Using ICT in the History Classroom
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Transcript of Using ICT in the History Classroom
Using ICT in the History Classroom
Richard Kennett (Redland Green
School)
Who am I?
Learning Outcomes
• ALL will know two new strategies for using ICT in their classroom
• MOST will know and in future use three new strategies for using ICT in their classroom
• SOME will evaluate their current practice and reflect on how to improve in relation to using ICT
Agenda
• Using ICT in the history classroom– Using ICT to plan lessons– Interactive whiteboards– Using ICT to aid delivery– History lessons in the ICT room
• APP
National Curriculum in Action
ICT Statutory Requirements
“Pupils should be given opportunities to apply and develop their ICT capability through the use of ICT tools to support their learning.”
To what extent do you practice this in your teaching?
The history of ICT in schools
?
History and ICT: the academic viewpoint
Theory is in agreement over one fact –
ICT does not guarantee better learning (Counsell, Haydn, Atkin).
Haydn (2002) “Computers have not had the revolutionary effect they expected”
On the whole theory regarding ICT is horrendously outdated and cannot keep up with the revolution that is occurring. Haydn (2002) – information on exam boards is not up-to-date on board websites
Wilkinson (2000) – one day we will all treat computers the same way we now use video recorders
ICT and planning lessons
• Ian Gilbert – “I want you to be lazy teachers”• Don’t reinvent the wheel: steal, share or
borrow ideas
• GOLDEN RULE: NEVER just use anything straight off the internet.
ICT and planning lessons
• www.schoolhistory.co.uk• http://www.igshistoryonline.co.uk/• http://www.historyshareforum.com/• http://www.historygcse.org/• www.burntcakes.com• http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/• http://www.activehistory.co.uk/• http://
school.discoveryeducation.com/lessonplans/ushis.html
Interactive whiteboards
• Two main types: Smartboard and Promethean• Load up the software and go!• Are they actually as good as everyone makes
out?
ICT to aid deliveryHaydn (2002): ‘ICT is very good at delivering things – but ‘delivery’ does not guarantee learning. The correlation between the volume of information available and the amount of learning is only in the minds of the politicians’
Counsell (2000): ‘More information access, prettier newspaper front pages, smarter graphs and clever web pages do not guarantee, one jot, any improvement in historical skill, knowledge or understanding’
THEY ARE WRONG!
ICT to aid delivery
Better resources
= Better pace / engagement
= Better learning
Using the internet to aid delivery
• www.youtube.co.uk• http://www.bbc.co.uk/schoolradio/
http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Main_Page• http://www.cartoons.ac.uk/• www.last.fm• http://groups.google.com/• http://www.britishpathe.com/• http://puzzlemaker.discoveryeducation.com/
History lessons in the ICT room
• Are they ever actually any good?
• Share best practice
• Produce a list of 3 top DOs and 3 top DON’Ts
History lessons in the ICT room
My golden rules• Specify which websites to use• Clear objectives• Link with an historical skill• Provide challenge both in terms of history and
ICT• http://www.maths.bris.ac.uk/~th0950/slave
MovieMaker Challenge- Produce a movie about the Battle of Hastings
Success Criteria• Number of images: Minimum
- 5 images, Maximum 10 images
• Must include titles describing the major stages of the battle
• Must use 2 different slide transitions
• Extension: Include interpretation and comedy!
National Curriculum in Action
ICT Statutory Requirements
Pupils should be given opportunities to apply and develop their ICT capability through the use of ICT tools to support their learning.
To what extent will you practice this in your teaching now?
‘Ask not what you can do for ICT but what ICT can do for you!’
Final Thought
Atkin (2000):
APP
BibliographyAtkin, Dave (2000). ‘How do I improve my use of ICT? Put history first!’, Teaching History 99
Counsell, Christine (2000). ‘Editorial’, Teaching History 101
Haydn, Terry (2002). ‘Computers and history: Rhetoric, reality and the lessons from the past’ in Haydn, T and Counsell, C (eds.) History, ICT and Learning in the Secondary School, pp11 – 38, London: Routledge Falmer
Haydn, T., Arthur, J., and Hunt, M (2001) Learning to teach history in the Secondary School Routledge Falmer, London.
National Curriculum in Action, ‘ICT in History’ http://www.ncaction.org.uk/subjects/history/ict-lrn.htm Accessed: November 2008
Wilkinson, Alf (2000). ‘Computers don’t bite! Your first tentative steps in using ICT in the history classroom’, Teaching History 101