Tuesday, February 17, 2015

All aboard...


The GAFE train is running smoothly through the middle school unlike the MBTA these days throughout the Boston area due to the incredible amounts of snow. Poor Boston!


Photo Credit: Boston Globe - Matthew Lee

The GAFE train image displayed above was tweeted out by Sylvia Duckworth.  As our district technology fellow and I were brainstorming how to roll out Google Apps for Education we came across this image, which inspired our direction and vision.  We wanted to test drive this train prior to implementing school-wide professional development to ensure it was the right trip for us.  We took a road trip to another Rhode Island middle school that uses Google Classroom and Apps for Education.   Originally, the thinking was to provide break out sessions for the first four stops on the GAFE train. After visiting Cole MS we learned so much more about Drive that we needed to dedicate one entire professional development to it and differentiate it based on the various knowledge levels in the building.  Stops 101, 102, and 103 were developed, which all focused on Drive for beginners to native users.  Check out the three stop descriptions on the Google form, http://goo.gl/forms/KlngBGrw7c, which was sent out for teachers to sign up for one of the stops.

It was critical that the vision of GAFE be communicated so that it encouraged teacher autonomy, aligned with moonshot thinking, and made teaching and learning more efficient and effective.  Google For Work’s video did just that so it was presented before the train stop sessions.  Check it out here:


All aboard!  Teachers and Teacher Assistants exited the GAFE train at their stops. Throughout the various sessions teachers were navigating through the most basic functions of Drive with the support of a tutorial video used in Stop 101 to thinking about ideas on how to incorporate it into their lessons at Stop 102.  Stop 102 teachers were asked, how do you imagine Google Apps for Education? Responses ranged from, “peer revision opportunities, real time feedback during writing sessions to multiple students at the same time, revising and creating assessments, and surveys/ formative assessment.”  These are just some of the few opportunities we explored, which is probably less than one percent of what GAFE can offer to the classroom experience. 
I am looking forward to where the GAFE train brings us in March and hopefully the MBTA will be back to 100% business by then and flowers will be popping out of the ground!  I can dream…