Thursday, July 29, 2021

A good teacher vs A successful teacher

 

To me, ‘a good teacher’ is a general term. The question boils down to how ‘good’ should be defined. Some people may equate ‘good’ with ‘caring’, while others may equate it with ‘being nice’. Still there will be those who define ‘a good teacher’ as a pedagogically competent teacher.

All of us want to be looked upon as good teachers. And indeed we may receive that compliment once in a while, for example when someone says it out of social courtesy. At the end of the day, we ourselves have to contemplate in what ways we want to be ‘good’ as teachers.

To me, the description ‘a successful teacher’ takes into account those on the receiving end, i.e., the students. A successful teacher succeeds in changing the students in one way or another, whether in terms of knowledge, or skills, or attitude.

Today, within changing students in terms of attitude, I would highlight one teacher success factor: the successful teacher ignites in his/her students a curiosity, enthusiasm, and even passion, in continuing to further their investigation of the course subject matter even when the course is over. This is because we are now living in the 21st century. With knowledge being multiplied day by day, every university course, even those at advanced levels, will only scratch the surface. For me, this disposition to lifelong learning is of paramount importance. To sum up, if I see a student continuing to explore my course subject matter even after the end of the course, that is the kind of success that I will most value.

Wednesday, July 21, 2021

Pecha Kucha - my quick review

 https://www.pechakucha.com/ is a web app for creating videos from pictures. You upload some pictures, voice-record every picture (slide), and then click create. The beta video creator doesn't have any other editing functions. 

Hence, it doesn't trump the more modern apps for creating videos from pictures. Pecha Kucha distinguishes itself as follows: 

1. The number of pictures you can upload is fixed (e.g., 5, or 10, or 20). The audio narration duration for each slide is equivalent to the number of slides you have uploaded. Thus, if you have uploaded 5 pictures, you have 5 seconds for narrating each picture. This is fixed. But as such, this may be good for practising presentation skills, especially with regard to timing. 

2. Pecha Kucha is primarily for people who want to share their work with the public. There is a vibrant Pecha Kucha community which organises presentations events from time to time. 

Downside

3. Too rigid in terms of the number of pictures one can upload, and the duration for narrating each picture. 

4. The download video option is a paid function. 

5. There isn't an unlisted sharing option. (Default: public)





Monday, July 19, 2021

Is Active Learning possible in large lecture halls?

One major challenge in employing active learning strategies in teaching university classes for some courses (especially, the more ‘general’ ones)  is certainly large class size. Students are seated in large lecture theatres, and in rows. The setting itself already encourages chalk and talk by the instructor. Even setting up group discussions is not that easy. Then, the large class size makes it difficult to administer and manage active learning activities. For example, it is difficult for the instructor to provide help to individual groups. There will never be enough time for individual to report their work to the whole class.

The lecturing to large classes may save costs, but it is a very 20th century teaching activity. Of course, this is not to say that all large-class lecturing should be dispensed with. But first, such lectures should be shortened and condensed (especially given today’s shortened attention span of EVERYBODY), and instead, should be complemented with other modes of learning.

Fortunately (for me), today even with large classes, there are still e-learning strategies which can facilitate some forms of active learning, even if students are seated in rows in a large lecture theatre. For example, there are now many useful polling and quiz apps for tapping into students’ views, previous knowledge, answers to quick questions, etc. (e.g., AnswerGarden, PollEverywhere, QuestionPro, Quizizz, Socrative). There are also apps for students to easily share their ideas (e.g., Padlet, Google Jamboard). There are also apps for creating short interactive tasks, which may be administered at intervals during a lecture (e.g., Wordwall; LearningApps.org).

  

Motivating students to engage actively in a lesson

To me, one way to motivate students to engage actively and participate in a lesson is when they see the purpose of the class session, and how it contributes to their future endeavours. However, sometimes this is easier said than done. If a course, or a class session, is closely related to what students HAVE TO complete soon, then this actual need will easily spice up the students, even if this is only extrinsic motivation. One example is the class session on Lesson Planning, which is usually conducted towards the end of my 17-session Subject Curriculum and Teaching (English) course on the Postgraduate Diploma in Education programme. The students, who are either preservice or inservice ESL teachers, will be supervised for teaching practicum soon after the Subject Curriculum and Teaching course. During the lesson observations, they will be assessed on, inter alia,  their lesson planning skills. In this scenario, it is not difficult to motivate students to engage activity, as they will have a chance to, and in fact need to, apply the lesson planning ideas soon in their own teaching.

It is less easy, however, when the course, or the class session, has no immediate application value to the students, especially if the course is more theoretical in nature. For a four-year undergraduate programme, students may not ‘feel’ the future importance of a course if it is offered in the first or second year of study. Sometimes, even the whole programme may not be one that is ‘practical’ or career-oriented.

It is under such circumstances that the task for course instructions to motivate students to engage them actively becomes even more challenging. The course instructor may then have to strive to (a) show the intrinsic value of,  and stimulate intrinsic interest in, the course content itself, and (b) make the class sessions themselves more interesting and rewarding, utilising a variety of teaching techniques (e.g., ‘small teaching’ strategies (Lang, 2016)) .

