John Travers
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- Adelaide, SA, Australia
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- education.au
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- More than one sector
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- web2, Digital Storytelling, Aust Digital Revolution, web2ools, Cyber Safety, ednatv, Grassroots Video, me-edu-au, WeavingICT, edna2010
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- John Travers
The Magic Toolbox
'Leading a Digital School' - a useful book for ICT leaders
Leading a digital school , edited by Mal Lee and
Michael Gaffney, published by ACER
2008 is a very useful collection of essays on the full range of
issues related to this much discussed topic. Naturally, among the
fifteen chapters there are some I really liked and some that I had
doubts about. I apply a personal ruler to new material about the use
of ICT in schools, based on an article I read a while ago and return
to regularly by Aviram
and Talmi. In short, they suggest there are two main groups
involved in the use of ICT in education: the largest group they
call Technocrats, who are fascinated by the technology and see great
benefit in its use and see it as relatively unproblematic. The
Technocrats tend to do the same old teaching using fancy new tools.
The other main group, Reformists are somewhat romantic and see ICT
as a tool that will almost inevitably bring education to a
constructivist paradise. My view is more aligned with the Reformists
but recognising that there is nothing inevitable about a change in
learning styles. ICT can help achieve more open learning but the
technology itself will not make it happen. That makes me a Realistic
Reformist I guess.
So, like Goldilocks, I found Roger Hayward's case study of his
school St Leonard's College just right, and almost reason enough alone
to get this book. St Leonards is a very affluent school and Dr
Hayward is very committed to the us of computers in education. But
he offers very salutary observations. "...our efforts to use
ICT well are , in my opinion, disappointing" and "...I
cannot shake off a feeling akin to driving around in an Aston Martin
in first gear with the handbrake on...". He is critical of
initiatives to use laptops as a Trojan horse to force a more
constructivist learning methodolgy and says, "Schools change
pedagogy by changing pedagogy, not by changing technology." But
he is not a pessimist, and has a lot of positive ideas on how to
apply technology to support good learning.
I liked David O'Brien's case study of his pioneering work in us
of IWBs and interestingly talks a lot about the successful use of
video games to point to how they have employed good learning
principles. Greg Whitby's excellent essay on staffing the digital
school barely mentions technology and is all about creating a good
learning environment for staff so they will use the technology, and
all their other resources, to achieve good learning by students.
David Ingvarson and Michael Gaffney provide a detailed overview of the
confusing world of learning management systems and online environments
including the burgeoning Web 2.0 world.
My Reformist alarms went off in some of the essays. Mal Lee
and Michael Gaffney's introduction recognises that changing
methodologies are needed but contrasted a Paper-Based Schooling with
Digitally Based Schooling. The implication is that the dominance of
paper causes one style of teaching and learning while digital
technology causes a more open and progressive approach. There is a lot
of evidence from digitally enhanced schools that the latter is not
necessarily so. I don't think they intended this implication and the
selection of essays in the book suggests the view that pedagogy is the
main issue and technology provides powerful tools.
A valuable and timely book for school leaders.
Tags:
staff developmen
school developm
leadership
Posted at 12:59PM Sep 11, 2008
by John Travers |

