Presentations 2.0

Presentations are a very common task in education, either as a summary/review or as assessment (or both). However, student presentations tend to fall short of teacher expectations for the very simple reason that the students don’t do enough research and they tend to end up copy-pasting usually too much text onto slides and reading out whatever they first bumped into after a quick Google search. The introduction of ChatGPT might elevate the experience a bit, but not necessarily much. The end result is a boring presentation where the students didn’t learn much and the audience feel their time has been wasted.

Students need to be taught how to run a meaningful and interesting presentation. They also need to be given the success criteria in advance so that they know what successful completion of the task looks like. This blog post doesn’t deal with the key features of an effective presentation, neither does it explain how success criteria need to be written, especially because ChatGPT is quite good at writing rubrics. This blog posts presents four alternative ideas to the traditional and mainly boring read-out-the-slides kind of student presentation.

  1. Shark Tank. Organise a Shark Tank like experience for the students. Invite teachers to judge the students’ presentation in a true cross-curricular manner. Try to incorporate as much of the show’s spectacular elements as possible. The students need to be equipped with some business knowledge so that they know how to convince the sharks. As such, use this format if you want to bring together several elements of the curriculum, such as business, subject knowledge (the pitch can be related to any subject from social studies to chemistry), and English/mother tongue (presentation skills). It also tests how well students think on their feet as they need to answer the sharks’ questions in a convincible manner.
  2. TED talk. Organise a TED talk event if you want the students to dig deeper into a topic and/or present an interesting, well built-up and though-provoking presentation. It is not as fast-paced as the Shark Tank format, so it’s better suited to introverted students. The students need to be familiar with the structure of a well-built up presentation, they need to know how to grab and keep the audience’s attention, which takes some preparation. If the students manage to get prepared with something truly interesting, this can be a rewarding experience for all participants. If you want to go above and beyond, apply for the TEDx licence to organise the real deal.
  3. CEO introducing a new idea. Think of Steve Jobs or more recently Mark Zuckerberg. Use this format if you want the students to think outside of the box or innovate in one way or another. These CEOs usually present new products or innovative ideas they think will change how consumers think of the experience of communication (iPhone) or interacting with others (metaverse). Not all these presentations have been successful, but they usually attract a lot of viewers because people are hungry for innovative new ideas. So use this format in case you encourage your students to experiment and push boundaries. Students need to be taught how to build up such presentations and how to engage with their audience to sell them a new idea.
  4. Elevator pitch. An elevator pitch is a very short presentation that can be presented to someone during an elevator ride, so it needs to be super focused and it needs to raise interest within moments. Use this format if you have a lot of students, a very short amount of time, or if you want to assess if the students have understood the main ideas of a concept.

Do you like any of the above ideas? Do you have a similar idea? Have tried out any of them? Let us know how it went and if the students liked it in the comments section below.

Interview activities using AI

These activities don’t replace teaching students interview techniques or basic communication skills. However, they add a fun element so that students become more engaged and hopefully learn more. Apart from content and communication, they will learn empathy and digital citizenship skills as well.

  1. Interview a long dead historical figure. Students write the script, and animate the historical figure with AI (for example Tokkingheads). They record their bits as the interviewer. They edit the interview for example in Flipgrid so that they can easily show their work to the world.
  2. Animate your drawing/photo and make it speak. Students can use their own drawings or photos and make them talk in a fun way with Blabberize. As a teacher use this opportunity to practice job interviews, descriptions, creating a hook, starting a youtube video and so much more. If you click on the Blabberize link, you can watch a llama talk. Animating the animal is quick – so the students can concentrate on content.
  3. Animate a famous painting to practice perspectives and empathy. With either Tokkingheads or Blabberize, you can animate a painting as well. Students can make the painting talk and tell everyone about how they felt when they were being painted, the circumstances in which the painting was made, or how boring Mona Lisa finds the tourists around her. This technique will help students take a different perspective and empathize with others. As a bonus, take a painting with multiple figures, and groups of students animate different figures from the painting to have a debate.

You can use these activities in various subjects: students can interview Pythagoras about his theorem or draw a cell and make it speak. Students can have two famous historical figures talk to each other or improve their speaking skills in the foreign language classroom. Don’t forget though to teach respectful and responsible behaviour. AI can be used in a demeaning way and we don’t want to bring up bullies in our classroom. This is, therefore, the perfect opportunity to teach elements of digital citizenship.

🔧 Resources. Browse this collection for more AI resources, or this blog post for more ideas.

What ideas do you have? Have you tried any of these activities in this format? Share with us in the comments section.

How to visualise students’ thinking

It is of utmost importance for teachers to know what and how students are thinking because this forms the basis of our assessment, feedback, and further planning. Visualising students’ thinking means that the teacher creates a situation in which the student has the opportunity to explain how they arrived at the solution while highlighting the key points in their thinking. They use various evidences to support their points.