 

Lang, J. M. (2016). Small teaching : everyday lessons from the science of learning. Jossey-Bass & Pfeiffer.

Friday, July 16, 2021

The 'Collections' function in Microsoft Edge

 My default browser is Chrome. But recently, while following the Harvard course, I discovered, by chance, a useful function in Microsoft Edge which is very useful for note-taking. It's called 'Collections'. After I click on the Collections icon in the top right corner, a vertical pane will pop up on the right-hand edge of the web page. Then if I see a key phrase or an important sentence on the web page I'm reading which I want to note down, all I need to do is highlight it, and then drag it into the right-hand Collection pane. I can even drag a diagram into the pane. I can also use the sticky note function inside the pane to type my own notes. 

After I have finished reading a module section, to get a copy of the notes that I have collected in the pane, all I need to do is to export that collection as a Word file. Later, when I start a new module section, I simply start a new Collection. 

Of course, this note-taking can be done by doing copy-and-paste into a Word document, but then you have to open and keep switching between 2 windows, and the Edge 'drag into collection' action is much quicker and simpler, and fun!




Thursday, July 15, 2021

I didn't know how to teach until I met you

 In the 'Make a difference' movie,  Teddy Stallard, MD, at his wedding, thanked his elementary school teacher Ms Thompson: "Thank you for believing in me. Thank you so much for making me feel important, and showing me that I could make a difference. (Teddy was once an at-risk student in elementary school, but Ms Thompson turned his life around.).  It's Ms Thompson's reply that has resonated with me ever since: "Teddy, you've got it all wrong. You're the one who taught me that I could make a difference. I didn't know how to teach until I met you."  This reply resonates with me because it reminds me that it's the students whom I have had that have served as the stimulus to my becoming a good teacher (and perhaps, even a better human being). Without them, I won't know the true meaning of teaching, and how to be a good teacher: "I didn't know how to teach until I met you."


https://makeadifferencemovie.com/index.php

Sunday, July 11, 2021

Kapwing for creating videos

 Out of the blue, Kapwing, a video editor, has become very popular among teachers in Hong Kong. I had a go, and created the video below. So far, the two biggest pluses to me are (a) inserting Gifs, and (b) adding background music. Overall, it's a very easy to use video editor. 


https://www.kapwing.com/videos/60eaae18a9816100b9117f9f

Saturday, July 10, 2021

Doodling function in Powtoon for free

 Glad that Powtoon has added the doodling function for free. Now I don't have to purchase Doodling apps like Doodle Maker or Doodly. Check out the one I've just created below:


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=grGSzgr09vU

Monday, July 05, 2021

Phase 2 of MIEE self-nomination passed

 今年(2021~22)的Microsoft Innovative Educator Expert的self~nomination 和去年有點不同,去年其中主要部分是製作一視頻,去自我介绍如何推進e-learning,今年這部分主要用文字描述,但增加了測驗性質的Phase 2,以考驗申請者對Microsoft tools 的熟悉程度。剛收到可以進入最後階段Phase 3的通知,不用重做Phase 2。

The Design Idea function in PPT

 我真是愛死PowerPoint 的Design Idea功能了!我平日不大願意花時間美化PowerPoint 或edit video for effects, 都是以簡單直接為主。但PowerPoint 讓我不做任何editing, 也可以製作不太單調的presentation deck。像下面的一個,我先在Word 以outline 模式記下要點,然後開PPT, import這Outline, 已經有整個成形的presentation deck, 最後為每一張slide 從右邊自動generate 出來的design idea選一個,乾手淨腳。create PPT這部分,不用十分鐘。

而且隨着PPT 背後的AI 愈來愈聪明, generate 出來的visuals 一定會愈來愈貼切和有趣。



Saturday, July 03, 2021

Attending the graduation ceremony of Baptist Lui Ming Choi Primary School

 收穫滿滿的早上。以主禮嘉賓身份出席浸信會呂明才小學的畢業禮,感受了一個程序充滿温馨,每一成員都充滿歸屬感的畢業禮。和PGDE舊學員,現任校長 Wong Fai Mei ,現任英語教師 Katie Sham 敘舊。認識了校監曾啟文先生,上任校長黃潔蓮校長,和一眾卓有成就的校董。還獲贈一份很特別的紀念品呢!

這早上,讓我再一次看到教育工作的重要和意義。


++++++++++

今早坐在台下欣賞同學的分享,無論是他們合唱的三首歌,傳燈儀色,或四段分班的視頻,有幾刻我觸動得幾乎忍不住眼淚,因為令我想起背後一眾老師的心血,和呂小對他們成長辦演了的角色。我的分享主旨在提醒同學要感恩,而他們在四段視頻中正正就是這樣做!整個典禮,令我親身感受到我們作為educator, 如何任重道遠,如何以生命影響生命。

Road Maps from Canva for showing the progress of a lesson

 In a TP lesson observation today, the teacher used a road map at the beginning of the lesson to give Ss an overview of the lesson. Then at ...