The School in the Cloud - when children and teachers cannot come to school
The Corona
Virus, Covid-19, has done what experts have suggested, but not been able to
implement, over decades. It has stopped children from being herded into classes.
At least for a while.
So, what’s
going to happen to the children who are at home? Who is going to look after
them if their parent(s) are away to work? What will they do all day?
I have worked
with children, both in and out of school, for several decades. In particular, I
have worked on what the internet and children can do together. Maybe, in all
those years of work, are some answers to what could happen in a world without
schools as we know them.
In what
follows are some ideas that I know will work, some that may work although I
have not tried them and some that are just guesses. If you are a teacher or a
parent, I hope you will find some of this useful.
Groups
of unsupervised children sharing an internet connection on a large screen in a
safe and public space, can learn anything by themselves – if they want to.
This was
the main finding from the ‘hole in the wall’ experiments of 1999-2005 in India
that led to the development of ‘self organized learning environments (SOLEs)’
between 2006-2009 in England. Later, we added a ‘granny cloud’ from 2010 to
augment the process and whole thing was called ‘the school in the cloud’. Its
all there in my book ‘The School in the Cloud – the emergning future of
learning’ (https://us.corwin.com/en-us/nam/the-school-in-the-cloud/book257918). References to published research work
are available from my website at www.cevesm.com
.
Maybe it is
time to bring the school in the cloud to this strange new world we have been plunged
into by the Corona Virus of 2019. Here are some of the things you could do –
and some that you should not.
Make a
group of 24 children
using, say, WhatsApp, FB messenger or something similar. This is not a ‘class’
and you are not going to do ‘online teaching’.
Take anything
that you think would be interesting for the children to learn about and make
a question out of it. Start a group chat and build up to the question. This
is a very critical part of the process you are about to start. Don’t make the
questions too easy. Not the kind that google can produce an instant answer to.
Questions that you or anyone else does not know the answer to are sometimes the
best! There are lots of questions that teachers have tried, good or bad, available
from sites such as https://startsole.org/. Also, the Granny Cloud (http://thegrannycloud.org/)
has people who have used the internet to talk to children for over 10 years.
They can give you invaluable advice.
It may be poetic justice to ask, ‘Is a virus dead or alive?’
as one of your first questions. No one, I think, knows the answer.
It would be ideal if the children in your group could form
groups of about four each, maybe by gathering at someone’s home. They should
access the internet using a large screen, such as a desktop computer or
a smart TV. Tiny devices like smart phones and tablets are not good because it
is difficult for more than one person to see what’s on the screen. Giving a device
or computer each to every child is not a good idea – you want them to share the
resource and share their ideas.
If it is not possible to make physical groups of children, things
are bit more complex. Try to get each child to access the internet from a large
screen and, at the same time, be in touch with other children in the group,
using whatever means works best – phones, tablets, Bluetooth, whatever.
Tell the children they must collectively arrive at an answer,
or answers, to your question. Suggest a time to reassemble. They could present
that collective answer in whatever form they want – video, audio, document,
presentation etc. But it must be only up to six answers for your group of 24.
Not more. They have to discuss and figure out how they will assemble the answers.
They must figure out how they will go about finding the answer. Don’t make
this sound like an order, tell them you are helpless, you don’t have the
time to look at 24 answers. Ask them if they can figure this out by
themselves.
This is your new sci-fi school. Just some learners and you, floating
in cyberspace. ‘You go there, I will go with you’ is all you can say.
This is called a Self Organised Learning Environment. A SOLE.
It works with children from 8 years old to young adults in Universities. That
is as far as I know.
You can map an entire curriculum into questions. A curriculum
that is made of the things that we don’t know is more interesting than one that
is a list of the things that we know. In trying to figure out what we don’t
know, learners will come across what we do know, anyway.
The statement, ‘No one knows the answer’ attracts all of humanity
- we are built that way.
The SOLE as a method of learning needs no tests or
examinations. After all, the whole process consists of learners attempting to
answer questions, which is what tests are all about anyway. You could give a
score to each SOLE session, if you like. You won’t find out how much learners
remember, but you will find out how they can critically examine issues and
problems.
This then, could be your school. The Corona Virus may have
closed schools down, or it may have expanded them to cover the globe.
If these suggestions interest you and you do try them, please
let me know how it went. There will be many ways to let me know, I think. You
figure that one out 😊
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