OnSlow County School – providing lesson in effective hybrid learning

On August 17, 2020, the first morning of hybrid learning at Onslow County Schools, Erin Holland, a Digital Learning and Teaching Services facilitator at the school district, was prepared for a torrent of questions and issues. “In the wake of COVID-19, my colleagues and I spent the summer training teachers in the school district in a hybrid learning environment.” Rather than being inundated with requests for help, Holland’s experience was quite the opposite. “On the first day of school, I walked past classroom after classroom of teachers using Microsoft Teams to host their hybrid learning classes without a hitch.”

“I love all the accessibility features in Microsoft 365 and especially Teams. Immersive Reader and Translate are huge for us and help us support our Exceptional Children and English Language Learners.”


Stephen Taylor: Director of Digital Learning and Teaching Services, Onslow County Schools

Onslow County Schools, a district in North Carolina with 27,000 students ranging from kindergarten to grade twelve, had embraced Teams as its learning management tool for years before COVID-19 sent students and teachers home. “If you want your students to communicate, collaborate, create, and think critically, Teams, combined with the entire Microsoft 365 suite, is a powerful tool to help every learner do just that,” says Stephen Taylor, Director of Digital Learning and Teaching Services at Onslow County Schools. “Also, it was important for us to know that Teams is an extremely secure platform. We have to be aware of CIPA and COPPA compliance, and Microsoft helps give us peace of mind that we’re meeting those regulations.” Because the district had already successfully implemented Teams, it wasn’t difficult to begin using it as a remote learning platform. Holland and her colleague Christy Torres were among the 20 Digital Learning and Teaching Services technology facilitators at Onslow County School District who stepped in to provide video conferencing instruction. Teams meetings proved intuitive to use, and teachers quickly embraced it as remote learning platform. “Many counties closed for a couple of weeks, but everyone at Onslow County Schools grades three to twelve was doing live Teams calls and keeping up with classes after only one day of transition,” says Taylor.
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After completing the 2019–2020 school year, Onslow County Schools worked through the summer to prepare for school openings on August 17. This time, however, the district opted for a hybrid teaching mode with students spending part of the week learning at home and part of the week in school. “We wanted to keep the focus on instruction,” says Holland. “With Teams, teachers can provide direct instruction to both groups of students synchronously, and they can monitor student progress every day. That element of consistency was incredibly important.”

In the months before schools opened for the 2020–2021 school year, Holland, Taylor, Torres, and their other team members, Jason Laurence, Angie Conklin, Gretchen Robinson, and Sachelle Dorencamp went on a “road show,” highlighting how hybrid learning in Teams could work. “The first principal who watched our hybrid learning demonstration looked at us when we were done and said, ‘I feel like I can breathe now.’ That was when we knew it was going to work,” says Holland.

Today, teachers across the district use Teams on their Windows 10 laptops for video calls with at-home students and a SMART Board or projector for writing notes or demonstrating concepts. Using the dual-screen capability in Teams, teachers can share the SMART Board with students at home, while in-person students participate in the class from a safe distance. The teacher can also use the multiwindow capability to see students at home, who use the raise hand feature or the meeting chat to contribute to discussions.

“That’s the best part of Teams for me,” says Holland. “It’s great to see a teacher talking to their class and then hear a voice from an at-home student chime in and contribute. That was a big focus for us, making sure students didn’t lose emotional and social connections to their peers just because they were joining a class from home.”

Teachers can use breakout rooms to pair in-person and online learners together for projects. “Elementary school teachers in particular enjoy using Together mode to make sure that younger students can see their friends and participate in classroom learning together,” says Taylor. “Teachers also find the Teams assignment feature extremely helpful. When they assign work, they can provide resources and monitor timelines right from the app.”

And, with Education Insights, an analytics tool in Teams for understanding students’ participation, teachers gain insights that help them make sure all students are learning and staying engaged. “Insights lets you quickly see who is engaged and who isn’t,” says Taylor. “It always helps when you’re talking to students or parents about participation to have a dashboard to help visualize and explain.”

Taylor and his colleagues are excited about new Teams functionality such as the spotlight feature, which allows teachers to feature an individual participant’s video for everyone to see, no matter who is speaking. Accessibility tools in Teams like Immersive Reader and Translate are also gaining traction across the school district. “I love all the accessibility features in Microsoft 365 and especially Teams,” says T

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Teams is also popular among educators at Onslow County Schools who use the platform to build a connected community with their colleagues. Today, Teams is the go-to platform for principals’ meetings in all 39 Onslow County educational facilities, and most schools hold regular virtual check-ins with teachers to share best practices. After collecting feedback from teachers on their experiences using Teams during COVID-19, Taylor and his team found that 85 percent said they felt well connected.