Here are two ways to do this:

  1. The student records their screen while solving a problem or drawing a conclusion. This can take several forms: uploading a sketch, using jamboard as a whiteboard, manipulating items on the screen, etc. The aim is that the student goes through their thinking and explains how they came to the solution. Recording the screen rather than themselves makes this option appealing to camera-shy students.
  2. Have the same evidence as in 1 above uploaded as background and the student records themselves pointing, explaining, coming to a conclusion while the video is on. Most video-recording tools allow for resizing the speaker, adding various elements such as text or stickers to further enhance the experience.

Both options require thinking on the students’ part and they can sharpen their presentation skills, their video making skills and communication skills along the way as an added bonus.

🔧 Resources. Browse this collection on how teachers use Flipgrid to make use of videos in showcasing learning.

What do you think? Have you tried any of the methods above? Did they work? Did the students enjoy recording a video as an assignment? Do you have special tricks to improve the experience? Share your ideas with us in the comments section below.

Blogging and journaling with students

I’ve posted earlier on how to make use of websites in teaching. Reflective journal was one way I recommended using websites for. There are other things students can blog or journal about and other awesome tools students can use.

Wakelet is my go-to tool whether it’s curating resources or sharing PD courses. It can be used for journalling as well since it allows for storing multiple media. Material can be easily rearranged and updated to maximise flexibility.

BookCreator is another great tool for journalling purposes. Its colourful and varied tools allow for creating an online book, which can be used as a journal or blog as well. New pages can be added easily to update content.

What can students blog or journal about? Here are some ideas:

  • Hobbies and pastimes: Students can journal about their hobby, what they create, what they do, how they learn. Combine this with a science/homeec/English/etc. project to guide learning. But make sure you don’t push school work too much not to demotivate students. If they are happy to write about their hobbies, that can be the aim itself!
  • Talent: Students can show off their talent in a blog or journal whether it’s musical, sport, cooking or any other talent. Blogging and journalling will allow for showing progress and reflecting on their talent. It can also serve as motivation to push themselves further.
  • Looking after a dog, a plant or another animal: If they have a pet or a plant, they can show how they care for them, how they grow or learn new tricks, what happens to them. This is a great way to create a sense of responsibility in the students. Seeing their pet or plant grow may give them the extra push not to give up or abandon them.
  • Helping out in the community: If students help their community in any way, whether it’s doing the shopping for an elderly neighbour or tutoring a student, they can show how the community grows around them and what pleasure it gives to them, those who provide the help. Make sure the students don’t include images or videos of people without their consent.
  • Team efforts: If student play a team sport or organise their community in any way, they can blog or journal about the rehearsals, the performances, the successes, the progress. This is a great way to make the community even stronger, grow solidarity and integrate others into the community.

The type of blogging/journalling the above ideas are examples of, among other things, allow for showing and reflecting on progress, and teaching digital citizenship. Students can understand that effort and hard work will inevitably result in progress. Also, they will become responsible citizens by caring for their environment and community, and by considering what media they can produce and publish.

📚 Reading. Read how you can use Wakelet for blogging. Read Monica Burns’ e-book on BookCreator about journals.

🔧 Resources. Digital citizenship resources.

Do you have any other ideas on how to start journalling with students? Do you have a project completed or in progress? Share with us in the comments section.

Wakelet for assessment

Have you tried Wakelet for assessment? You can use collections or even a whole public profile if your students share it with the world for formative assessment. Some benefits of using Wakelet for assessment:

  1. It’s fun to create for the students as they can add varied media and content as well as embed content created elsewhere (appsmash) so they are more likely to invest energy into their learning. Their creativity can soar.
  2. It makes learning very visible. The content students add and curate show their understanding and progress, as the level of complexity, explanations and reflection will reflect their current understanding.
  3. Intervention and feedback can be targeted at exactly where the students need it because of high visibility. Misunderstandings? Confusion? Lack of addressing certain issues? You can all see this while perusing their portfolio.
  4. You can assess group work as well if the students set up collaborative collections or spaces. Assessing individual effort though might be an issue when assessing student work, so plan success criteria carefully and communicate your expectations clearly before work starts.
  5. It’s flexible and grows with the students. Students can work on their collections as long as they want by adding and replacing items, reflecting on their learning, or continuing their story. As the year goes by, students can add new collections and compare their new understanding with what they used to know and think. This way, a collection (space) on Wakelet is perfect for reflection and a proof of progress.

Anything else to add to this impressive list? Share with us in the comments section. Also tell us if you’ve tried assessment with/through Wakelet and how it went.

