We enjoyed very much viewing some of the examples in the Gallery of
Projects, after downloading Etoys 4 and switching to full screen mode. What recommendations would Etoys - experienced teachers and the creators of Etoys give to teachers who are just starting to use Etoys in their classrooms? How much should they do and how much should they ask the students to do? What is the best way to ask the class to do a project? How do experienced evaluators rank projects? Where do they look for value in a project? Any comments will be appreciated. The timing is perfect for our country, Uruguay, the distribution of the XO computers to public elementary school students is complete. Almost all of them are already connected to internet. Etoys-To-Go offers a solution to many others. They can even work at cybercafes which are quite popular here. Now is the time to go to work and use Etoys 4. Thanks in advance for any comments. Carlos Rabassa Member of Volunteer Support Network to Plan Ceibal (OLPC) _______________________________________________ squeakland mailing list [hidden email] http://lists.squeakland.org/mailman/listinfo/squeakland |
On Wednesday 28 October 2009 02:36:13 pm Carlos Rabassa wrote:
> What recommendations would Etoys - experienced teachers and the > creators of Etoys give to teachers who are just starting to use Etoys > in their classrooms? Etoys is a powerful learning environment. People need time to get used to this environment. The toys in the catalog are based on metaphors that may not correspond to objects encountered by children in daily life in your region. So make sure teachers (and students) get lots of time to play with it and establish their own metaphors. For instance, some children may prefer to think of "lasso" as "scissors". Not all features are discoverable through exploration. So guidance is necessary for such advanced features. For instance, Etoys can also exist on screen without being "visible". The object can be transparent, hidden or use a camouflage costume. You could immerse a piece of glass in water to illustrate such features. BTW, Etoys is a "classroom" ;-). > How much should they do and how much should they ask the students to do? Initially it is very much co-exploration. Teachers have the advantage of experience, but fear of accidents may hold them back. Children, with unbridled curiousity, explore freely without fear and discover "features" faster than adults. But they also get distracted easily. One way to work around such issues is for teachers to initiate a project on a particular topic (e.g. water conservation) and then get the students to elaborate it further. Learning happens while "doing" projects. > What is the best way to ask the class to do a project? The best way is best left to teachers and local practices :-). I assist teachers only on the mechanics of Etoys. I encourage them to ask "how to..." rather than "what is the best way..". Most teachers use activities (like paper craft, beads, ball game etc.) for concept development. I help teachers model those same activities in Etoys. Children get to redo the same activities in Etoys and then go on to discover the extra capabilities in the digital environment. For instance, a given count of beads are arranged in a rectangular shape to discover factors. The same can be done by resizing a holder with objects. This experiment is much easier (and faster) in Etoys. Or a teacher can get students to drop a ball and trace its locus on a wall and then create this model in Etoys. Once this is done, students can study how different gravitational forces affect the movement. > How do experienced evaluators rank projects? > Where do they look for value in a project? I am not sure if Etoys projects can be evaluated this way. The value is in the thinking ("debugging") that goes into a project. Of course, it is possible to create a project specifically for evaluation (e.g. an essay or a diagram). In this case, Etoys is just an digital editor. It is nice to get in touch with school supporters around the world. Thanks for reaching out. Regards .. Subbu _______________________________________________ squeakland mailing list [hidden email] http://lists.squeakland.org/mailman/listinfo/squeakland |
Mr. Subramaniam,
