Showing posts with label Thinking Kit App. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thinking Kit App. Show all posts

Friday, 22 July 2016

4 things I learned from our STEAM Co. workshop

This week, I had a fantastic day at Broadwood Primary School. Teacher Mel Horan organised a STEAM Co. day of lots of different activities, and I was asked to host a Thinking Kit workshop. There was huge variation; from lavender bag making to writing/performing music, to rocket firing!

Mr STEAM Co. introducing the day of creativity
Mr. STEAM Co. Nick Corston
I arrived at 7.45am and Mel gave me my own STEAM Co. passport, which all children would also receive. It had details of all of the activities and a space for a letter next to each. The more workshops children visited, a secret message would be revealed. A nice extra touch to encourage them to try new things.

Our spot was the computer suite, and I was gifted with the company of Broadwood’s ICT/Computing Lead, Jeanette Bowden, and Bridgewater teacher, Tracy Philipson. The facilities were great - lots of iPads and fast laptops. Tracy had used our content-based apps, Digital Mysteries before so that was a helpful start. We thought the most challenging things would be the varied ages (6-11) and that they could come and go as they please. Jeanette mentioned that one thing that could be on our side is that the children would hopefully help each other. Time would tell!

Two students discussing their iPad activity
Two students and I, discussing their activity
After a welcome assembly, it was time to begin. Jeanette, Tracy and I hurried back and awaited our first arrivals. Sure enough, we had a mixture of ages: 6-9 year olds. The best thing to do first was have them explore Digital Mysteries, so they knew what types of activities they could create. They particularly found ‘Who killed King Ted?’ cool and younger children liked ‘Why didn’t Amy go to school today?’ Within five minutes, many started asking when they could create their own, plus at the same time, more children appeared, ready to join in and ask what we were doing...so that was when the fun really began!

Here’s the four key things I learned:

  • Children teach each other

    This was really lovely to see and particularly prominent, I think, because of the flexibility of the day. The vast age difference between some of the children in our workshop, meant that natural instincts to help others came to fruition without us asking. With some being very young, they hadn’t typed in a web or email address before, so older children showed them what to do, what to type and where to click. This meant that although being young and at this stage of learning meant they couldn’t create a task on their own, they played a part and learned some key skills as they went along.

  • Let passions shine through

    If you’ve not heard about Thinking Kit before, it allows teachers and students to create their very own app-like activities for iPads. We can’t speak to everyone who's used Thinking Kit up to now, but some that we have, have told us that students have created activities on a range of things - but often curriculum-based. This is great and one of the key things that helps integrate the tool into day-to-day school life, but this day was all about freedom and creativity. For this reason, I left the topic completely open.
    A task all about Batman being created:
    1 & 2: Creation side. 3: In the app.
    Some students needed a bit of help to think of an idea but others thought of topics straight away. 'Lightbulb moments’ included activity ideas to discuss children’s Minecraft expertise, whether Cinderella should go to the ball, Batman’s exploits and why some YouTubers are so popular! 
    While these aren’t “curriculum topics”, they ignited the passion the students needed in order to help them become content creators. Whilst they were getting excited that they were using their favourite hobby as part of a school activity, they were also developing many skills. A few to name; often collaboration, writing, targeting a particular audience, research, web-skills of sourcing relevant images and saving/uploading them plus general digital skills.

  • Don't assume

    As I mentioned earlier, one of the challenges was going to be suiting the workshop to different age groups all at the same time. This then led me to believe that maybe younger children would either be able to stick with ‘solving’ our own mysteries or only creating a task with strong guidance. Now, whilst these two things definitely did work well for some children, one of the younger children actually made so much progress that he created four tasks all on his own! At the beginning, I sat with him to guide him through some of the things that were new to him but after that, he was on a roll! Whilst I’d expected only year fives and sixes (age 9-11) to create full activities predominantly on their own or with peers, this boy and a few others actually proved me wrong - with a little guidance and passion for their idea, children can achieve their goals independently. It was lovely seeing the students share their tasks with others too.

