howard baldwin, nz ministry of education, e-learning in nz schools

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e-Learning in New Zealand Schools Howard Baldwin Manager, e-Learning Innovation KANZ, Hobart, April 2011

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Slides from the KANZ Broadband Summit. Visit www.dbcde.gov.au/kanz2011 for more information.

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Page 1: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

e-Learning in New Zealand Schools

Howard BaldwinManager, e-Learning Innovation

KANZ, Hobart, April 2011

Page 2: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

From the 1990s: The

computer room

BBC

1985: The standalone school

computer

Potential education network

2012???

The school LAN:

1995-2010+

The past 25 years in NZ schools

Adapted from Becta 2004

Page 3: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

Then• Pen• Chalkboard/

Whiteboard• Banda• Gestetner• 16mm

projector• Slide shows• Telephone• Fax• Library

Now Next?

• Txting/Pxting• Blogs/Wikis• Pod/Vod-casting• Data projector• LMS/e-portfolios• IM/SMS• Digital cameras• Video

Conference• Google/Youtube• Peer2peer

networks

• Virtual reality• Wearable PCs• Ubiquitous identity• Voice recognition• Agents, avatars• Visualisation• Miniaturisation• Reusable paper• Semantic web• PLEs

1980/90s

Teaching and learning tools

Page 4: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

The last decade…

Page 5: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

From the NZ Curriculum“…e-Learning may:

• assist the making of connections by enabling students to enter and explore new learning environments, overcoming barriers of distance and time;

• facilitate shared learning by enabling students to join or create communities of learners that extend well beyond the classroom;

• assist in the creation of supportive learning environments by offering resources that take account of individual, cultural or developmental differences;

• enhance opportunities to learn by offering students virtual experiences and tools that save them time, allowing them to take their learning further.

Schools should explore not only how ICT can supplement traditional ways of teaching but also how it can open up new and different ways of learning.”

Page 6: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

The New Zealand schooling system• 2650 state and state-integrated schools, 750,000 pupils.

120 Independent schools, 40,000 pupils• Schools are self-governing and self-managing• There are no layers of interventions between the ministry

and schools• Schools make their own decisions regarding purchase

and use of ICT• Schools decide the amount of e-Learning they will use in

delivering the NZ Curriculum• The ministry provides a range of support programmes to

all schools• “Innovation occurs at the edge of pedagogical practice”

Page 7: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

Current uses of technologies in schools• Regular in-classroom use of web and network resources• Delivering specialist teaching remotely (VC and web)• Increasing use of online assessment tools• More sophisticated data collection and analysis for

student outcomes• Learning management systems, including e-portfolios,

which include ‘dynamic’ learning information and ‘what next’ functionality

• More direct parent, family, and whānau access through on-line portals

Page 8: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

Connectivity. Where are we now? • Vast majority of schools are now on broadband

• Speeds range between 0.5 to 5.0Mbps – increasingly inadequate for many online services to work effectively

• Fewer than 200 New Zealand schools have the bandwidth required for streaming video, web conferencing or applications such as Google Earth

• Next generation of applications require high speed, symmetrical internet connections

• An increasing number of schools are implementing a wide range of pupil-owned digital devices

Page 9: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

Barriers• Fragmented ICT approach has resulted in a variety of

network architectures – a challenge to connect

• Schools purchase individually – limits opportunity to centralise procurement and reduce cost

• Digital divide issue nationally – is now access to the internet at high speed, not access to computers

• Limited opportunities for remote support/provision of off-site support

Page 10: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

The Government’s commitment• 97% NZ schools (99.7% of students) will have

access to ultra-fast broadband (capable of 100megabits/second) by 2016

• 3% remote schools will have access to fast broadband (up to10Mbps) by other means e.g. satellite or point-to-point wireless

• $1.5 billion investment overall

• $150 million investment signalled to prepare schools for the rollout

• Schools will receive fibre into their communications rack at no cost to them

Page 11: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

How? Ministry of Economic Development responsible for Government policy on fibre rollout

Urban areas = Ultra Fast Broadband Initiative

• 61% of schools (but 75% general population)

• Crown Fibre Holdings (CFH) set up to manage the $1.35 billion ‘Ultra Fast Broadband (UFB) Initiative’.

• Two regional providers selected so far; Northpower (Whangarei) and WEL Networks (Hamilton, Tauranga, Whanganui, Tokoroa, Hawera and New Plymouth

• First fibre deployed in Whangarei in April 2011

Page 12: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

How?

Rural areas = Rural Broadband Initiative

• 39% schools (25% population)

• Separate $300 million Rural Broadband Initiative (RBI) overseen directly by MED

• Telecom/Vodafone successful providers

• Negotiations completed April 2011

• 500 rural schools will get fibre in the June 2011/2012 year. 200 in following years

Page 13: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

When will schools be connected?Depends on outcome of UFB/RBI procurement processes and subsequent order in which successful providers choose to connect schools. Completion planned for end 2016.

