New P2PU groups seeking collaborators!

A couple weeks ago at SXSWedu, we had a session to brainstorm some new peer learning groups on P2PU.

The outlines for these groups have now been turned into (preliminary) groups at P2PU, and we are looking for collaborators to help build out the groups and co-facilitate them. If you are interested, sign up to participate or email us (schoolofed at p2pu dot org).

These groups will likely start in May/June.

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Mobile Devices for Learning

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Building Digital Curriculum

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Student-driven K-12 Classrooms

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Student-driven University Classrooms

We are the 1%

I’m excited about all the new things going on with sharing, especially as it relates to personal learning for teachers. There are a lot of new groups forming around the idea of open professional development, connected learning for teachers, and online communities of practice.

I recently took part in a panel on “Building a Culture of Sharing” at SXSWedu and am also involved in a P2PU School of Ed group about “Empower Your Personal Learning,” both of which have gotten me thinking deeply about this.

Here’s my big concern — those of us involved in this are a very small minority of teachers. I could venture to say that well over 95% of teachers are not involved in using the power of social networks to advance their own personal learning.

When I raised this point, someone said to me (paraphrasing), “Well, what’s the problem? Sharing is as easy as breathing.”

I don’t think that’s true. There are many barriers to sharing and engaging in self-directed personal learning. Some relate to time constraints, priorities, and personality characteristics. Some are rooted in fear or lack of agency. More troubling are those based in institutional barriers to sharing.

I would hate to see this movement go down the road of ed tech, where there is a small minority of folks engaged and benefiting, while the vast majority of teachers continue in the way that they have done for decades. Our students are the ones who pay the ultimate price for this.

So what is to be done? How do we involve the other 99% of mainstream teachers in this?

Let’s Build a Collaborative Learning Space

At SXSWedu this year, I was slated to do a hands-on session to brainstorm what makes a good collaborative learning space with strong peer learning and to begin building such a thing. The goal was to get people thinking about peer learning, to introduce them to P2PU, and to see what they came up with.

I am often not very good as fostering hands-on collaboration in a conference setting, especially when people don’t know each other. Other challenges included that this session was only an hour long and that the room was set up auditorium style with rows of seats and a podium upfront on a stage.

Despite these challenges, this session went great. Here’s what we did, what went well, and what didn’t. Thanks much to Philipp Schmidt who helped brainstorm and facilitate this.

Brief discussion of what we did: I talked for about 10 minutes, introducing the idea of peer learning and P2PU. I told people they’d be getting into groups (or they could work individually if they wanted) to brainstorm tasks for a peer learning group on ___. I gave them some suggested topics:

  • How can we make our classrooms more student-driven?
  • How can mobile devices be used for learning?
  • How can Twitter be used for professional learning?
  • How can we build a digital curriculum?
  • …or create your own topic

I said they could brainstorm and/or develop on paper, in a Google Doc (in which I had set up areas for each group in advance), or in P2PU. I asked people to self-group and asked for a volunteer for notetaker from each group. See below for the slides and handout I used.

Then the rest of the time was hands on. At the end of the hour, animated conversation was still going on, and I was told not to interrupt them!

What worked well:

  • At the beginning of the session, I said “This is going to be a very hands on session. If that isn’t your thing, feel free to leave.” (Maybe 2 of 45 people left. I don’t know what I’d have done if 40+ left.)
  • Giving prompts for groups was mentioned as something that people liked. Everyone pretty easily grouped around 3 of the 4 topics I suggested. (We dropped one.)
  • Giving choices both in topic choice, group/individual, and where to brainstorm was well received.
  • Three people volunteered to be notetakers. Excellent participation!
  • People rearranged the room for groupwork. Here’s what it looked like:
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  • The Google Doc worked excellently. Here are the results. I don’t think anyone used paper or P2PU (which I figured was too ambitious for this purpose). There is something magic about using a shared Google Doc for this kind of thing – it has worked for me f2f and online and even with the most reluctant groups. Best of all, now I have captured their great thinking for further iteration.

What I might do differently next time:

  • Talk even less at the beginning.
  • Define additional roles beyond notetaker within each group.
  • Don’t have handouts. The were unnecessary.
  • Would be nice to have more time to do reports out and possibly some group discussion and iteration.

I got everyone’s emails from this session to follow up. I am certain that we will collaborate further on these ideas and that you’ll see them in future P2PU School of Ed groups.

Slides I used:

Handouts

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Open Ed Week webinars!

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To celebrate Open Education Week, I’m helping to facilitate two great webinars, and you are all invited!

OER in K-12 – Thurs., March 8 – 9am Central (15:00 GMT)
Log-in link
A panel discussion with:

  • Karen Fasimpaur, K12 Open Ed
  • Jeff Mao, State of Maine Department of Education
  • Ahrash Bissell, National Repository of Online Courses
  • Delaina Tonks, Open High School of Utah
  • Jason Neiffer, Montana Digital Academy

Slides from this session:

P2PU: Peer Learning Fueled by Open Content – Thurs., March 8 – 2pm Central (20:00 GMT)
Log-in link
A panel discussion with:

  • Philipp Schmidt, P2PU Executive Director
  • Karen Fasimpaur, P2PU Community Member
  • Vanessa Gennarelli, P2PU Community Member
  • Alan Webb, P2PU Community Member
  • Maria Droujkova, P2PU Community Member

Slides from this session:

A complete list of all Open Ed Week webinars is here. Recordings and accompanying materials will also be posted here following the sessions.

Spread the word, and we hope to see you next week. Sharing is good!