1 / 49

Being Brave Safely

Being Brave Safely. How the modern educator can exploit the potential of public online spaces and remain professional Ken Corish Online Safety Consultant South West Grid for Learning. Overview. I loved this game when i was at school. It was our treat for being the best behaved in class.

truda
Download Presentation

Being Brave Safely

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Being Brave Safely How the modern educator can exploit the potential of public online spaces and remain professional Ken CorishOnline Safety Consultant South West Grid for Learning

  2. Overview

  3. I loved this game when i was at school. It was our treat for being the best behaved in class. That witch scarred me, I'm 18 and I was still shittin it when the witch came on!

  4. 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 BBS Applications Content Communication Collaboration Entertainment E-Commerce Bandwidth 9.6K 14.4K 56K 64K 128K 1Mb 6Mb ? 1GB 2GB 4GB 10GB 50GB 300GB 1TB ? HDD Storage 24Mb 2TB Internet Age Web 1.0 Web 2.0 Web 3.0?

  5. Connectivity

  6. Global Trends • Mobile Learning • Mobile devices with good computing capability • Cloud Computing • Apps over the internet… • One-to-One Computing • Every learner has access to a device • Ubiquitous Learning • Learning opportunities ‘anytime, anywhere’ • Gaming • Gaming experience to attract interest & attention • Personalised Learning • Tailor teaching for gaps & learning styles • Redefinition of learning spaces • No ’30 desks in rows of 5’ • Teacher generated content • Self generated and shared • Smart Portfolio Assessment • E-Portfolio & formative assessment • Teacher managers/mentors • Change in teacher role to facilitator/director

  7. Research and Indicators

  8. Byron Review

  9. Ofsted – The safe use of new technologies • Active approach to e-safety • Pupil knowledge and understanding • Shared responsibility for e-safety • Training – all staff / all Governors • Well planned & coordinated curriculum • Policies adapted to circumstances • Do not have “lock-down” filtering • Pupils take responsibility for own safety Pupils in the schools that had ‘managed’ systems had better knowledge and understanding of how to stay safe than those in schools with ‘locked down’ systems. Pupils were more vulnerable overall when schools used locked down systems because they were not given enough opportunities to learn how to assess and manage risk for themselves.

  10. SWGfL 360 Survey • Policy and filtering are seen as strengths • Staff Training consistently the weakest • Primary’s consistently weaker than secondary’s • Urban and semi urban schools have stronger e safety education for children and young people

  11. Technologies

  12. Which collaborative technologies? Profile focused Content focused White label Micro /presence blogging Mobile platforms Gaming networks

  13. How are young people using collaborative technology?

  14. What can they help us do? • Engage young people where they already are • Be found • Teach young people in settings that are familiar to them • Meet changing global expectations • Spread opportunities for engagement

  15. Examples

  16. LTS GLOW Consolarium Project http://ltsblogs.org.uk/consolarium/2010/05/27/eyepet-as-cfe/

  17. Examples

  18. Strategies and Considerations

  19. Are you ready?

  20. Understand Risk

  21. Identify and map risk

  22. Identify and map risk

  23. Identify and map risk

  24. Understand technical intervention

  25. Understand technical intervention

  26. Understand technical intervention

  27. Understand technical intervention

  28. Understand technical intervention

  29. Understand technical intervention

  30. Understand technical intervention

  31. Understand technical intervention

  32. Clear expectations; responsibility

  33. Clear expectations; agreement

  34. Clear expectations; agreement

  35. Clear expectations; sanctions

  36. Clear expectations; reporting

  37. Educate; students

  38. Educate your workforce

  39. Educate; parents

  40. How can we be successful?

  41. Thank You www.swgfl.org.uk/delegateevaluation Add your email address to enter a monthly draw for £25 Amazon Voucher

  42. Table Discussions • Bridge the gap between formal and informal learning • Rather than locking down the internet, support its most enriching uses • Teach new media literacy that involves critical thinking Identify and discuss barriers to progress ...

More Related