From the The Educational Technology: ICT in Education website
Articles on e-learning and information & communication technology containing practical advice
Fourteen things to make sure of before a lesson in a computer room
By Terry Freedman
Mon, 4 Feb 2008, 00:02
You’ve planned how the computers will be used as an integral part of your
curriculum, you’re fully trained, and the pupils know what they’re doing. What
could possibly go wrong?
Unfortunately, the answer is “anything”. Here is a checklist of things to do
in the short-term (eg from about a week beforehand) in advance of using the
computer room.
Checklist
- Check that the computer room is still available. There may have been a
double-booking, or essential equipment may be away for repair.
- If the room is available, does it have help for the pupils in terms of using
the software? You may need to ask the ICT Co-ordinator if there are any simple
guides available. You may wish to produce your own posters of key words to put
up around the room for your lesson.
- Check the number of computers that will be available. If 2 are being
repaired, that could make a big difference to the way you organise the pupils.
- Check that printing will be possible, and that there will be printer paper
available (or will you have to bring your own?).
- Check that the software you need is installed and working.
- Upload any files you need to the shared area on the network, or copy the
files onto CDs, DVDs or memory sticks if stand-alones will be used, or upload
them to the internet if the computers will be able to connect to it. You may
need to ask the ICT Co-ordinator or a technician to do tasks like these. If so,
give as much notice as possible.
- Check that pupils will be able to get to these files easily: can the process
be automated, or will you need to prepare a set of instructions? (It is usually
a terrible start to a lesson to stand there dictating a list of 10 instructions:
it usually degenerates into farce.)
- Check that all pupils have User IDs for the network, that you have a list of
them (with passwords) and/or that there are “spare” User IDs that pupils can log
on with.
- Check that the pupils’ User IDS will give them access to the programs and
files you want them to have access to. You can test this by creating extra User
IDs with the same configuration, and log on as another pupil, in effect, to see
how it looks and operates from a pupils’ point of view.
- How will you demonstrate software skills to the pupils? Has the projector
for the electronic whiteboard been switched on, and do you know how to use the
whiteboard? How do you log onto the computer to which the large display monitor
is attached? Will you need to ask the pupils to gather around a computer
workstation? If so, which one will it be, and which pupil will you ask to sit
there (choose one who won’t mind being disturbed). Or does the school have a
set-up that enables you to put the demonstration on each individual screen – and
if so, can you use it?
- Make sure that you have reached a point in your scheme of work where the
computers will be used meaningfully, rather than used only because you’ve
got the room booked.
- Have some non-computer work available in the computer room just in case
there’s a power cut or some other type of interruption in the middle of the
lesson.
- If you plan to use the internet you will need to check that there is
connectivity, that the sites you wish to use are not “down” or have not been
blocked by the school’s filtering system or have not been compromised by the
addition of advertisements or pornographic images (it has been known to happen).
It might be an idea to save your intended websites locally, ie to cache them.
- If the pupils are going to be using the internet for research, think about
giving them a few search terms to start them off, or even some URLs to explore
first.
© Terry Freedman Mon, 4 Feb 2008