Search the Case Studies

Search Form

Search for:


Search the Articles

Search Form

Search for:


Search the Membership

Search Form

Search for:


Search MirandaNet

Search Form

Search in:


MirandaNet Fellowship Casestudy

Membership List | Publications | Research | Specialist Area List | Braided Learning Ejournal


Article image

Pop Up Classroom

Meeting things simple with tablets

David Fuller

Year of posting: 2014


Abstract:

The biggest stumbling block with any implementation of a tablet strategy is engaging and encouraging teachers to move with the technology. How this is done and how it works is very much dependent on the school and the age of the pupils that are being taught.

Teachers in some cases have great difficulty in trying to appreciate what the potential of a tablet can bring to the classroom. I have trained a lot of teachers around the country in the past 18 months and a common issue that I find is that a lot of them like the tablets but they tend to just use it for email and Internet browsing. The key is trying to get them past this and that is normally unlocked by finding them a useful app or feature or something that is simple to do that instantly makes a change to the way that the children can learn or find out things for themselves.


Keywords:

tablets, teacher training, iPad, ebooks, literacy, Siri, pupils, tablet strategy


Study

For the past few months, I have had the pleasure of travelling and working in Brighton. This is part of the project for the Tablet Academy who are supporting the Fonthill Foundation's pop up classroom in the Marina. I have been working with a number of schools in Brighton, the work has been primarily involved with iPads but the experiences I will discuss are based on tablets in general. Incidentally, I'm writing this in my car and using the Siri capability of entering text by talking and I'm trying to do the whole of this document this way.

What I want to do is to describe the work that we have completed so far with pupils aged from reception up to year six, as well as SEN children up to the age of 18. This will provide some good guidance and advice in helping decide on a reasonable strategy to get started with these devices.

What I would like to show over the next few pages are different types of activities using tablets - in this case iPads - to engage and demonstrated to the teachers how they can be used with the students in a learning environment. The most important thing is the standard teacher phrase of keeping it simple.  The schools involved were a mix of those who have never used tablets in the classroom before, to those with a 1:1 implementation at the beginning of the school year. The tasks took place between April and July 2014.

Conclusions

This will be a brief summary of the main points to come from the project undertaken above.

Full description with samples of work in the document linked below:

Case Study - 2014 - Pop up classroom (PDF 450 KB)


MirandaNet Members can go to the Log on/off area to edit their own casestudies.


[Back to the top]

[Back]