Title: Orchestration with the Interactive Whiteboard: provisionality and permanence
1Orchestration with the Interactive Whiteboard
provisionality and permanence
- Alison Twiner
- Julia Gillen
- Judith Kleine Staarman
- Karen Littleton
- Neil Mercer
2Background of the research
- 2005 94 of primary schools in England Wales
at least one IWB - Manufacturers and policy makers keen to highlight
benefits, but little research on the IWB as a
pedagogic tool - Danger of technologically led introduction of
whiteboards
Charles Clarke Every school of the future will
have an interactive whiteboard in every
classroom, technology has already revolutionised
learning (2004)
3The teacher, IWB and multimodal orchestration
- Research to address the relationship between
- Teachers pedagogical practices and IWB
affordances - Use of the IWB to show structure
- Use of the IWB to support flexibility
- Use of the IWB to capture spontaneity
4Study design
- Four Key Stage 2 classes (7-11 years)
- 2 sets of 2 consecutive lessons on same topic
from each teacher (4 lessons/teacher) - History, PSHE, Science, Literacy, Maths lessons
- Total of 16 lessons
- Observational data video audio recordings
- Teacher interviews
- Some additional recording
5Focus for this session
- 4 extracts from 4 lessons
- Primary schools in South England
- Literacy, Year 3 (age 7-8)
- PSHE, Year 5 (age 10-11)
6Teachers pedagogical practices and IWB
affordances
- What does the teacher perceive s/he can do with
the IWB? - Visual element to replace/complement other
sources/modalities - Pace controlled by IWB/teacher
- Structure to guide/remind/be changed
- Access resources planned/spontaneous
7Use of the IWB to show structure
- The IWB as a stable medium (Haldane 2007)
- Facilitate seamless movement through key points
- Tools to control structure and pace
- Hinder flexibility?
8Use of the IWB to support flexibility
- Talk as an unstable medium (Haldane 2005)
- Matched resources (Hennessy 2007)
- Interactivity and IWB resource combined with
other modal representations, to explore ideas
9Use of the IWB to capture spontaneity (1)
- Creation of an improvable object
- Planned Annotating captured scenes from DVD
extract
10Use of the IWB to capture spontaneity (2)
- Unplanned Annotating lesson resource
- Provisionality
- Acknowledging childrens contributions
- Non-authoritative, interactive dialogue
11Conclusions
- IWB as a tool
- It can support
- structured presentation of information,
- presentation of matched resources,
- provisional exploration of ideas,
- and permanent capture of contribution
- Use by teacher and class affordances have to be
perceived and valued, and fit within existing
practices
12Orchestration with the Interactive Whiteboard
provisionality and permanence
- Email
- a.j.twiner_at_open.ac.uk