The Educational Technology Site: ICT in Education
THE site for leaders and managers of educational ICT
moving

Home Page 


  Enter your email to receive
  the latest article summaries

 
  Preview | Powered by FeedBlitz


Subscribe to article summaries

Subscribe to full articles

Subscribe to our podcast

Subscribe to Computers in Classrooms, our free newsletter

Latest news via Twitter

Latest comments on this site

Thoughts & tips for the day

Terry's 2 Minute Tips videos

My recent activity (via Friendfeed)

 
 News & Views
 
 Leading & Managing Educational Technology
 
 Website guides
 
 Using & Teaching Educational Technology
 Checklist: using ed tech
 
 Computers in Classrooms
 Latest + downloads
 Past issues
 
 Weekend
 
 New website

Locations of visitors to this page

Using & Teaching Educational Technology


In praise of silliness
By Terry Freedman
Created on Wed, 26 Aug 2009, 08:51

Email this article
 Printer friendly page
Email the author
Listen to this article

I am all in favour of the experiment by an ATM company in London which sees instructions in rhyming slang on some of its cash machines.

People tend to be too serious, and sometimes you can achieve quite a lot in terms of making people think, or even improving learning, through the interjection of a bit of mild humour.

I’m not suggesting that these ATMs will educate people, but that a similar principle might be introduced into the school environment. When I was running an ICT department in a school, I sometimes used to put up silly notices along the lines of:

"Is you is or is you ain't printing? If so…"

(From the song Is you is or is you ain’t my baby?)

OK, so it didn’t produce guffaws, but then it wasn’t meant to. Just about every ICT suite has notices saying what you can’t do, what is forbidden. The overall effect is to put people on edge, in my opinion. You can grab people’s attention with an unusual and slightly humorous headline, and then state a few rules. I believe that the light-hearted opening puts them in the right, ie receptive, frame of mind.

Humour is fine to use in other places too, especially when the work can get pretty intense. I tweaked a spreadsheet once so that at the top, in the title bar, it read:

"Mr Freedman says: Get on with your work!"

I also had a button which said

"Click here in case of an emergency".

Inevitably, clicking on it caused a message to pop up stating:

"This is not an emergency! Stop messing about!"

My coup de grace, however, was recording myself saying "Stop that and get back to your work", and assigning the sound file to one of the windows events on a stand-alone computer. It was quite humorous to see the reaction of a pupil experiencing it for the first time!

Of course, it goes without saying that such frivolity will not work if you have not already established classroom discipline and have really interesting work for the students to do. My aim was to try to replicate a workplace environment, in the sense that in a normal, healthy work environment people work, have a bit of a break, exchange some banter, and get on with their work. Why should school be any different?

Related article: Fings ain’t wot they used to be.



What do you think? Please leave a comment.

© Terry Freedman Wed, 26 Aug 2009


Comments are moderated.
If you found this article useful,  share it with a colleague via email. You can also share it on other websites using the "Share or Retweet" button below
Headlines by category

Why not subscribe to our free newsletter? Click here for more info.





News & Views
The new website is now well-established
The BETT Show 2010
The new ICT in Education website is well under way!
New ICT in Education website up and running
Changes afoot
A Funny Thing Happened To Me On The Way Home
Is There a Place for the Barefoot Researcher?
Handheld Learning Keynotes Now Available
Reflections on Handheld Learning: Authenticity vs Karaoke, and magnificent failure vs benign success
Reflections on Handheld Learning: Technology May Give Parents Consumer Power, But Is That Unequivocally Good?
Leading & Managing Educational Technology
Too overbearing by half
If your ICT provision were a restaurant...
Terry's Two Minute Tips #14: Starting Work As A New ICT Co-ordinator
Making it till Christmas
What does a broken clock signify?
Risk Assessment
Increasing the decision-making capacity of your team
Decision-making in a crisis
Shock Tactics
Conventional non-wisdom
Website guides
Two changes to this website
Website menu guide
Guide to the Educational Technology: ICT in Education Website
QuickStart Guide to the Educational Technology: I.C.T. in Education Site
Website Guide: Getting Content for Your Website
Using & Teaching Educational Technology
The internet – empowering or censoring citizens?
In praise of silliness
Getting Off To A Good Start
My foray into Blog TV
Cars Maths in Motion
Teachers as bloggers
Terry's Two Minute Tips #13: Effective Feedback
Ask Miller! Final edition!
Ask Miller!
Review of 31 Days to Build a Better Blog
Computers in Classrooms
The law says...
Computers in Classrooms -- next edition - UPDATE
Latest Computers in Classrooms now available
Announcement: Briefing on ICT in the Rose Review of the Primary Curriculum
Computers in Classrooms Social Networking Special
Computers in Classrooms Mid-April 2009 Issue
Computers in Classrooms 3 April 2009
Computers in Classrooms: Talking Books, Book reviews, Visualisers, Report on the Primary Capital 08 Conference and much, much more
Computers in Classrooms March 2009: hardware and book reviews, advice on school design and bidding for capital funding and much more!
Newsletter changes
Weekend
Five Minute Fiction: The Big Sweep
Blast from the past: what was I concerned about on this date in last year?
Change management #5: People can do it for themselves
Change Management #4
Change management #3
Change Management #2
Change management #1
New website
Web 2.0 Projects Book Deadline Extended
Tenacity: a good quality or a bad one?
What makes a good teacher as far as technology is concerned?
The tyranny of relevance
Making ICT more interesting: 5 suggestions
Are you only teaching the kids how to drill holes?
Seven reasons to have an educational technology library in school
How good is the teaching of ICT? An interview with Edith, an English teenager
ICT in the Rose Review of the Primary Curriculum: Wordle and PDF Version
Students like to hear comments on their work: 3 reasons why this is good news, 3 reasons it worked for me, and 2 necessary preconditions



<