The first JEDLAB-inspired
webinar occurred on Sept 16th, hosting 16 Jewish educators
from around the globe. Veteran EdTech educators Etta King, Education Program
Manager at Jewish Women's Archive and
Smadar Goldstein, Founder and co-Director of Jerusalem EdTech Solutions
(JETS), coordinated this online learning hangout to talk about how
technologically-adept educators can learn from each other and bring newcomers
into the elearning world.
The group, which included both day school and afternoon school teachers, online educators, administrators, educational coaches and other professionals met for a participant-driven, collaborative discussion about online professional development in the Jewish educational community. Etta King opened the session by describing her wish to find new and creative ways to develop and implement curriculum that focuses on Jewish values, Jewish heroes and social justice. Her previous conversations about online learning have been within the JEDLAB community as well as within her own organization, and now she threw open the question of how to involve more participant-educators with the goal of creating a structured program of professional development which could establish universal objectives for online learning.
The participants expressed
interest in an online class as a good way for Jewish educators to advance
together. Such a class would allow for collaboration and a process learning
experience that could strengthen teachers' skills for coping with varied
classroom situations. In addition, the webinar participants noted that, in the
same way that students learn best when they apply a skill or concept
immediately, teachers will also increase their teaching skills when they can
acquire new information in an online PD class and apply it in their domain
within days, without having to go through a long period of planning before
implementation.
The webinar participants
offered concrete solutions. One idea was based on the Craftsy.com website in
which a community of people interact online for a shared goal. This type of
framework could be specifically helpful to lay leaders and other
non-professional educators who are teaching in Jewish educational frameworks
but lack an education background.
A second suggestion involved
educational forums that teach different concepts through a video, discussion,
assignment and opportunity for participants to examine each other's work. Such
a format provides constant feedback and, in an expression that was repeated
several times during the class, enables educators to learn from each other by
"peeking into each other's classrooms."
Hang-out participants were
asked to note which type of tools they know how to use. One educator mentioned
the DangerouslyIrrelevant
website which draws information from classrooms and educators around the
country. The site keeps teachers up-to-date on new technologies and tools while
emphasizing that education will always depend more on the educators than on the
tools themselves.
In summary, the question
focused on the core of the webinar -- how can Jewish educators use online
professional development opportunities to gain from each other?
The session ended when the
group broke up into break-out groups to discuss how to move forward to share
resources and information, both individually and among the larger JEBLAB
community.
Etta King's group decided to
look at the larger picture in deciding which gaps need to be filled so that the
new PD course doesn't end up reinventing the wheel. JEDLAB should serve as a
clearinghouse for learning "what's out there, especially in light of the
fact that technology is always changing and educators must stay abreast of the
changes. Accessing materials should be easy to ensure that teachers don't need
to recreate the same materials and same lesson plans and can use the time and
energy to create new materials. Tikvah Wiener, who will be moderating the
November webinar has
already begun to gather resources on the Frisch RealSchool blog.
The suggestion was made to
create a platform which will allow teachers to contribute their materials and
lessons and will enable other educators to access those materials at will.
There can be different categories including categories for beginning and
advanced teachers, day schools, afternoon schools, etc.
The second group, facilitated
by JETS' co-Director Smadar Goldstein, discussed the feasibility of creating a
series of webinars in which each participant would facilitate a session in a
specific area of expertise. Each webinar could be given on a different
platform so participants would also be introduced to different platforms as
part of the program.
The session ended with the
promise to set up a blog with a calendar so that all participants, as well as
new people who want to join the conversation, can stay abreast of the schedule
for 2013-2014 PD classes.
Educators are invited to share
their knowledge at an upcoming webainr. Please sign up here.
The next PD session will be held on November
11th 2013 at 11:00a.m. EST :
- Twitter Tests?: Using Social Media in the Classroom. Presenter: Tikvah Wiener, founder of RealSchool
Thank you so much for this summary. I could not attend, this is helpful, especially with the links.
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