Page 14: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

What is the Ministry of Education doing?Ultra-fast Broadband in Schools (UFBiS) programme

Aim:

To enable schools to realise the potential of UFB to improve outcomes for students

Vision: Learning without limits

Learning anywhere, anytime, from anyone, through access to ubiquitous digital environments, appropriate ICT tools, and the skills and knowledge to use these effectively

Page 15: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

How will UFB improve education outcomes?Equity

• Reduced barriers of distance and travel costs e.g. virtual field trips

• Enabling sharing of scarce resources e.g. Māori medium teachers

Engagement

• Students using familiar (‘leisure’) technology to create and learn e.g. gaming, simulations, virtual worlds, rich content libraries

• Particularly effective for previously disengaged students or students with special needs

Learning

• Potential for 24/7 teaching and learning further for virtual professional development

• Better data collection, enabling evidence-based policies

• Ability to analyse and identify learner needs and target support

Page 16: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

What is the Ministry doing?• Information and support for schools pre, during and post

connection to fibre

• Investigating viability of dedicated education network

• Building capability

• Provision of hardware and software

• Upgrading internal school network infrastructure

Page 17: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

Preparing schools for the rollout• Ongoing sector engagement programme including

annual ‘Learning without limits’ seminar series to support schools in preparing for ultra-fast broadband

• Meeting held with first UFB schools in Whangarei in March (deployment commencing April) to gather feedback on schools’ needs

• Information pack provided to each school prior to connection and dedicated MoE staff to assist and advise schools throughout process

Page 18: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

School Network Upgrade Project (SNUP)• Provides subsidised upgrades to internal data and

electrical cabling infrastructure

• Over 500 schools upgraded since 2006

• Around 300 schools currently underway

• 80% costs for state, 68% for state integrated funded by government.

• School’s contribution approx $100 per student

• By end of 2011 approx 1/3 of schools will have been upgraded. Sector coverage completed by the end of 2016

Page 19: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

TELA laptop scheme• Available to all state and state-integrated schools

• Provides fully funded leased laptops to principals

• Subsidised leases are available for teachers working in permanent full-time roles (or part-time over 50%)

• 86% of schools subscribe to the scheme• Research has shown that 96% of participants agree

scheme has had positive impact on teaching and learning

Page 20: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

Software and supportMinistry of Education also provides a range of software and support at no cost to state and state-integrated schools including:

•Apple, Novell, Symantec and Microsoft software

•Telecom, Watchdog and Websense web filtering and firewall products.

Page 21: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

e-Learning Professional Development

• $11.2 million invested annually

• Current 3 yr ‘cluster’ based model in place since 1999

• 65% of schools have participated (15% at any one time)

• Now transitioning to new regionally delivered model to better support the needs of all schools

• Current clusters will be phased out by 2012– 2011 74 ICT PD clusters (588 schools)– 2012 55 clusters ( 501 schools)

Page 22: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

New ICT PD modelNew provider ‘Leading Learning Consortium’ will

1. Deliver blended e-Learning programme• To support existing ICT PD clusters• Transition to regional delivery model • Work with a range of regional PLD providers to deliver

coherent framework of services to sector

2. Manage content and communities on Enabling e-Learning website, support Digi-Advisors

3. Develop e-Maturity Framework (to identify best practice)

4. Deliver Virtual Professional Learning and Development (VPLD) programme

Page 23: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

Other relevant Ministry initiatives• TKI and online services • Digistore /Digi-Advisors• Student Management System support • e-asTTle • Virtual Learning Network • eportfolio trial and online moderation using Mahara • ENROL

Page 24: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

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NEN trial extension• Investigating issues and opportunities for schools in

accessing online content and services over a dedicated network

• Findings will inform implementation of a Managed Network for Schools if this goes ahead

• Original 2008 trial with 23 schools

• Currently being extended to 102 schools

• KAREN research network – the backbone of trial NEN

Page 25: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

NEN trial extension – content and services (examples) • Te Kete Ipurangi and sub-sites (Digistore, NZC etc)

• Virtual Learning Network (Moodle, LAMS, Elgg, Mahara servers)

• Adobe Connect Web Conferencing

• Video Conferencing (Standard and HD)

• Three Learning Management Systems

• Mahara based ePortfolio (myportfolio.school.nz)

Page 26: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

An Education Network (NEN) for NZ schools?• Request for Information for ‘Managed Network and

Managed Services’ released last year

• Business case to government due end of May

• Recommendations to Cabinet June/July 2011

• Next stage, if approved will be a Request for Proposal to vendors

• If approved a Network for learning (N4L) could be in place mid-2012

Page 27: Howard Baldwin, NZ Ministry of Education, E-Learning in NZ Schools

Howard BaldwinManager, e-Learning Innovation

[email protected]