Due to the pandemic, the children in our classrooms today have an unprecedented level of experience in using technologies as part of their learning (APPG, 2021).
As we all move forwards from the pandemic and find our own ‘new normal’ ways of working, one of the significant conversations has been about how to incorporate these experiences meaningfully into planning for today and tomorrow.
As recently published by the DfE Education Technology Survey, a majority of schools are now working towards a one-to-one device approach (DfE, 2022).
Different schools and groups are at varying stages of enabling this. The most common approaches are:
A combination of children bringing their own devices from home and providing school-loaned devices for those unable to do so is arguably the most pragmatic and powerful. This is because it is the most cost and time-efficient way of ensuring every child has access to a device that they can call their own. From a pedagogical perspective, it is this sense of ownership that will bridge device usage from being a novelty to being transformational in terms of educational outcomes.
Drawing upon the research evidence, Twining and Maher (2017), found that when students were given the opportunity to choose when and where to use their device, they became more discerning about the technology use and its impact on their learning. In other words, they focused on what would help their learning (increasing metacognitive skills) rather than the novelty of using devices.
Furthermore, Liu et al. (2014) found that student access to 1:1 devices was attributed to blurring boundaries between ‘formal and informal learning space’ and extending learning from school into the home.
“I can have my own layouts on my screen. I can do my work more quickly because I know my own keyboard and shortcuts.”
“I’ve used my own device for maths and English… I can leave tabs open from work I’ve done in class…. and use it for homework too”
“The good thing about using your own device is that access is quicker and you have your own home screen so you know where everything is.”
“I like having the opportunity to choose to use my own computer to help me in my learning. It means I can choose how to present my work.”
Once children have the fluidity of access to a device that they can think of as their own, this opens up all kinds of creative opportunities to enhance teaching and learning purposefully. The necessary adaptation of lessons for online delivery during the pandemic has empowered teachers with a plethora of new skills – a very steep learning curve for many, but one which has had wide-reaching consequences. The way that learning takes place has changed rapidly, with staff and students readily tackling the complexities of working online, managing content in the cloud, collaborating on shared projects, engaging with interactive tools and embracing new presentation methods.
These kinds of approaches encourage the creation of a more engaging learning environment, with adaptations to suit different learning needs and opportunities to form connections and apply transferable skills. Embracing technology as a tool for students to use alongside other, more traditional, educational resources, reflects the way that they use technology at home and is more representative of how they are likely to use technology in their future careers.Today’s young people are unafraid of technology, willing to explore its uses and limits in all aspects of their lives.
Without embracing this in the school environment, we would be hampering a way of learning that is more natural to them than it is perhaps to their parents and teachers. Allowing our students to drive their own learning through inquiry and research, with the use of the most up-to-date web content, fosters independent thinking skills and helps create more active and focused learning.
It is up to us as teachers to decide how we engage with and embrace these opportunities. Large-scale studies by Twining et al., (2017) found that the use of technologies amplifies the existing pedagogical stance of children’s teachers. In other words, technology highlights the way that we teach, and the types of learning experiences that we provide for our children. Selwyn (2018), refers to the role of teachers as being ‘pedagogical gatekeepers’ to student learning experiences – fronting our decisions about what we allow or encourage children to do using their devices as part of their learning.
At Sherborne House School we believe in using technology to make activities meaningful, engaging and personal for our children. For example, this term the children have used their own devices to engage interactively with live video lessons, to re-watch teacher instruction at their own pace, research information as part of their individual learning projects, to move through sequences of activities based on their individual attainment and confidence, to choose platforms on which to publish their own writing in a variety of different ways, to create collaborative documents to co-construct work with other students, and to drive their own progress through the use of adaptive online questions.
As highlighted in the Oxford University Press ‘Addressing the Deepening Digital Divide’ report, if the digital divide is left unaddressed, the gap between the under-connected and the hyper-digitalised will widen, aggravating existing inequalities. So, the decisions that we make are about more than engaging children in their learning, they are fundamentally about social justice and equality – ensuring meaningful and purposeful learning for all students.
