually be a Sequencing Stage in between grouping and answering, but we eased them in for today, especially because we wanted more time than usual to reflect at the end.
Activity

What we did, was integrate some elements of a SOLE session. We stayed within the room for a little while until we knew the students were settled into the task (as well as for taking some pictures).
Reading Stage
- Students got to grips with this straight away: there are a few different ways of making the icon sized slips bigger so you can read everything on them. Many tended to double tap and a few used the ‘pinch and zoom’ gesture.
- The majority of students read the slips in numerical order – this helps them be organised as they know which they have read. The information on the slips is deliberately not in correlation chronologically with the numbers of them, so this works fine.
- Some read the slips together and some pairs had a pattern of having one student re-size the slip then the other reading it while the other listened.

Students are asked to create at least three named groups to sort the slips into. There was a good mixture when having a look at the end. One pair did only have two (relevant, not relevant), but even this helped see how the students thought (that's why we call it Brains on the Tablet).
Reflection Stage
As mentioned, there would usually be a Sequencing Stage, but due to the nature of the session and the time restrictions, the students then went straight to typing in their answer. The Reflection Stage then followed. For the groups that got to this point, it was so good to see the enthusiasm and pride on many of their faces.
Back to us…
Katy Milne (Director of Arts and Creativity) and Mrs Pattison very kindly asked the students lots of questions at the end. These involved thinking about the setup, the content of the app, the usage of the app, what they’d learned and whether they’d do it again.
Some questions asked:
How many groups did you create?
One pair created six different groups/categories, which was interesting, and several others: four or five. As mentioned, there was one pair who created two groups.
What did you learn in this session that you didn’t know before?
A few students talked about the main character Theo. An answer included ‘We learned that Theo has a statue of him’. We then made it clear that Theo was a fictional character who was created in that time frame to help them learn about what it would be like to be someone at this time.
Another answer was ‘that builders used columns called Doric, Ionic and Corinthian to hold up roofs’ and that ‘the British Museum in London is built in a classical Greek style’ (interesting that this student used the iPad (on the app’s Reflection Stage) to point to this fact.
What was Theo most proud of about Ancient Greece? (The main question)
There was many answers but the majority said that it's Theo and his father being in the Olympics. An addition was that one of his favourite foods is olives and ‘because he won the Olympics, he got a prize of an olive crown, so he would have been proud of that’ – the connecting of two separate pieces of information was good to see. A different answer was that Theo would have been most proud of his uncle’s building work. On the Hard level of this mystery, additional slips about democracy would have been added – this could have brought in a different slant.
What did you think of how you were grouped together? Do you prefer how you usually work in a SOLE session, in bigger groups, or were you pleased with working in pairs?
Following on from the success we’ve seen in the bigger groups before, it was surprising to note that the students who spoke up, really found benefit in working in pairs:
“When you’re in pairs, you just listen.”
“I like it in little groups more, because you concentrate better.”
When Katy then asked if they felt free to move around (a big benefit of SOLE), one students said they did when they were finished: ‘Well they didn’t really get it, so me and Ryan sat and helped them’.
If you could think of a way to improve the app/mystery, what would you suggest?
It can of course be difficult for students to put their hand up and say something they feel may upset someone, but we tried to encourage them as much as possible, because feedback can only help us improve. One student did say it would be good if there was some way you could get rid of any notes and sticky tapes that you didn’t need any more/you’d done by accident – there is in actual fact, a ‘Trash’ group where you drag and drop stuff you don’t need. So although you can’t get rid of it entirely (the idea is that all thoughts/notes/actions are there if needed), you can remove it from main view and concentrate on the bigger picture.
Would you use Digital Mysteries apps again?
This was met with many enthusiastic exclaims of ‘yes’ and ‘definitely’, and when asked if they thought they could do a fresh mystery without any ‘instructions’ next time, they were very confident. A few highlights:
‘I thought that it was a bit different to any other game. In a good way.’
‘It was new.’
‘I liked it because I never knew you could do, like, this type of stuff on it.’
‘It was easy to use.’
Recap
It was a brilliant afternoon. We want to say a big thank you to Katy who organised the session, as well as James Brady for ensuring that all of the tech was running smoothly for the students.
Also a big thank you to Mrs Pattison and her colleagues for bringing the students in, asking questions and being supportive of the task. Of course, another thank you to the Byerley Park year five class who came in. They were a pleasure to work with, came up with some great ideas and were very polite at the end, coming up to us to say thank you.
At some point in the future, it will be great to do it again!
To read Greenfield Arts' blog post on this session, click here.
To try Digital Mysteries, go to our Developer's Page on the App Store.
Labels:
Ancient Greece,
app,
App Store,
collaborative learning,
Critical,
digital mysteries,
discussion,
Higher level,
iPad,
learning,
reflection,
Skills,
Skype Grannies,
SOLE,
Sugata Mitra,
TED,
thinking
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