Here is a proposal I am submitting to obtain a grant for $2000 for Professional Learning basically on using wikis:
This project is based on the research done by Dr Debra Panizzon, (Deputy Director, Flinders Centre for Science Education in the 21st Century). Her research suggested that outstanding outcomes in Science can (in part) be achieved by Science teachers where there is a culture of collegiality, shared assessment practices, communal teaching resources and shared goal-setting and class expectations.
I will work with a group of Science teachers (middle school focus) and I will:
· Introduce the idea of using a commonly-accessed web site (called a wiki) to write curriculum documents for the Science course.
· We would cover
o The main science concepts and skills
o Teaching and learning resources
o Common and/or shared assessment tasks
· Emphasis is on working on the website collaboratively. Wikis allow anybody to edit, add, delete or in some way modify the contents. This wiki will be a private one so only invited teachers can submit content.
· It also allows discussion of topics and this should allow teachers to clarify ideas, discuss the meaning of key concepts and give feedback on what has been uploaded
· If it continues beyond this year, it will evolve into a useful, up-to-date yet dynamic working document.
The Professional Learning program that I will run will have the wiki as it’s focus. However, to break up any sessions I also propose to give some short input on some of the key ideas presented at the Summer School. Here the focus is on how this information or research might impact on their science teaching.
These sessions will include:
· The survey of Year 10 Science students by Terry Lyons (Choosing Science Project for 2007)
· Neuroscience and Learning by Professor Ian Fitzgibbons (South Australian Neuroscience Institute)
· Learning Capital by Mike Lawson and Helen Askell-Williams (Flinders University, School of Education)
· Hands-on Science practical and tutorial sessions (by various members of the Science and Engineering faculties at Flinders University)
The sessions would run in the following manner:
- A short introductory session – Introduction to Wikis (what are they, how they work, how to get into our wiki and use it).
- A full-day session to write the curriculum documents (creating the framework, research, sharing information, reflection)
- Follow-up sessions (clarify any issues, continue to share experiences, discuss how other teachers [e.g. student teachers, new teachers] might use the resource)
Ulimately, I would envisage that this group of teachers would develop wikis with other teachers and possibly even with students!