| There’s a group on photo-sharing site Flickr dedicated to teasing each other with mystery objects. Here is my contribution. If you don’t know the answer yourself, get a D&T teacher to help you.
If you’re not a Flickr member, feel free to leave your guess in the comments here. |
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Yacapaca
Great teachers spend less time marking and more time teaching
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Gordon Brown’s pre-Budget announcement on school funding has been widely reported already, mainly as an example of New Labour’s long-established vice of reporting every piece of funding at least three times. My interest lies more with the timeframe of his proposals. Brown is promising money to refurbish school buildings over a 10-15 year period. It is clear that we would benefit from warm, clean, dry and well-lit classrooms next year or the year after – but what will be relevant by 2022? Actually, I don’t take issue with the warm, clean, dry, well-lit bit. It’s that word classroom that denotes an invention I think won’t last into the next generation.
The classroom as we have come to know it is a room where 30-odd children can conveniently be lectured to by one adult. It doesn’t have much else going for it. It is typically inconveniently far from those childrens’ homes (especially after the age of eleven), and it is an intrinsically sterile place that makes it much harder for the teacher to nurture or stimulate the children incarcerated in it.
Classrooms are like this because this way they require minimum resources. A school can run on a pupil:teacher ratio of 20:1. To propose a better solution requires us to find more resources. And, over the next generation, I am completely confident that we will do just that.
They won’t be human resources of course, but computers. Or perhaps computer-intermediated humans, because computers may replace human intellect but are unlikely to replace the educationally equally essential human ability to emote.
So far, you’ve seen computers in schools as things for kids to do spreadsheets or, gawdhelpus, Powerpoint presentations on. A combined typewriter and adding machine. But in fact, you already use one supercomputer regularly; it’s called Google. In future you will use many more without even thinking about it. And just how super do I mean? According to futurologist Ray Kurzweil, we can expect computer intelligence to match our own by 2020 (see graph) – just thirteen years from now.
A slight outframe from my argument here – before you start making mental images of shiny talking robots lecturing to your students, which you then dismiss as implausible, try this mental test. Thinks of fairly complex web search, the sort where you are not confident Google would give you the answers you need. Now imagine that Google gets a program that would allow it to write back to you and ask questions about your search, to understand it better. Plausible? Good. Now imagine that over four or five years, Google refine this program to the point where you can’t really tell whether it’s the program asking you questions, or another human being. Still plausible? Well guess what, your imaginary Google has just passed the Turing Test, the best-established benchmark for human-like intelligence in computers. But as I said, that’s an outframe. Back to the main argument.
The future this all points towards is one in which every child has an intelligent, artificial, mentor permanently available to him or her. And don’t assume that mentor will look like a computer; my money is on it being accessed via an evolution of the mobile phone. The intelligence itself will be out there in the ether, just as knowledge is now.
In this future, which is only half-way through Gordon’s funding cycle, I can’t see much relevance to a classroom built for didactic presentations. Can you?
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If you looked at the ePortfolio exemplars I blogged at the start of the month, you might have noticed that they required quite a big screen for optimum display. Many screens in schools are only 800×600 so I’ve been worrying about this for some time.
So… through December, Sasha rewrote all the templates to conform to a system known as ‘Liquid Layout’. The idea is that a web page should intelligently resize itself to whatever screen it finds itself on, rather than demanding that you the user buy a screen the same size as the designer’s.
Perfectly liquid layouts work equally well on desktop or your mobile phone. We’ve not gone quite that far, but we have improved things a lot. Certainly the portfolios will display fine on all common school computers.
With our intensively graphical format it wasn’t easy, and I’m pretty proud of what Sasha has achieved. Take a look for yourself; here are the same real students’ portfolios I showed last month, re-exported with the new templates:
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One of my greatest failed inventions was selling worksheets individually, like these (scroll to the bottom of the page). Teachers often complain that they buy a Chalkface pack then use only half the contents, so it seemed a good service to allow people to pick and choose the bits they wanted.
It wasn’t. Everyone said it was a good idea; nobody (well, hardly anybody) actually bought an individual worksheet. In retrospect, the flaw is obvious. To know if you want to teach with a resorce, you need to see the whole thing. We did allow teachers to download print-disabled copies of each worksheet first, but that is simply too time-consuming for a busy teacher. As the whole thing is only £25, more cost-effective to simply buy the whole thing.
I mention this now because the individual worksheets are going soon, as part of a general revamp of the site. So if you actually have been sitting there agonising over whether to spend £1.17 on It’s OK to be Angry, now’s your last chance.
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We’re still piloting our free ePortfolio system, but I thought you might like to see some of the work students are doing on it at the moment. These three examples, each from a different school, make great illustrations of the range of possibilities in the system. They are produced by students of different attainment levels, doing different courses, in three very different schools. I have anonymised the names to John Smith/Jane Smith, but otherwise left them completely untouched as the students produced them. Note that only one of the three examples is actually a finished piece of work.
So here they are, specified as
Teacher: School: Task- Julie Mason: Wellingborough School: Designers & Product Development(download)
- Dave Boshell: Newtown High School: DiDA L1 Using ICT(download)
- Ray Krachan: Arbroath Academy: Internet Addictions(download)
I’ve added the download links for two reasons. First, to demonstrate one of the features of the system; you can view ePortfolios direct online, or download them to CD as some exam boards require. And second to enable you to investigate the file structure should you wish to.
My thanks, for permission to publish, to the teachers and students involved. The free ePortfolio system is available as part of Yacapaca.

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