Teams is popular with teachers and students because it’s easy to learn. This is important for Onslow County Schools because the district is near one of the largest US Marine Corps base in the world, and many new students arrive throughout the year. “Teams makes it easier for new students and teachers to get adjusted quickly, and parents also find it easy to use Teams,” says Holland. “In the past, parents sometimes had difficulty helping their kids with homework because teachers used different tools. With everyone in Teams, it’s helped parents support their kids learning at home.”

Counselors use Teams to support wellness efforts at the district, such as helping students set up class schedules and giving advice. And some student clubs are holding group meetings in Teams to collaborate on projects.

Taylor and his IT colleagues used Microsoft Power Automate, a workflow automation solution within Teams, to create an app to help maintain social distancing when parents pick up students from school. “Using the app, parents drive up and scan a QR code that automatically alerts a teacher, who then sends the student out to meet their parents,” he says. “It helps avoid students congregating outside the school. We also used Power Automate and Teams to streamline the process of submitting bullying reports so that counsel.

Bringing peace of mind to parents, students, and teachers with Teams
The Onslow County School District was well placed to respond to COVID-19 thanks to its history of embracing new technology and the dedicated efforts of the IT department, led by Chief Technology Officer, Jeff Pittman. “Onslow County Schools is unique in the focus we put on technology,” says Holland. “We have 20 Digital Learning and Teaching Services facilitators, whereas other districts might have five at most.” That technology-forward approach proved valuable when schools in the district were able to respond quickly to the crisis and keep students up to speed.

In the first days of remote learning, providing consistency was important to everyone at Onslow County Schools. “Parents and kids were uncertain about a lot of things, but one thing they could be certain of was that their teachers were waiting for them in Teams,” says Torres. “That really helped settle everyone.”

For Torres and her colleagues, the ability to teach students seamlessly was a great relief. “On that first day, I started to get pictures from teachers showing me their Teams classes were working, and I even got one photo from a principal with tears in her eyes because she was so happy to see the kids were safe and learning from their teachers,” remembers Torres. For the school district, Teams has become an indispensable tool for responding to the unexpected and providing a great learning experience to students, no matter where they are.

Singapore’s Tanglin Trust School adopt Microsoft OneNote and pen-enabled device

Case studies

Singapore Tanglin Trust School adopt Microsoft OneNote and pen enabled device

Singapore’s Tanglin Trust School has continued innovating in education by encouraging teachers and students to adopt Microsoft OneNote and pen-enabled devices. Teachers can efficiently share resources and provide students with personalized feedback, while students can access materials and lessons anywhere and at any time.

Tanglin Trust School in Singapore combines British-based learning with an international perspective, creating a safe, caring, and stimulating environment for its students. The school’s high standards and strong support help build a community of passionate learners ready to confidently contribute to the world.

Teachers are encouraged to innovate and to model how best to employ technology for inquiry and communication and to enhance teaching and learning. “We want technology to be simultaneously transformational and unremarkable, an accelerator of learning, not a driver,” says Stephen Morgan, Head of Technology for Learning at Tanglin Trust Senior School.

Trying out—and adopting—Microsoft OneNote Class Notebooks

Three years ago, the Senior School began exploring the use of OneNote Class Notebooks, alongside a trial of pen-enabled devices, with both students and teachers. The combination proved immediately powerful, allowing teachers to plan together and deliver content through notebooks of shared materials and lessons, and letting students immediately access and, crucially, interact with, all the materials.

According to Morgan, “It was pure efficiency. Students could keep better track of their work and teachers could more easily organize their curriculum and track student progress.”

Microsoft education partner Edukinect helped the effort by providing the school with Microsoft Surface units for testing, along with training and technical support.

The power of the pen

Kayzad Byramjee, Assistant Head of Technology for Learning, says, “Now what we’re aiming to do is embed the power of the pen with OneNote in both the way that teachers teach—the pedagogy—as well as the way that students learn. The school also wants to ensure that some of the attributes we try to encourage in students—being independent, self-sufficient, and collaborative—are harnessed through pen-enabled devices and through OneNote.”

The school is now working with students and teachers on visual note taking. Morgan explains, “We think visual note taking is a skill that will really stand up for life when students go on to college and the world of work, and having pen-enabled devices is going to give them the edge.”

Pen-enabled devices have led to better integration of technology into learning; teachers are now able to give students immediate voiced, typed, or inked feedback. “That’s really the Holy Grail for us,” Morgan says, “providing rich, personalized feedback that students can respond to, creating a genuine dialogue around learning.”

Fundamental for both teachers and students: the flexibility of OneNote. “You can highlight the text and move it to another region of the workspace. Add some space in there if you want, zoom in, write something in a bit more detail, add video clips and other media, link it to your notes. The end product is comprehensive and immersive,” says Morgan.

