This week we took another step towards a 1 to 1 model of personal computing in Years 5 and 6 at school. With a further 32 laptops (Toshiba Satellite A200) divided amongst the 4 classes we now have a total of 16 laptops per class. Since September we have regularly pooled the laptops between the two classes in Year 5, providing us with more machines. Now we have the option of one laptop per child if we choose to.

Laptops in my classroomI spent the best part of a morning installing antivirus software, configuring the laptops to access the wireless network and proxy settings to get online. After telling the children that we had the new machines I said that we can get online but they do not have all of the software available on the others just yet. One of the children replied:

“But we can get onto Google Docs can’t we?”

Great to hear this from the children and it seems that Google Docs has quickly become another tool for us to use. Much of the novelty has worn off and it now has become just another part of what we do in the classroom. Much like the use of del.icio.us for the weblinks we use in class – when we use something the children enjoy the first question will always be: “Is this on del.icio.us?”

This week has been dominated by Optional SATs in English and Maths but we spent Thursday and Friday afternoon exploring a Geography project involving Google Docs.

We are working on a unit about India and the differences with our own country. Rick and I have planned for the children to define what they want to learn about. In small groups they are going to produce a short presentation about a topic of their choosing. In addition they will design an activity to do with that topic for the class to take part in. After some initial work the children in my class have chosen to work on these five different topics:

  • The Himalayas
  • Wildlife in India
  • Fashion
  • Indian Art
  • The History of India

Much of this week I have been wishing for the integration of Google Notebook into the Education Apps suite of tools. Many teachers are calling for it and this project of ours requires just such a tool. There is a work round to register with Notebook by creating an account based on the Ed GMail account. But that is too hacky for me – I want the tool right there for the children to use and think it is about time they included it. In the remainder of this post I will refer to some of the processes that are better suited to Notebook than Docs.

The first job for the groups of children was to elect someone to create a single research document that would then be shared with the remaining group members and yours truly. Each child was assigned a colour to give a visual indication of the content they have added and sub headings for their topic were explored and added.

In the afternoon on Friday we had some time to begin the process of finding information about their topics, but before they began I wanted to highlight some of the ways that they could search for it. Intermingled within this was an opportunity to model the searching / selecting / referencing process in a document about Food in India. We will use this doc as a sandbox and exemplar of practice as we go through the project and a place to model some of the processes involved. As this research was to form part of the children’s holiday homework I composed an email with my searching suggestions to help remind them, they were:

  • Explore India using Google Earth – switch on the different information layers available.
  • Use some of the Google search tips I showed you. “” to search for exact phrases.
  • Quintura for Kids – a different search engine http://kids.quintura.com
  • Use an image search such as Google images or FlickrCC image search – you can add them to your research doc.
  • Search using del.icio.us – use the + sign to search for different tags.
  • Wikipedia – a huge reference library.
  • Living Library

I modelled how to add a website URL reference for a piece of research in Docs – this would be automatically created when using Google Notebooks. When using Google Notebook you highlight and right click to “Note this” from any site – it grabs the site address and adds your selected content into the notebook. Each clipping is also organised separately and can be reordered. Not forgetting that you can create different sections (sub headings) within any notebook and add notes to these.

The idea then is that the group will work collaboratively on a single doc adding different items of research synchronously or asynchronously. But something doesn’t feel right. It is all very well using the sharing functionality of Docs but it just isn’t the right tool. When I do research on a new curriculum topic I gather my ideas in a Google Notebook. The children would still be able to share the Notebook between the group by much the same process as adding collaborators to a doc. That would be the right tool for this research work – come on Google let us start to use it with our classes!

Once the children began their own research I was pleased to see a variety of information searches taking place: exploring the Himalayas in Google Earth, looking at the terrain and geographic information available; del.icio.us searches looking for popular tagged sites and the use of Wikipedia and more formalised resources like Living Library.