  • The simpler the instructions the better

    Pre-Thinking Kit, we had Windows software that enabled people to create their own activities. This tool formed the basis of the Thinking Kit Creator, but our developers had to have a big cull in terms of features to make it accessible online and also to open up the tool to more children. Because we made the tool a lot simpler, we thought we had the bare minimum of what someone would need to create an activity. However, seeing primary children using the tool for myself, opened my eyes: we still had a few advanced options that can be hidden away for those who know to look for them. Examples include adding a Reading Stage or extra instruction: just their presence meant those few more precious minutes being used to ask what they meant (when these features weren't particularly relevant for a student creating a task for a peer).

    The key is to suit tasks to different audiences - our original and very advanced Windows authoring tool is still very useful to some teachers, but they know what they are looking for and so the extras help rather than hinder.
Helping one of the younger students to create an activity
Helping one of the younger students
The day was brilliant. Everyone involved - from the teachers, to teaching assistants, to members of the local community and different businesses, and of course the children - worked really hard to make the day a success, and it most definitely was!

For more information on Thinking Kit and how to get the free app and a free trial to the activity creator that the children used, please visit www.thinking-kit.com. You can also read our last blog post for details on how to get involved with STEAM Co. here.

Some examples of students' work...

Task 9774 'Should we go to the beach?'

Task 5159 on Robin Hood

Friday, 24 June 2016

Assignments: From passive presentations to engaging digital activities

(This article was originally published on ukedchat.com)

More and more teachers are giving students projects to do, whether at school or at home. They often have complete freedom of how to present the final outcome.
 

Common examples include a PowerPoint presentation, report, poster or physical model. A few, may go for a more creative option such as a video, or maybe a delicious one such as a cooked meal. However, digital technology, when used, is often limited to presenting passive information without any interactivity. The type that doesn’t encourage any engagement.

So far this year, my 9 year old daughter has done a poster, two models and a card game. Now, she wants to try something new for her Victorians project. She doesn’t want to do a PowerPoint; she thinks that’s what people do when they don’t want to put in a lot of effort.

It must be said that some teachers do encourage students to take advantage of digital technologies. Examples include blogging or other forms of presenting content, e.g. social media, or wikis. Even then though, for those who engage with the content, it‘s still mostly passive (reading/watching). Sometimes it increases a bit to up/down-voting or commenting as the ultimate engagement.

Presenting ‘content’ in a way that allows for some degree of engagement is a challenge for teachers and students without programming skills or advanced ICT knowledge. It’s quite surprising in this day and age, especially with the digital native generation. Tools such as ‘Book Creator’ and ‘Explain Everything™ Interactive Whiteboard’ are a breath of fresh air in this respect. Hopefully more and more such tools get developed that focus on empowering teachers and students to become creative at content creation.

When it comes to pre-prepared educational material, tablets/apps are increasing in popularity; if not for their educational value, then for their increased level of engagement. Lots of new opportunities can be opened up by providing:
  • teachers with the ability to present learning material in an app-like manner.
  • students with the means to present their project based learning outcome in an app-like manner.

Motivation for teachers is probably around getting students more engaged with their material. For the students presenting their own work, they’ll be a lot more motivated than usual; the final outcome is way ‘cooler’ than what they’re used to. Other students can actively engage with creations by others. Work is not just quickly glanced at, put in a folder or hung on the wall, but actually used, engaged with and learned from.

For developers, the challenge is to strike a balance between providing tools that allow for easy content creation, but also providing opportunity for active engagement with that content too. The problem so far has been that enabling the latter often sacrifices the simplicity of the creation part. This then excludes many from giving it a go.

As an academic researcher on education technology, I have been exploring ways to offer such opportunities for a long time. This led to Thinking Kit, with its two parts: the web-based creator and the iPad app. Through a simple, easy-to-use tool, students (or teachers) add content (e.g. open question/objective then images/text to help people answer/achieve it) then the Thinking Kit transforms it into an engaging iPad activity available to download free around the world. This way, students’ creations are not just passively received (viewed/commented on/read), they are actually used by someone else as a learning tool.

An activity created by students in the UK on migration this week.
As the app is designed to be used by pairs and to encourage discussion during the process, students will have the invaluable opportunity to watch peers engage with their work and ‘verbally’ discuss it. Observing how their content is being interpreted and understood by their peers means a better future appreciation for how to create with the audience in mind. A dedicated Reflection Stage also helps students develop their critical thinking skills.

