Sunday, 10 August 2014

Immediacy of communication

Teachers spend a lot of time reinforcing guidelines for participating in whole class discussions. This system of one speaker and respectful listening is necessary in many learning situations, but inevitably involves students waiting to share ideas and ask questions. In whole class situations this leads to frustration for some students as they wait to voice “burning” questions or ideas and allows others to sit back without engaging. While I use non technological methods to provide students with increased opportunities to respond (response cards, mini whiteboards and talk-to-your-partner), these methods do not allow the teacher to capture and make visible all responses.

My experiences with teaching  via Web Conferencing (Collaborate) introduced me to the benefits of the chat function and shared whiteboard as spaces where all students are able to contribute, answering each other’s questions building on the ideas of others and actively engaging in the activity or presentation rather than being  passive recipients. An overview of whole class thinking ( in real time) , also provides a basis for further discussion and supports higher order thinking through analysis and reflection. This experience inspired me to explore backchannelling in regular classrooms (Byrne, 2013).

While the following back channelling tools are available on desktop devices, accessing them from a mobile device allows them to be easily utilised in a regular classroom as part of everyday learning activities.

Learning Activity :  Students pose meaningful questions about the life of Indigenous Australians before and after colonisation.

Apps/ Native functions : Access to Padlet/TodaysMeet through Safari App, wireless connection

In this artefact I have used Padlet as a tool for whole class brainstorming as part of the Australian Curriculum History where students are required to pose questions about life for Indigenous and Torres Strait Islander peoples both before and after colonisation. The Padlet could be kept open throughout a series of lessons. The free form layout option of  Padlet makes it particularly useful in this situation, as questions can be grouped and re grouped according to different criteria.




TodaysMeet is another backchannelling tool that is very simple to use and is easily accessed through Safari on an iPad. TodaysMeet places posts in chronological order and automatically tags entries with the name of the contributor and time they were entered. Silvia Tolisano (2009) discusses the practicalities of using this back channelling tool in her blog post and outlines useful guidelines for supporting students to contribute positively.

Learning Activity Shared reading. Analysing the language used by author’s to portray characters, analysing the development of a character throughout a quest novel (i.e. Rowan of Rin).
Apps/ Native functions : Access to class Edstudio ( chat function)  through Safari App, wireless connection.

I am very aware of the security and safety issues that are a part of working with young students in a school setting. The Learning Place is continually upgrading to provide similar capabilities for interaction as open access tools (such as TodaysMeet or Padlet).  I recently joined a Web Conference presented by Stephanie Hendy around backchannelling in the Learning Place (Hendy, 2014) and discovered the chat function within EdStudios. This tool has several advantages that make it particularly suitable for classroom use. The setting options allow the teacher control over when students can access the chat, as well as functions that may be distracting for students such as emoticons or font and colour and banned words/ banned contributors function.

The purpose of the shared reading is to develop an understanding of how an author portrays a character over time and how that character changes throughout the book. EdStudio chat enables the teacher to easily create new chats (for each chapter of the book)  and organise these on one page. Chat transcripts can be downloaded as pdfs and printed for comparison and discussion or provided as notes for students who were absent. Chats from earlier chapters can easily be viewed beside chats from later chapters to support discussions that compare and contrast.


Backchannel Ed Studio Access key: S245154381  https://staff.learningplace.eq.edu.au/lp/pages/default.aspx?pid=1464499

Opportunities to transform learning 

 Because Padlet, TodaysMeet and EdStudio Chats all provide access to real time communication regardless of location, there is scope for the transformative use of backchannelling by including students and teachers from other locations.  Silvia Rosenthal Tolisano (2010) provides an inspiring example of this in her simultaneous use of Skype ( on mobile devices) and backchannelling to make connections between her own class and students in countries all over the world through online “ visits” .


Learning Activity : Explaining mathematical thinking during a math investigation ( patterns) and evaluating explanations.
Apps/ Native functions :  Socrative App ( student and teacher)  ,wireless connection.

Socrative allows teachers to create and set quizzes that provide students with immediate feedback. As well as share quizzes with other teachers. The results of quizzes can be organised by question or student and accessed as pdf or Excel documents via email, download or Google Drive. Teachers are able to collect and organise data around responses.
The idea for this activity came from a demonstration of inductive teaching methods in mathematics I observed recently. The goal was for students to discover the solution to a problem involving patterns. This lesson involved whole class discussion as students shared their solutions and discussed different ways of thinking about the problem. I noticed that students were very engaged in forming their ideas but did not listen to, or build on the contributions of their peers during discussions, preferring to share their own idea even if it had previously been offered by someone else. I felt that the immediate communication afforded by mobile technology might be useful in this situation.

The activity uses the “quick question” option within Socrative as a forum for sharing and evaluating responses. This option is accessed through the teacher dashboard. It allows teachers to select anonymous/ named and single/ unlimited responses. Once responses have been collected students are able to vote. The results of the vote can be displayed and used as a basis for further discussion.

Using Socrative to share student ideas simultaneously would allow all students to be heard and avoids the problem of quieter students being overlooked.  It also allows students to pay attention to the discussion. Posting solutions anonymously removes the fear of being incorrect, encourages risk taking and removes the risk of embarrassing students when using the vote function to evaluate responses.

From my observation explaining their mathematical thinking is also something many students find difficult. Viewing and evaluating anonymous responses in later lessons would also support a change in focus, from the methods used by students, to the quality of their explanations and use of mathematical language.









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