Thank you very much for such a complete answer. I am going to translate my questions and your answers for distribution through the america-latina and rapceibal forums that are read by spanish and portuguese speaking enthusiasts. I'm sure they will be very helpful in getting things moving. Some of your comments, although coming from far away hit it right on the point. I guess our minds and concerns work the same all around the world. I have seen your name among the developers at Squeakland. What would you like me to tell our fellow Squeakers about your background? You say you assist teachers. Are you a teacher yourself? Thanks again. Carlos On Oct 29, 2009, at 9:53 AM, K. K. Subramaniam wrote: > On Wednesday 28 October 2009 02:36:13 pm Carlos Rabassa wrote: >> What recommendations would Etoys - experienced teachers and the >> creators of Etoys give to teachers who are just starting to use Etoys >> in their classrooms? > Etoys is a powerful learning environment. People need time to get > used to this > environment. The toys in the catalog are based on metaphors that may > not > correspond to objects encountered by children in daily life in your > region. So > make sure teachers (and students) get lots of time to play with it and > establish their own metaphors. For instance, some children may > prefer to think > of "lasso" as "scissors". > > Not all features are discoverable through exploration. So guidance is > necessary for such advanced features. For instance, Etoys can also > exist on > screen without being "visible". The object can be transparent, > hidden or use a > camouflage costume. You could immerse a piece of glass in water to > illustrate > such features. > > BTW, Etoys is a "classroom" ;-). > >> How much should they do and how much should they ask the students >> to do? > Initially it is very much co-exploration. Teachers have the > advantage of > experience, but fear of accidents may hold them back. Children, with > unbridled > curiousity, explore freely without fear and discover "features" > faster than > adults. But they also get distracted easily. > > One way to work around such issues is for teachers to initiate a > project on a > particular topic (e.g. water conservation) and then get the students > to > elaborate it further. Learning happens while "doing" projects. > >> What is the best way to ask the class to do a project? > The best way is best left to teachers and local practices :-). I > assist > teachers only on the mechanics of Etoys. I encourage them to ask > "how to..." > rather than "what is the best way..". > > Most teachers use activities (like paper craft, beads, ball game > etc.) for > concept development. I help teachers model those same activities in > Etoys. > Children get to redo the same activities in Etoys and then go on to > discover > the extra capabilities in the digital environment. > > For instance, a given count of beads are arranged in a rectangular > shape to > discover factors. The same can be done by resizing a holder with > objects. This > experiment is much easier (and faster) in Etoys. > > Or a teacher can get students to drop a ball and trace its locus on > a wall and > then create this model in Etoys. Once this is done, students can > study how > different gravitational forces affect the movement. > >> How do experienced evaluators rank projects? >> Where do they look for value in a project? > I am not sure if Etoys projects can be evaluated this way. The value > is in the > thinking ("debugging") that goes into a project. Of course, it is > possible to > create a project specifically for evaluation (e.g. an essay or a > diagram). In > this case, Etoys is just an digital editor. > > It is nice to get in touch with school supporters around the world. > Thanks for > reaching out. > > Regards .. Subbu _______________________________________________ squeakland mailing list [hidden email] http://lists.squeakland.org/mailman/listinfo/squeakland |
On Thursday 29 October 2009 07:49:15 pm Carlos Rabassa wrote:
> What would you like me to tell our fellow Squeakers about your > background? I am one of the trustees Sikshana Foundation (www.sikshana.org), an NGO in Bangalore, India that assists public schools to enhance the quality of education. I introduced Squeak in my neighborhood schools in 2006 because it is a virtual computer tailored for young learners that insulates them from rapid changes in the computer marketplace. See http://enduringbits.blogspot.com/2007/06/one-computer-per-child.html for the background. > You say you assist teachers. Are you a teacher yourself? No. I am a software engineer by profession and I study learning as a hobby. I help design technology pilots for Sikshana. We have placed notebook computers and 7000 USB flash memory chips in 120 village schools. I assist around 600 teachers in using computers to motivate and educate their students. There are many economic and cultural issues in making computing meaningful for these schools. It is bit like trying to introduce ox carts into Los Angeles to reduce carbon footprint :-). I depend on teachers' feedback to help me tune the deployment. You can track the unfolding story at sikshana.blogspot.com Subbu _______________________________________________ squeakland mailing list [hidden email] http://lists.squeakland.org/mailman/listinfo/squeakland |
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