ISTE Standards and Creativity
ISTE defines creativity as constructing knowledge and
developing innovative products and processes using technology. The R. Keith Sawyer article, Educating for Innovation, proposes that
the key mission for schools in our knowledge society is to educate for
creativity. He explains creativity is deeply social and that the best creative
insights come from collaborative teams. To
foster student learning and creativity, he proposes using a disciplined
improvisation teaching style that emphasizes students learning for deeper
understanding through collaboration and unstructured (but scaffolded) group
discussion. Students need to be taught to engage in effective collaborative
discussions.
One of our school’s focuses this year is to use Kagan
cooperative learning strategies in our classrooms. This aligns with fostering
creativity because these strategies help scaffold cooperative learning and can facilitate
group discussion. The sentence frames that are part of our language arts
curriculum are also extremely helpful tools for fostering collaborative
discussions – but these are structured discussions. To teach for creativity,
I’ll need to move toward more student-led group discussion.
Technology project
based on ISTE
This week my first graders used their Seesaw learning
journals to plan, then present their personal narratives. For pre-writing they created a graphic organizer
with sketches and key words to plan their story. They included strategies for
adding voice (dialogue, inside story, feelings) in different parts (beginning,
first, next, then, finally) of their graphic organizer. Students took a photo of their organizer,
stored it in their journal, then recorded themselves as they talked through
their plan. Their partner was encouraged
to ask them questions as they spoke (What
did you do? How did you feel? What did
you say?). During the writing process, students listened to their plan before
they wrote and several went back to listen to various parts as they progressed
through their story. Once the stories were finalized, students worked with
partners to practice reading them, get feedback, then record their finished
story. Here’s how this project aligns with the ISTE rubric – the area that is
missing is critical thinking/problem solving.
I need to find ways to include that standard in future projects.
Creativity and innovation:
- Students applied existing knowledge to generate new ideas/products
- Students created original works as a means of personal/group expression
Communication and collaboration:
- Students used digital media to communicate and work collaboratively to support individual learning and contribute to the learning of others
- Students interact, collaborate, and publish with peers using a variety of digital environments and media
Digital citizenship:
- Students exhibit a positive attitude toward using technology that supports collaboration, learning and productivity
Technology operations and concepts:
- Students understand and use technology systems
- Students use applications effectively and productively
- Students transfer