So when you next set students an assignment or project, think about what the end result could be. Rather than a passive poster or presentation, they can actually create something that is useful and usable. It doesn’t have to be complicated.

www.thinking-kit.com

 


More about Thinking Kit

Thinking Kit is a two part tool: the creator and the app. Through the web-based creator, users fill in a template. The template outlines what a collaborative, engaging activity needs and they add their content: a question/objective, images (e.g. drawings/photos) and snippets of text that will help people answer the question/achieve the objective. Upon saving, Thinking Kit transforms this information into an app-like activity, saves it to the cloud and generates a number.

Students and teachers around the world can then go to the FREE Thinking Kit App (iPad) and enter the number to get the activity (if it’s marked as public). That’s it.

Now what you have, is an iPad activity that can be worked on alone or in pairs. There are tools to help users make sense of the information, e.g. groups, sticky tapes and notes. The interactive playback Reflection stage and the PDF reports allow for reflecting upon and evidencing the process. This encourages metacognition, formative assessment and keeping a record of learning.

You can also use Thinking Kit to create your own tasks for students – see ‘16 ways to use Thinking Kit’ for some ideas.

Friday, 4 March 2016

International Women's Day/Women's History Month

Tuesday 8th March marks International Women’s Day, while the month of March is Women’s History Month, so we have created a dedicated, FREE iPad activity for your students to use.


This year’s IWD theme is ‘Pledge for Parity’, and anyone can join in to support the event. One way is to pledge your support to one of the following:
  • help women and girls achieve their ambitions
  • challenge conscious and unconscious bias
  • call for gender-balanced leadership
  • value women and men's contributions equally
  • create inclusive, flexible cultures
There are many ways to put this pledge in action, such as spreading the word (social media details below), organising an event, or helping to get young people discussing such topics and the history behind them.

In light of this, we've created a FREE ‘Women’s Suffrage - UK’ iPad activity for those around 14-16 (or younger/older depending). Working with English teacher Elizabeth Doyle, and an illustrator to bring the information to life, we have a 24 piece, problem-solving iPad activity for students to work on alone, in pairs or small groups. The main task question is 'Who should get the credit for the success of the campaign to give British women the vote on equal terms with men?'

All you/students have to do is:
  1. Download the FREE Thinking Kit App onto iPads - click here or search ‘Thinking Kit App’ on the App Store.
  2. Go to Educator or Learner then ‘New session’
  3. Tap ‘Download task’
  4. Enter the number 4 - it will immediately start downloading
  5. Tap on the task then begin!
A screenshot of students completing the task in the Thinking Kit App




If you/students want to customise it, you can use the FREE trial of the Thinking Kit Creator (no card details required) to do so quickly and easily. The tool, which can be used on any device on any browser, allows you to open up any public activity and make a new copy to edit as you please.

Ideas:
  • Add new bits of information/images or delete some of ours so that you can focus on a particular strand
  • Get students to research/discuss the topic then add their own slips of thoughts/information/images. Class members can then use each other's tasks.

    E.g they could add more facts, thoughts on how the events impacts modern life/what life might be like now if it hadn’t taken place - anything! It’s a great way to get the students’ creativity flowing at the same time as developing digital literacy skills, writing and speaking/listening.
  • Follow Elizabeth’s recommended difficulty levels (included in the description of the task when you download it). These can easily be recreated in the Thinking Kit Creator. The task is by default, the 'hard' level - just delete the slips that Elizabeth hasn't included for easy/medium, and also see the different sub-questions which she has included too.
  • Create a brand new Thinking Kit activity on International Women's Day or Women's History Month.

Edit the activity in the Thinking Kit Creator - change text, add/remove images, add more slips, change background.

We’d love to know how you use the activity with your students this month, so please comment below, tweet us at @refthinking or email info@reflectivethinking.com. We’ll feature your feedback on our social media pages and e-news! Remember, download the task with the Thinking Kit App (iPad) and/or edit it with the Thinking Kit Creator (any browser).

For more details on the occasions you can click on any of the links below. There are some brilliant events going on, free resources, discussions and more.

International Women’s Day
  • Official website
  • Twitter @womensday - When you tweet about it, include #IWD2016 or #PledgeforParity
  • Facebook page
  • LinkedIn group
  • YouTube - see videos and interviews on the topics being considered
Women’s History Month
  • Official website
  • Twitter @womenshistory