Freitag, 23. Oktober 2020

DIGITALES LEHRBUCH IM UNTERRICHT DER MUTTERSPRACHE

 



In unserem Gymnasium verwenden wir viele online Apps. Es gibt einige Webseiten, mit

denen die Schüler spielen, üben und lernen können z.B.: Wordwall oder Kahoot. Während der

Stunden Ungarisch als Muttersprache benutzen wir häufig ein digitales Lehrbuch – nkp.hu

Dort finden die Schüler den Lehrstoff und interaktive Aufgaben auch. Diese Übungen machen

wir oft zusammen in der Schule mit der Hilfe unserer Geräte. Die Vorteile dieses Buches sind

die Übereinstimmung mit unserem Lehrplan und die Hyperlinks, die den Schülern als weitere

Hilfe beim Lernen dient.

Táncsics Milály Gimnázium, Dabas Hungary

BETRIEBSLEBEN VON TIERE


  Link zum ganzen Material Betriebsleben von Tiere

   Táncsics Milály Gimnázium, Dabas Hungary

MENTIMETER - THE DIGITAL METHODS I REGURLARY USE

 


This app enables users to share knowledge and real-time feedback on mobile with presentations, polls or brainstorming sessions in classes.

 It is a visualising tool that I use a lot especially at the beginning of my lessons. It is the only version of brainstorming where we can see all the ideas in a wordcloud for example. However, it offers much more. It is an easy-to-use online tool that allows you to create questions, get answers, and easily show the result, real time. The tool’s goal is to make presentations more engaging, interactive, and fun.

Mentimeter allows you to engage the audience better. Your audience would feel more involved in your presentation when given the chance to decide an outcome. It can boost efficiency and effectiveness through collaboration, aside from making it faster for you to generate content or data.

Complex data is made understandable as well as intuitive through visualization. With this tool, you have the ability to do analysis using built-in methods and frameworks, enabling both the moderator and audience to see and discuss sophisticated analyses without the time-consuming analysis.

It has been designed to ensure you get your message across and can convert your audience’s opinions into a more interactive tangible data in real-time.

Balogh Zsuzsi, Dabas, Hungary

Donnerstag, 22. Oktober 2020

AN EXAMPLE OF PHENOMENONBASED PROJECT IN GEOGRAPHY

Link to the presentation of Ari Toropainen during his LTT -visit in Hungary 2.2.-8.2.2020




Ari Toropainen, Iitin lukio, Finland
 


Donnerstag, 1. Oktober 2020

FLIPPED LEARNING - LTT FINLAND IN ENGLAND

 


This is the presentation about Flipped Learning which Matti Rantonen held during his LTT -visit in England.


Matti Rantonen, Iitin lukio, Finland

matti.rantonen@iitti.fi




Mittwoch, 30. September 2020

FLIPPED LEARNING IN DEUTSCHLAND

 

Flipped Learning in Deutschland



 


Der Link zur PräsentationDifferenzierbarkeit 



                                Hier gibt es einen Link zum aktualisierten Zeitplan


          Sophie Halwas,  Helmholtzschule, Frankfurt Deutschland






Freitag, 10. Juli 2020

MUSIC AT DISTANCE

We studied music mainly by listening different kinds of music. Usually I gave assignments via Wilma and students could do them at their own pace. When students gave presentations we used Microsoft Teams or Zoom as a platform. Concidering the circumstances those applications worked out pretty well. Students managed to choose interesting songs for listening and they also created fun quiz shows (Kahoot for example) so that every classmate could involve.

The most important shortage was lack of making music together: playing and singing. As a teacher I consider making music the most important, fundamenltal aspect of learning music. I know there are different solutions for making music remotely. One group of students actually used a DAW-program called Soundtrap (DAW = Digital Audio Workstation). I will definitely continue my research on this area so I will be prepared for the future if times like these ever happen again!

Milla Pohjola, music teacher, Iitin lukio, Finland

REMOTE TEACHING EXPIERENCES MATH



Example 1.

The lectures were arranged using video conferencing tool (Microsoft Teams). I shared my screen to show examples and how-to-do-this with my computer. This communication was pretty much “one-way”, the students did ask or comment only few times. In addition to my short lecture there was assignment for students to submit using Teams. In that class I arranged my lectures in the same time I would do in normal school conditions, three times a week. Some of the lectures I recorded and shared to students using Microsoft Stream -cloud.

