Posted by:
Neil Stephenson
GUEST POST BY NEIL STEPHENSON.
Neil
Stephenson is a grade 6/7 teacher in Calgary, Alberta and has been his
district's 1:1 PD coordinator for the last three years. Neil speaks
regularly about technology and inquiry based learning, and was chosen in
2007 as a Apple Distinguished Educator. You can follow Neil's blog at Thinking In Mind.
Last year my students participated in a year-long, Humanities Project
called the Cigar Box Project. In a nut shell, the students walked
through Canadian History by "remixing" historical images
and artifacts into their own creations, designed to express their
understanding while allowing students to use technology to build a
holistic understanding of history. Along the way, students crafted
historical digital stories, as well as creating voice-recorded, self-assessments that accompanied each Cigar Panel. The project was inspired by the online exhibit
at the Canadian Museum of Civilization, and after our students created
their "cigar box panels" last year, the Museum asked us if we would be
willing to link our student creations with the National Museum. The
kids were pretty excited! There are a lot more pieces to project, and
if you are interested, you can read more about the project here and here.
One of the pieces of the project last year was Skypeing with Sheldon
Posen, the curator at the National Museum. Since all of our students'
work (sketchbooks, iMovies, Cigar Panels, self-assessments, etc) was
posted on student blogs, Sheldon was able to see and comment on the
work. He immediately wanted to talk with the kids, not about his work,
but about theirs, which was amazing. Using Skype, Sheldon was able to encourage my students, provide feedback on how the student creations compared to the historic panels, and speak about the curiosity the panels instilled in him. It was so powerful to see my grade 7 students fearlessly engaging with a PhD in Canadian History about their work!
This year I am teaching the project again, with some changes and
improvements. One new layer is that another school just outside of our
city has agreed to work through the same project at the same time as our
students. The other teacher and myself use Skype (almost daily!) to
collaborate, share resources, plan and track the progress of the
project. I speak more with the other teacher through Skype than I do
with most teachers in my school! Over the last 4 months, our students
have been sharing resources, images and peer feedback through Google Docs,
as well as providing providing editing suggestions through Voicethread.
All of this has been possible because Skype makes it so easy for the
other teacher and myself to collaborate and plan, so much that it feels
like we are in the same building.
I have also used Skype to introduce and teach parts of the project to
the other school. Similar to Skypeing with Sheldon last year, this
year I have become the expert that walks the other students through
parts of the project. We have also created some Skype accounts for our
students, and have planned some upcoming collaboration times for our
students to use Skype to share the historical understanding they are
building. As you can see, Skype has played a key role in the success of
the project and how I now plan my work on a regular basis.