Empower your students through Wakelet

Wakelet has a Student Ambassador Programme to empower students. The students need to create six collections, each centred around a different skill:

  1. Curation
  2. Collaboration
  3. Creativity
  4. Citizenship
  5. Critical thinking
  6. Communication

The Student Ambassador Programme is for students above the age of 13 and it is available at the school. Wakelet provides the resources and the Training Department supervises it. At the end of each challenge, the TD has the right to issue a badge to the students. Once the students have completed all the challenges, the TD contacts Wakelet, who issue the final certificate. The students don’t have to wait for each other, they can advance at their own pace.

You as a teacher can mentor the students. If you don’t feel up to this challenge, the TD will mentor your students.

Do you want to empower your students? Fill out this form if you are interested, and let us know how the TD can help your students gain 21st century skills.

Leave it to the students…

When it comes to teaching and learning and who does the heavy work, I like to tip the balance towards the students: I want them to do the work, not me. Unless they invest the energy, the thinking and the hard work, learning is less likely to happen. There are various ways to make this shift happen. If you are a beginner in this respect, I suggest you start with some tasks that are traditionally the teacher’s “job to do”, and ask the students to create an activity for themselves. If you are beyond this level, you can start thinking about how to make the students the agent in the learning process.

Here are some entry-level ideas on how to make the students do the work and still enjoy it.

1. Students write a mock test and test each other. This is a very simple thing to set up: divide the lesson into two parts. In the first half, the students write a mock test. The teacher gives the task types, the type of items to create and some guidelines on how to write a test. All these conditions should be the same as in the upcoming test this exercise is practice of. The students in groups write questions and test items. The teacher monitors and gives ideas. My experience is that students don’t know what questions and items would work in a test – which is normal, that’s why they are the students. So the teacher needs to guide them and elicit or explain why certain questions wouldn’t work. The easiest way to do this is to ask the students, “What kind of answer do you expect here?” or “How would you answer this question?” or “Would you accept X or Y as an answer? Why?” This probing will lead students to the discovery of what makes a good question. The aim here is not to train the students in mind-reading, but to make them understand what they need to know and understand in order to excel in the upcoming test. In the second half of the lesson the groups exchange their test, write down their answers, then correct each other’s work. The usual reaction I get for this activity is that the students find it hard but satisfying to create test items, they acknowledge that it is not easy to be a teacher, and usually they ask for more such activities.

2. Students create an online quiz for each other. There are so many online quizzes such as Kahoot!, Quizlet, Quizizz, and so on. Students pick their favourite and in pairs or small teams, create a test. They then share the link to their game and play. Teacher monitoring is a must while they create their test – guide them on content, the way they ask their questions, the answers they would accept, typos and so on. As most of these games can be reconfigured, the students can go on playing after the lesson. The greatest success and most amazing result I had was using this method with university students and Quizlet. When it came to practising (and learning the material at hand), they were so absorbed in the Gravity game that I couldn’t stop being amazed.

3. Human board game. This game is an enlarged board game: There’s one task or activity or question on each A4 sheet you place on the floor around the classroom. The students are the life-sized counters who move along the board. This is usually great fun, and you can make the students work even harder: Have them come up with the activities and create the board game together. Even children as young as 5-6 can contribute with sufficient teacher help. Of course, the younger the students are, the more scaffolding is needed. With such young students, you can demonstrate some tasks, such as “Draw [an animal]” or “What colour is this?” (and they have to colour the sheet). The teacher also needs to make sure the students stay on task and write items that are related to the content to be practised.

4. Questions and muddy points. Each student writes a question on a slip of paper; the teacher redistributes them. The students mingle to answer, then after each round, swap their slip. The teacher can use this information as assessment and evaluate what needs to be reteaching and who needs more help. Studying student questions are a great way to learn about the current level of understanding of students. If they write their own questions? Bonus.

5. Talking stones. Why not? Students can divide an A4 sheet into four parts (or more), write a question or a debatable point in each part, distribute an equal number of colourful pebbles/paper clips/small stationery to each participating member, and start the discussion immediately. Depending on how much time you want to spend on this or how you organise this activity, you can require students to swap their sheets and discuss another group’s talking points.

Here are some advance-level ideas:

1. Students plan and teach a lesson. It is an elevated flipped lesson. Give as much guidance to the students as they need, from the topic to focus on to the materials to reference, and have them plan and teach (part of) a lesson. They can use tried and tested methods they “stole” from you or they can be as innovative as they want to be. Don’t forget to give them feedback after the lesson, in private.

2. Choice boards. Some basic ideas about choices can be read in this blog. While offering choices is a simple but effective way to give ownership to the students, the types of activities and outcomes on offer need to be carefully considered. As long as the options come from the teacher, they are the teacher’s ideas. However, with some intuition and experimentation you can work out paths that give the students maximum freedom in how they learn the material. Think of varying the types of task, the tools, the outcomes. In an extreme case you can allow the students to submit their work as a song or a tik-tok video. Why not? As long as they prove their learning, anything goes.