Cost-effective suggestions to facilitate every child having 1:1 device access
- Purchasing low-cost devices (e.g. Chromebooks, starting from £109)
- Purchasing reconditioned laptops from reputable organisations (e.g. 2econd chance – starting from £59)
- Repurposing old devices (e.g. installing Chrome OS on old MacBooks/Windows laptops)
- Removing restrictions on where existing devices are being kept or stored so that they are more freely accessible to students as and when they need them
- Accepting donations of tablets and laptops
Sarah Evans is assistant headteacher at Sherborne House School and Dr Fiona Aubrey-Smith is director of One Life Learning.
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Why 1:1 device access unlocks the most powerful kinds of learning
Sarah Evans and Fiona Aubrey-Smith
Due to the pandemic, the children in our classrooms today have an unprecedented level of experience in using technologies as part of their learning (APPG, 2021).
As we all move forwards from the pandemic and find our own ‘new normal’ ways of working, one of the significant conversations has been about how to incorporate these experiences meaningfully into planning for today and tomorrow.
As recently published by the DfE Education Technology Survey, a majority of schools are now working towards a one-to-one device approach (DfE, 2022).
Different schools and groups are at varying stages of enabling this. The most common approaches are:
A combination of children bringing their own devices from home and providing school-loaned devices for those unable to do so is arguably the most pragmatic and powerful. This is because it is the most cost and time-efficient way of ensuring every child has access to a device that they can call their own. From a pedagogical perspective, it is this sense of ownership that will bridge device usage from being a novelty to being transformational in terms of educational outcomes.
Drawing upon the research evidence, Twining and Maher (2017), found that when students were given the opportunity to choose when and where to use their device, they became more discerning about the technology use and its impact on their learning. In other words, they focused on what would help their learning (increasing metacognitive skills) rather than the novelty of using devices.
Furthermore, Liu et al. (2014) found that student access to 1:1 devices was attributed to blurring boundaries between ‘formal and informal learning space’ and extending learning from school into the home.
Children at Sherborne House School very much reflect this:
Once children have the fluidity of access to a device that they can think of as their own, this opens up all kinds of creative opportunities to enhance teaching and learning purposefully. The necessary adaptation of lessons for online delivery during the pandemic has empowered teachers with a plethora of new skills – a very steep learning curve for many, but one which has had wide-reaching consequences. The way that learning takes place has changed rapidly, with staff and students readily tackling the complexities of working online, managing content in the cloud, collaborating on shared projects, engaging with interactive tools and embracing new presentation methods.
These kinds of approaches encourage the creation of a more engaging learning environment, with adaptations to suit different learning needs and opportunities to form connections and apply transferable skills. Embracing technology as a tool for students to use alongside other, more traditional, educational resources, reflects the way that they use technology at home and is more representative of how they are likely to use technology in their future careers.Today’s young people are unafraid of technology, willing to explore its uses and limits in all aspects of their lives.
Without embracing this in the school environment, we would be hampering a way of learning that is more natural to them than it is perhaps to their parents and teachers. Allowing our students to drive their own learning through inquiry and research, with the use of the most up-to-date web content, fosters independent thinking skills and helps create more active and focused learning.
It is up to us as teachers to decide how we engage with and embrace these opportunities. Large-scale studies by Twining et al., (2017) found that the use of technologies amplifies the existing pedagogical stance of children’s teachers. In other words, technology highlights the way that we teach, and the types of learning experiences that we provide for our children. Selwyn (2018), refers to the role of teachers as being ‘pedagogical gatekeepers’ to student learning experiences – fronting our decisions about what we allow or encourage children to do using their devices as part of their learning.
At Sherborne House School we believe in using technology to make activities meaningful, engaging and personal for our children. For example, this term the children have used their own devices to engage interactively with live video lessons, to re-watch teacher instruction at their own pace, research information as part of their individual learning projects, to move through sequences of activities based on their individual attainment and confidence, to choose platforms on which to publish their own writing in a variety of different ways, to create collaborative documents to co-construct work with other students, and to drive their own progress through the use of adaptive online questions.
As highlighted in the Oxford University Press ‘Addressing the Deepening Digital Divide’ report, if the digital divide is left unaddressed, the gap between the under-connected and the hyper-digitalised will widen, aggravating existing inequalities. So, the decisions that we make are about more than engaging children in their learning, they are fundamentally about social justice and equality – ensuring meaningful and purposeful learning for all students.
Cost-effective suggestions to facilitate every child having 1:1 device access
Sarah Evans is assistant headteacher at Sherborne House School and Dr Fiona Aubrey-Smith is director of One Life Learning.
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