How I lead remote learning in Hong Kong during school closures

How i lead remote-learning in hong-kong during school closures

adopted from https://educationblog.microsoft.com/en-us/2020/03/how-i-lead-remote-learning-in-hong-kong-during-school-closures/

By Ng Wai Ying, Winnie, Head of Chinese at St. Hilary’s Primary School,
Head of Chinese at St. Hilary’s Primary School Hong Kong
Posted on March 19, 2020 at 2:57 pm

We got the news on the first day of the Chinese Lunar New Year, which fell on January 25. The Education Bureau of Hong Kong announced all schools would be suspended due to the COVID-19 virus. Our school principal immediately set up an emergency meeting to figure out how we would resume instruction after the holiday.

Since we use Microsoft tools, I quickly realized it would make sense for Teams and OneNote to play a leading role in online lessons for my students. We were learning as we went, much like many other educators like you and below I’ve shared my tips and our experience launching distance learning.

 

This was our first lesson. The students opened their cameras and got to work online from their homes.

Try first

I started by selecting some of my Grade 6 students to help me pilot live lessons. To begin, I prepared a trial lesson in Teams to observe student behavior and responses. In the lesson, I checked whether they could hear me, recorded the meeting, and showed them a video. After that trial, I gained confidence that this could work. Still, before the first actual lesson, I held a second trial for the whole class. This time, I provided time for them to greet each other. When kids are stuck at home, they really miss their friends!My students also tried out some functions, such as giving likes to posts. I then walked them through Teams, followed by some rules for live lessons, including how and when to turn on/off their microphones.With 20 students ready to learn, I shared my screen, and then I showed my PowerPoint and video. My students were excited for the online class. All in all, it was a very good start!

Setting ground rules

In Chinese class, we only speak Mandarin, and I wanted to make sure some of our regular procedures applied to online learning. So, I set up ground rules, including no casual messages, no emojis, and no speaking English during the lessons. We went over these in Teams, and I inserted a Microsoft Forms survey right in our Teams channel to ensure the children had them down before we got to work.

Fostering student engagement and a positive culture

Screen sharing is one the most important functions of leading engaging online lessons in Teams. I am so glad that Teams lets me seamlessly switch my screens to show PowerPoint decks or class notes in OneNote, for example.

I believe mutual respect and good feedback are essential with any kind of instruction, and this has been a good opportunity to teach my students to be respectful online world. Praise from teachers to students can reinforce good online behavior, which can help students stay engaged and focused during instruction. Sometimes, I share examples of good student work online to provide recognition for a job well done. See below.

It’s also important to continue to make learning fun!

Below you’ll see we played an online bingo game in OneNote to work on vocabulary.

During this style of online teaching, students can still collaborate. I gave out rubrics that students can use to evaluate each other’s work. Students then modify and improve their work after participating in peer evaluations.

Integrating Teams, OneNote, Forms, and Flipgrid

 

I’m glad my students were already used to using tools like OneNote, Forms, and Flipgrid. We often have collaboration activities going on in our classroom, such as using OneNote as a tool to edit writing. We use Flipgrid as a formative assessment tool for recording student thoughts about a unit or a topic.

With Teams, there are two modes for conversation that we use, the Chat and Post functions. I’ve tried to open four or five groups using Chat, as it is easier for me to add or remove people there. The way I think about this is as having two kinds of classrooms. Chat is a small classroom for discussion groups, and Post is a big classroom for teacher-led instruction.

I’ve asked some of my students to be group leaders for helping me monitoring others in the small-group discussions. I’ve told them if the time is over, they must ask all the group members to leave and go back to the big classroom (the Post meeting).

This all took some getting used to. When five calls popped up on my screen at the same time, I had to decide which group I needed to help first. I’ve found that I can work with a maximum of four groups through the Chat function at the same time. I just need to press a button to enter different groups. My students always say “Wow, Miss Ng, you’re here again! How come we didn’t notice it.” They love to have their own rooms for discussion. Up to now, they’ve shown mutual respect to others and never abuse the right to use Chatroom.

Group writing and editing with tablets and pencils

Learning a language is not only about reading, but also writing. Teams allows my students to hear their peers and write things at the same time. We use OneNote as a collaboration space for group work. Students sometimes ink in different colors to easily distinguish their work.

Below, groups use collaboration space for editing their writing and evaluating the work using rubrics. 

Using Flipgrid as a debate platform 

We need to build in time and space for students to nurture their creativity, and Flipgrid is a great tool to support that. In addition, developing students’ debate skills is part of our learning objectives, and Flipgrid serves as a virtual debate platform. I can put the Flipgrid link or tag in Teams so students can get to it easily.

I use emojis or gifs to help students choose the right topic.

Here are my grids

Getting the hang of remote learning
So far, I’ve completed more than two dozen live lessons and I’ve grown more and more confident in my ability to teach this way to meet the needs of my students during these challenging times. The Hong Kong government says schools will remain closed until April 20, or later. I’m glad I have these online tools at my fingertips, and I hope my experience can help other teachers prepare for remote learning. It’s not easy, but it is doable and students benefit greatly. Take a look here for more helpful tips on how Microsoft can support remote learning and stay tuned to the Microsoft Education Blog as more educators share their learnings.

Check out Microsoft’s remote learning resources.

Read the full article https://educationblog.microsoft.com/en-us/2020/03/how-i-lead-remote-learning-in-hong-kong-during-school-closures.