3. Students create their individual learning plan. This takes the previous idea one step forward. If the students are mature or talented enough, why not allow them to design their individual learning plan? As assessment tends to be reliant on the curriculum, it’s worth discussing with the students what it means and where they have to be at the end of the term or academic year. The teacher needs to understand the curriculum requirements in great depth and share outcomes and objectives with the students so that they know where they are headed. A lot of scaffolding is necessary, and monitoring and plenty of feedback on the way are a must.

4. Students plan the unit and how they want to work. You can start small when it comes to students planning their own learning. Start with a unit. Share outcomes, objectives, success criteria, expected milestones, resources, etc. with the students. Create a checklist for the students so that they can monitor and self-evaluate on the way.

5. The negotiated syllabus. This is an advanced-level practice where you come to a common understanding with the students bypassing the agenda of the teacher; the students and the teacher shape the syllabus on an emerging basis. You can read a summary of negotiation and the negotiated syllabus in the language teaching environment below. (Note, however, that the claims are equally valid in non-language teaching classrooms as well.)

While this idea of placing so much responsibility on the students might seem a bit alien at first, it is worth giving it a go. Start small, start with the beginner ideas. Don’t forget, however, that the students need a lot of scaffolding and feedback when they first start out creating material and paths of learning for themselves. Also, be patient – they are not teachers, and they don’t have to know how to be one. Don’t expect them to be teachers, but guide them on how they can find ways to practise and learn more effectively. Let us know in the comments section of other tried and tested methods of making the students work harder and taking more responsibility for their work.

Do more with – new series on Youtube

The Training Department has started a new series on its Youtube channel. The aim of this series is to present ideas that revolve around a key concept in teaching such as feedback, motivational strategies, or the power of discussions in teaching. Episodes on various lenses in teaching might also crop up, such as time, space or change. The first episode in the series is about storytelling.

What other ideas do you have? Share with us in the comments section. If you wish to watch a video on a topic that hasn’t been dealt with, contact the TD.

Badges

Gamification can be done in several ways. We’ve been all using various games in our teaching whether offline or online. Here’s a recent post about my current favourite games. Gamification has several benefits such as added fun, instant feedback, and an enhanced learning experience among others. One easy way to add a gamified element to learning is badges.

Here are some tips on how to make use of badges:

  1. Badges must be earned and associated with achievement and success criteria. Don’t just hand out badges for nothing. Associate them with some sort of achievement so that badges have value. This will motivate students and teachers alike because it will make badges worth striving for. If anyone can get a badge for no work at all, it will be not worth pursuing them and putting in the effort, and ultimately you won’t be able to use them to motivate students to learn.
  2. Badges can be collectible. If you make various sets of badges, with increasing levels of difficulty, it can add to the fun as well as serve as an extra fuel to motivate students. People like collecting things, this is especially true for young people, so why not make use of it for a good purpose? It can also spark a healthy competition among students.
  3. Badges should be well-designed. Well-designed and tasteful things are simply more attractive and people will do more to own them. This can serve as an additional motivating factor in wanting to earn them. Invest the bit of extra time to design cool badges your students will want to work for.

What can you use badges for? Here are some ideas:

  1. Team player
  2. Achiever
  3. Leadership
  4. Creative thinker
  5. Star/expert/master reader/researcher/presenter
  6. And many more…

An example of a badge (First Level Tech Ninja) can be seen below.

If you want to learn more about why and how to create badges, sign up for training with the Training Department. What badges would you like to see issued to teachers and students at Brainworks? Share with us in the comments section.

Creating instructional videos

What is an instructional video? It’s a short clip that helps students understand a concept by way of explanations and examples. It can serve as a tutorial or as a hook. You can create short videos to introduce a topic, give further explanation on certain concepts or raise interesting questions for further research for high achievers. Here’s one I created on questions.

Watch this short video on how to make instructional videos:

Some more advice on how to make effective instructional videos:

1-2. Create interest and introduce outcomes

3-4. Develop theory and demonstrate examples from that theory

5. Recap

6. Stimulate critical thinking

You can watch Brian Shaw talk about the above in more detail in the following videos:

How to create a well-structured instructional video (1’53”)

How to engage, retain and entertain with instructional video (2’27”)

How to increase the production value of your instructional video (2’28”)

And what videomakers to use to create a video? Here are some tools to start with.

Prezi | Biteable | Screencastify | Animoto | WeVideo | or google for more…

Also, you can use online teleprompters so that you don’t forget anything you want to say in the video. Use this teleprompter or search google for more.

If you’ve created a fun and instructive video, share the link with us in the comments section. You can also ask questions and give advice on what works best.

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