Tanglin Trust Senior School anticipates OneNote and pen-enabled devices continuing to enrich the school’s teaching and learning for some time to come.

“We think visual note taking is a skill that will really stand up for life when students go on to college and the world of work,
and having pen-enabled devices is going to give them the edge.”

Stephen Morgan: Head of Technology for Learning
Tanglin Trust Senior School

School Leaders Convention Dialogue- Blended Learning Framework and Guideline

School Leaders Convention Dialogue

Blended Learning Framework and Guideline

Venue : ICC
Date : 26th November 2020
Audiences : School Leaders

Facilitated by YM Tuan Shahrizal Bin Hj Emran, Head of EdTech Center. The aim of Activity 1 is to come up with one statement per table for Blended Learning. For each table, participants to log in onto Microsoft Teams and read the definitions that has been provided by other school leaders. Each table to come up with the commonalities. Once Identify the commonalities, each table to come up with ONE statement. For Activity 2 , Facilitator to share the findings of school leaders prework on their rationale of implementing blended learning in classroom.

For activity 3, participants in each table will be in pairs. Hence each table will have 3 groups. Each group will be using one laptop. Each group select a different article. (Each group can pick more than one article).  From their reading, each group to identify the different models of blended learning. For this Part 2 activity, each table will be only using one laptop to provide input. Mapping game: Facilitator to explain that there will be 7 situations and each table must identify and map the best model to suit the situation provided. Facilitators note: The situations are shown in colours below.


a. Situation 1 and 2: there is only enough devices for a fraction of a class
b. Situation 3 and 4: There is enough devices for all students in a class but not at home
c. Situation 5 to 7: Enough devices for all students to access during class and at home

There should be only one situation for each blended learning model.For this activity, each table will be only using one laptop to provide input. Each table will list out as many statements as they can on the slide deck on factors for successful implementation of blended learning in classroom / school.
Once listed, each table to group the statements into themes (Label the themes). To find out more on blended/hybrid learning, you may visit this page to learn more.

School Leaders Convention Dialogue – School E-Leadership

School Leaders Convention Dialogue

School E-Leadership

Venue : ICC
Date : 25th November 2020
Audiences : School Leaders

Facilitated by YM Pg Hj Shaiffadzillah Bin Pg Hj Omaralli, EdTech Center. Pg Dr Shai shares with school leaders the concept of digital transformation leadership in regard to school management. Pg Dr Shai shares the objective of the session: The role  of school leadership in transforming the schools  we run now into the schools that we envision for  the future.

The topics that he will cover in Part 1 are :
– 21st Century learner-centred leadership
– Redesigning the School Design Model for the 21st Century
– VUCA
– Open discourse on Vision

The topics that he will cover in Part 2 are:
– Understanding the online teacher
– Understanding technology-enhanced learning and teaching practices

1st Course for the School’s Innovation Team at SMJA

Innovation Team Course

Supporting learning initiatives with staff Teams

School : Sekolah Menengah Sultan Muhammad Jamalul Alam, SMJA
Date : 4th November 2020
Usergroup : Innovation Team
Technologies : Microsoft Teams
Supported WSE aspects : 1.2.2 Communication system, 1.2.4 Data Management, 1.2.3 ICT

Around 22 teachers in Sekolah Menengah Sultan Muhammad Jamalul Alam, SMJA had attended the 1st course under the Digital Classroom initiative. The course focuses on the introduction of Microsoft Teams , effective communications, data management and overall 

A total of 50 teachers achieved recognition as “Microsoft Innovative Educator, MIE ” under Digital Classroom initiative at SR Lambak Kanan, Jln 49

A total of 50 teachers achieved recognition as Microsoft Innovative Educator (MIE) under digital classroom initiative at SR Lambak Kanan, Jln 49

EdTech Centre Journal

Other than that, the Education Technology Centre has introduced a competition platform called “Innovation Challenge” for the school’s Innovation Team. Through this challenge, teachers are given the opportunity in using the “skillset” that has been learned to introduce digital solution for the problems encountered in school. The winner for the 1st Innovation Challenge was a team by Cikgu Haji Fairul and Cikgu Shamsul with their digital Form to replace the existing school daily log book.

INNOVATION TEAM COURSE – IN USING ONENOTE STAFF NOTEBOOK

Innovation Team Course

OneNote Staff Notebook

School : SR Lambak Kanan, Jln 49
Date : 5th October 2020
Usergroup : Innovation Team
Technologies : Microsoft Teams
Supported WSE aspects : 1.2.2 Communication system, 1.2.4 Data Management, 1.2.3 ICT

The course aim to lead and model proper use of OneNote to promotes teamwork and collaboration work.  Within the course, the participants learnt on how to add custom sections and content to meet digital documentation and data for the school and allowing feedback amongst teachers and staff professionally to achieve school’s objectives