 

Canvas

The features

  • Canvas allows students to access learning the when, where, and how best fits their lifestyle(s).
  • Open platform helps teachers try new things and promotes a spirit of learning innovation across your institution with a vibrant ecosystem of third-party tools
  • Canvas provides an industry-best, guaranteed 99.9% uptime Service Level Agreement (SLA) to all customers
  • Communication features offer more than just an email inbox; we provide users with a global notifications panel that lets them choose both how they’d like to receive information (via email, text message, or push notification) and when (instantly, daily, weekly, never, etc.)
  • Canvas supports teachers in improving student achievement for everyone, from the littlest learners to college-bound seniors and beyond
  • Provides familiar, consistent learning tools during the entire student experience
  • Offering a virtual classroom that grows and adapts along with each school. Canvas makes it easy for districts to identify their highest-performing classrooms, take what works, and scale it across classrooms and schools district-wide
  • Accurate, actionable data is the key to identifying levels of student understanding and adjusting teaching and learning accordingly
  • Easy to quickly gather the data via in-class and benchmark assessments so teachers and admins can get to the important part: using it
  • Canvas makes it easy to provide engaging, relevant professional development that teachers can access any time, from anywhere that fits their schedules

The tools within Canvas

Online tutorial videos

Microsoft OneNote

The features

  • Get organized in notebooks you can divide into sections and pages. With easy navigation and search, you’ll always find your notes right where you left them.
  • Revise your notes with type, highlighting, or ink annotations. With OneNote across all your devices, you’ll never miss a flash of inspiration.
  • Sort content across notebooks, sections, and pages.
  • Draw your thoughts and annotate your notes, using a stylus or your finger.
  • Record audio notes, insert online videos, and add files.
  • Use the OneNote Web Clipper to save content with a single click.
  • Teachers can use OneNote to organize lesson plans in searchable digital notebooks, and staff can create a sharable content library. Encourage students to handwrite notes and sketch diagrams.

Online Tutorial Videos

Google Forms

The features

  • Manage event registrations, whip up a quick poll, collect email addresses for a newsletter, create a pop quiz, and much more.
  • Use your own photo or logo, and Forms will pick just the right colors to complete your own unique form, or choose from a set of curated themes to set the tone.
  • Choose from a bunch of question options, from multiple choice to dropdowns to a linear scale. Add images and YouTube videos, or get fancy with page branching and question skip logic.
  • Forms is responsive, so that means it’s easy (and beautiful) to make, edit, and respond to forms on screens big and small.
  • Responses to your surveys are neatly and automatically collected in Forms, with real time response info and charts. Or, take your data further by viewing it all in Sheets.

Online Tutorial Videos

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Wakelet

The features

  • Engage students by inviting them to contribute to a group collection! Whether they’re adding text, links, videos, images or Flipgrid shorts, you can make sure your students are engaging with your subject, even when they’re not in school.
  • Wakelet’s integration with Microsoft Teams allows for optimized collaboration with colleagues.
  • Easily able to curate all the resources for students in one web link,a picture of the exam board outcomes, a short video from YouTube and a Microsoft Form (quiz) for them to test their understanding of the topic they’re revising
  • Target a specific area of the course to revise by providing contents in wakelet and how they could see exactly what they needed to know
  • Encourage active listening by sharing weekly podcasts.
  • Open classroom to the world in the form of newsletters, parent communication and multimedia publications
  • Quick revision of important concepts just before the assessments
  • To track & share student progress in the form of Student Digital Portfolios

Online Tutorial Videos

Class Dojo

The features

  • Teachers can encourage students for any skill or value — whether it’s working hard, being kind, helping others or something else.
  • Students can showcase and share their learning by adding photos and videos to their own portfolios
  • Get parents engaged by sharing photos and videos of wonderful classroom moments
  • Make random groups of students. Display activity directions. Turn on background music. And there’s so much more to come with ClassDojo Toolkit.
  • Teachers, school leaders, and families can partner on ClassDojo and create an incredible school community.
  • Share activities that students can respond to from home via video, photo, journal entry, or drawing.
  • Send direct messages to families, share lessons or announcements, and assign classwork to students.
  • Simply print and share a class code or individual codes, so students can easily log in from home

Online Tutorial Videos

Google Classrooms

The features

  • Classroom helps students and teachers organize assignments, boost collaboration, and foster better communication.
  • A streamlined, easy-to-use tool that helps teachers manage coursework.
  • With Classroom, educators can create classes, distribute assignments, grade and send feedback, and see everything in one place.
  • With Classroom, teachers and students can sign in from any computer or mobile device to access class assignments, course materials, and feedback.
  • Educators can track student progress to know where and when to give extra feedback. With simplified workflows, more energy can be focused on giving students constructive, personalized recommendations

Online Tutorial Videos

Microsoft Forms

The features

  • Forms is the result of direct feedback from educators that they want to have a quizzing function with Office 365 Education.
  • An easy way to assess student progress on an ongoing basis.
  • An assessment solution that will save them time, help differentiate instruction for all students and provide quiz takers with real-time personalized feedback.
  • Forms is a great quizzing platform because quiz question types are unique.
  • Quiz authors can also indicate the correct answer(s) while authoring quiz questions and they can enter feedback for each answer.
  • Forms can be used to create surveys, requisitions, assessments and so much more. For example, a school teacher may want to get feedback from a student’s parents on their child’s study habits.
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The tools inside Microsoft Forms

Online Tutorial Videos