Example 2. The course material was already in the Internet-service (www.opinaika.fi, in Finnish only) so I created usernames for students. The course material included theory with examples and brief automatically checked assignments. Cool thing was that the system allowed me to monitor when and how student had accomplished each assignment. On Fridays I quickly checked how many points had each student achieved and give some feedback personally. I was available for students to explain unclear points with video conference tools or Teams-messages.

In addition to automatically checked small assignments I will grade in detail 40 exam-type assignments per student so this will be a lot more work compared to traditional exam. In this course I pilot to grade with no official controlled test.

Students working varies; some studied very regularly and some very loosely. Few students are causing worry because of very passive or minuscule communication and lack of submitted assignments. The course is in progress as I am writing this. 

Example 3. The course started before corona-restrictions. The final exam was arranged as remote-exam; the assignments appeared on a fixed time to the password-protected www-site and there was three hours for students to submit the answers. Student could take a photo of their hand-written answers and send that to me or upload to the restricted www-site. Of course, I pondered upon the possibility of cheat. This time the results were pretty much as I would bet based on each student’s schoolwork in normal times. But if the corona-situation goes worse in future and we continue remote school in September, I will use more controlled remote-exam. One way is to start exam so that I can monitor each student’s webcam to check they are alone and continue to monitor their computer’s desktop (student shares her/him screen to me).

None of the known methods is waterproof, I think.

Technical stuff

Video-conferencing software Teams worked very well in one-way communication from teacher to all students, and well in creating/submitting math assignments. Out student had licences to Office 365, but it took a while before everything was working. In small group conversations does Teams work very well. Teacher must create “channels” to subdivide whole class into smaller groups. Another option for arranging the remote classes with video conferencing was Zoom-software. Zoom seemed to be more agile with greater number of participants but it lacked assignment-tools, composition of course material.

As math writing tool I used mostly Word -equation editor. I also have possibility to connect a document camera to PC and share the screen to show my hand-written math. I did try a Bamboo digital pen too but ended up writing math mostly with keyboard.

Touko Arhosalo, mathematics teacher, Iitin lukio, Finland


Sonntag, 10. November 2019

LTT - ENGLAND IN FINLAND - BIOLOGY





Subject

Biology

Objectives of the lesson

Teach about the woodlands of Britain and explain the differences between British woods and woods in Finland. Explain the different types of tree and animal which are common in British woodlands. Revise the levels in the woodland & food chains given a woodland food web. Learn about energy efficiency and transfer of biomass. Discuss issues in British forests such as endangered animals and forest conservation organisations. 

Activities

Slides to show the different types of woodland – deciduous and coniferous.
Student’s were asked to guess the percentage cover of woodland in the UK versus Finland and the percentages of the different types of woodland.
Threats to UK forests discussed – Dutch Elm and Ash Dieback disease and examples shown.


Conditions for fast growth rate Question/Answer session to draw out the idea of milder conditions in UK leading to faster growth rate.
British woodland foodwebs shown. 

Written activity – individual – how many food chains could they find and which was the longest. Drew out the idea than no longer than 5-6 organisms.
This led to the next activity on energy efficiency and loss of biomass as energy transferred. Gave students a worksheet in Finnish to complete ‘where is energy transferred to?’

Description of local forest (Formby) where the red squirrel is endangered. Asked questions on why this may be the case (competition with grey squirrel for food). Explained the role of the National Trust and Forestry Commission. 

Media used

Powerpoint slides

Benefits of Lesson

The student’s had previously completed a lesson in which they learnt about Finnish forests. This lesson built on their knowledge and understanding. They also were able to revisit previous topics (food webs/chains) and apply their knowledge to this context. They developed their understanding of energy loss in food chains.

Rating

Some pupils were more able to understand the concepts because of their better knowledge of the English language. It was very useful to have Marjut there to translate our questions and their responses when necessary. 

Alyson Briggs and Billy Douthwaite

Dienstag, 28. Mai 2019

DIGITALES KURSHEFT


In dem digitalen Kursheft, werden die Unterrichtsstunden abwechselnd von Schülern protokolliert. Andere Schüler können dann die Mitschrift ergänzen,
      weil die Mitschrift nicht vollständig war
      mit ergänzenden  Inhalten aus Büchern, www
      mit links zu interessanten Inhalten


Dafür eignet sich
      ein googledocs



      Onenote Kursbuch










STUDENT COMPANY THE ROLLING RAT NY

        Iitin lukio has been part of global Junior Achievement (JA) entrepreneurship education program for several years. Within the program...