Teach Middle East Magazine Issue 2 Volume 2 Nov-Dec 2014 | Page 21

Featured Teacher University of Southern California also inspires me. I look to these people when it comes to best practice with the use of technology in the classroom. What are some of the ways in which you use ICT to help other educators to improve in their practice? JESS has always been at the forefront of using cutting edge mobile technology. We adopted the use of the iPad in 2011. Asa Firth, who is now our Deputy Head Teacher and Head of Key Stage 2, and I spoke about the use of mobile technology at the very first What Works event held by the KHDA. We presented on ideas that are still being used today at conferences all over. Both Asa and I were very passionate about finding ways to infuse the use of technology in lessons at a time when it was not as prolific as it is today. I have been running Tech Byte sessions for the past few years. These are optional professional development sessions that staff can attend. In these sessions, I look at new apps, how to use them effectively in lessons and also new software that might be useful to teachers and students. We have hosted Apple Distinguished Educator David Kirtlan of Elsium Solutions in the UK at our school twice and we have also hosted Spark teach meet events here. Within the student body, we have the Tech Leader Programme. Tech Leaders are trained to assist other students, parents and even teachers with understanding new applications that they may need help with. Students applying for the position of Tech Leader have to submit a short one minute video clip in which they tell me why I should consider them for the position. I insist that as a requirement of the application process, they need to upload their videos to our Dropbox. From Year 4-6, we have a Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) policy in effect that allows students to use their own iPads. The students and parents are given a contract, which they both have to sign. In rare instances, we have used this contract to remind them of their agreement with us about the acceptable use of these devices. Share with us two successful ICT projects that you ran in the school. The one that we always go back to is the project that led to our current use of mobile technology in the school. This was in 2011. Asa was Head of Year Four and I was working with him then. At that point, the school had invested in a number of iPads so each class had one. We sat down before Christmas to discuss potential projects for the next term. We mulled over a particular idea for hours… what if we did everything on an iPad? What if we taught exclusively on an iPad for an en tire week? This formed the foundation of what we named Mobile Tech Week. We used all the iPads that we had in the school and trialled the BYOD system for the first time to supplement the numbers. Overall, we had enough devices for the entire year group of 88 students to share one between two. We used Book Creator, which is still one of the best apps to use in schools, to create multimedia ebooks throughout the week. The focus of the work was habitats and adaptations. Students chose particular habitats to research and represent using various forms of multimedia within the ebooks. On the final level, students were told to plan a trip to the habitat, so they were looking at apps like Skyscanner, Google Maps and Apple Maps to find the locations of restaurants and safaris. In the end, students had ebooks with dozens of pages of text, images, video and audio footage. Last year, when I moved to Year 6, I ended up with the same cohort that I had taught back for the Mobile Tech Week project. Obviously, we couldn’t use the same type of project, as it Class Time Nov - Dec 2014 19