This 25 minute session began to uncover some interesting questions and concepts about the use of Google Docs. A group of boys working on the history of India began very well but soon were having trouble with deletion and overtyping in the Google Doc (this would not have occurred in Notebooks because each clip is saved as a new note). Even though they were working on the same table, next to each other – they were just not talking. They became a bit transfixed with what they were doing on screen. It is important that when you ask the children to collaborate with each other on a document they remember understand what collaborate means. They needed to discuss and talk with each other about what was happening and who was doing what.

In order to refocus the class on this important aspect I stopped everyone and we talked about this example for a moment – I made a teaching point of it. It seemed that the group in question had actually gone backwards and lost work because they were deleting each others by accident – one of the boys told me he could get it back from the “Revision History” which he promptly did. I felt that the children were trying their best but were a little unsure about how to go about working synchronously on a document with 2 or 3 other children – there was a need to model this and show them what to do. After all it is a new skill, a completely unknown process they have not experienced before. Here are some reflections on approaching this:

  • Emphasis must be placed on the communication between children when working in the same document.
  • Model this process if possible – Rick and I have already planned to show the children what we mean, to be working on a doc together and to be saying, “I am just going to put an image in the second section.” They have to see and hear this in action and understand the importance of it.
  • Highlight and praise the smooth running and good communication between a group – be absolutely clear why it is a good example to the whole class. Continue to flag up good practice as the project progresses.
  • Just because they are sharing a document does not mean they are automatically collaborating – they have to work as a team and not alone.
  • Expect to see changes – encourage the children to begin to appreciate that when other people are working with them the document they see will alter. Perhaps model this with the whole class on a single document.
  • Listen and pause – as the children are working they may hear a member of their team say they are going to put a bunch of text and images in a section, encourage them to react by pausing for a moment and letting their own document update. In this way they will not be surprised by a document suddenly changing.
  • What is my friend doing? Encourage the children to take an active interest in which section their peers may be working on. This could well be decided at the outset so it is clear who is working where in the document.

After all it is not about the different colours for their names. Fundamentally the children need to use their communication skills to facilitate the production of something together.

And of course I still yearn for Google Notebook in this instance. In my opinion we are settling for an oval when we really want a circle. Most of the issues I have explored above about working with docs in this way would not exist in Notebook. It references, organises and structures the research as part of the process – the children could then export the resulting notebook to Docs and refine what they have done. We will persist with Docs but it is frustrating to know of a very powerful tool that is more suited to the task, but is currently beyond our reach.

6 comments

  1. Hey Tom,
    I am a student and I am talking a computers in education class. We have been talking a lot about integrating technology into the classroom. I really enjoyed reading your blog on your new use of technology in your classroom. I really liked how you used google docs for an assignment. I have been a little sceptical on my feelings about having a laptop for each student in classrooms around the world. But seeing how they can be used from what you wrote, you have really opened my eyes to the possiblilities that are out there for my future students. Thank you and good luck with everything!

  2. Well I am Surya teaching Geography to class 10 – 12 students in Delhi INDIA. You talked about some help from this side of the world. If you need any then Pl tell me.

  3. Great work Tom- it’s inspiring to see how you are using the tools in your classroom. thanks for providing insight and many helpful tips.
    Jenny Luca.

  4. Tom,
    I have learned so much about Google docs and possibilities by reading your posts. My district block Google docs. One this will change too.
    Thanks for a great post
    Bill

  5. Tom,
    I am absolutely amazed with your series on Google Docs and how you are applying them in your classroom – I am looking forward to try something similar in my new school next year. I am not sure if someone has pointed this out to you already – did you consider Zoho as an alternative to Google Apps? While it is true that Google feels like “well-known” territory for the kids, and GMail is absolutely great, perhaps for the particular issues you talk about in this post Zoho Notebook may have been a good choice.
    Again, thanks for sharing your work – it is truly inspiring!

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