Glow Scotland blog
Guest Blog from Robert Hill, Dundee:
May 9th 2010 is the anniversary of the birth of J M Barrie born 150 years ago in Kirriemuir, Angus. The anniversary is being celebrated in style across the world including Kirriemuir itself where the Kirriemuir Heritage Trust is commemorating their famous son with a festival, Barrie 2010: A Celebration Of Imagination which will run for two weeks from 7th -23rd May.
Great Ormond Street Hospital, to which Barrie bequeathed all the royalties from performances of Peter Pan, is running a campaign to create a Guinness Book Record for the greatest number of Peter Pans on one day (Friday 30th April).
Barrie’s connections are not limited to Kirriemuir of course and he is linked with Dundee, Motherwell, Glasgow Academy, Dumfries and London.
Glow’s contribution to the commemoration is a national Glow Group, J M Barrie Celebration, where teachers and pupils can come together to make the most of this anniversary. Here you will find details of the Great Ormond Street Hospital challenge, a competition to get you started, photographs of Barrie’s life and times, places to store writing about him and a place for discussion. Other activities can be added as the need arises.
This group is able to provide the context for literacy work within CfE, local environment topics (plenty within Kirriemuir), environmental studies including History and also the Geography associated with the places J M Barrie is linked to. It also provides scope for collaborative work in many different ways.
Just click on this link to get to the Glow Group. You will need to request access so please say which school you are at and give us your email address. During the day, it should not be long before you are granted access to the Glow Group.
We hope that you will take this opportunity to celebrate one of world’s most distinguished children’s authors with your pupils.
MorePupils across Scotland will have the chance to take part in activities and Glow Meets about five hot science topics in the Too Hot to Handle? series in the next few months, starting next week with Space for P6-S1 on 25th March.
Cathy Southworth from Edinburgh University is heading up this development and is keen to involve as many youngsters as possible. She says, “Too Hot To Handle? is here to support the Topical Science organiser of a Curriculum for Excellence from P6-S3. It provides access to current scientists in Scotland that work on a range of hot topics, through a vidcast, teaching materials and a discussion board for questions about the topics that are answered by the scientists, and a GLOW meet where you can grill the scientists with questions.”
As well as learning about the science, pupils will get a flavour of the excitement of being a scientist.
Visit the Too Hot to Handle Glow Group. Have a look at the wealth of materials for the Space topic, show your class the videos, post some questions for the scientists on the discussion board and come into the Glow Meet on 25th to grill the space scientists – Noe Kains from The University of St Andrews and Duncan Forgan and Chris Evans from The Royal Observatory, Edinburgh.
There will be a competition challenge on the day and members of your class could win a prize.
Other topics in the series:
Flu Fighters for 2nd level (P6-P7) ready for after the Easter break; Glow Meet 20th May
Biodiversity Buzz for 2nd & 3rd levels (P7-S2) ready for after the Easter break; Glow Meet 25th May
Doable Renewables for 2nd & 3rd levels (P7-S2) ready for May; Glow Meet 15th June
Me and my Brain for third and fourth levels (S1-S3) ready for May; Glow Meet 17th June
This week too, we have another two science based Glow Meets:
Dr Bunhead’s Spoofbusters on 16th (1.30 – 2.30) for upper primary and secondary pupils,
Industrial Chemistry on 18th (1.45-2.45) for Higher and AH Chemistry pupils.
All these Glow Meets use the same Science Glow Meet webpart in the National Sciences Glow Group.
More
The SLF Extra Glow Group is now live, with things to see before the Scottish Learning Festival, and a preview of what to expect over the two days. One event you can get involved in before the festival is a Glow Meet Session with Fiona Hyslop, the Cabinet Secretary for Education and Lifelong Learning. In advance of her Keynote Speech at SLF, Ms Hyslop will be hosting a Glow Meet for Scottish Schools from Gavinburn Primary School in West Dunbartonshire. The Glow Meet will take place on the 15th of September between 1pm and 2pm.
The cabinet secretary will be talking about what it means to her to be Scottish, and inviting questions from the children at Gavinburn and the Glow audience.
To sign up your class to watch or to take part in the question and answer session, please visit the SLF Extra Glow Group by clicking on this link
More
Guest post from Alan Hamilton, a Business Education Teacher at Stirling High School, and the administrator of the Business Education Glow Group for Teachers.
A National Glow Group for teachers of Business Education is now taking membership. This group will be a place for teachers to share ideas and resources as we begin to drive forward Curriculum for Excellence.
Business Education teachers can access the group via this handy short link – http://tinyurl.com/BusEdGlow - you will need to request access when you first go, but should be added in quickly.
Glow Groups have been created for all Business Education subjects: S1/S2 ICT, Accounting, Administration, Business Management and Economics. Teachers will be able to upload content and request materials from each other. It is hoped this will carry forward the work of the now defunct BEN forums.
Get involved today to meet your colleagues from across the country.
More
Once again this year, young people from around Scotland have been invited to vote for their favourite shortlisted title in the Royal Mail Scottish Children’s Book Awards. Glow has teamed up with the Scottish Book Trust to bring you a national Glow Group where you can discuss your thoughts on the books with other young judges in schools across Scotland.
Teachers and librarians can click this link to request access to the Glow Group. Once you’re in, you can contact the Glow team via the group, and they will add your class/reading group as members too.
This is an exciting opportunity for readers to have their opinions heard. The shortlisted books come in three age categories – 0-7, 8-11 and 12-16 – so there’s something for readers of all ages to get their teeth into. Schools will need to register with the Scottish Book Trust in the first instance – click here for more details - and voting closes on the 13th of November, so there’s still plenty of time to get involved.
MoreOn Thursday 27 and Friday 28 August 2009, the Building Glow Communities Mathematics event takes place at Stirling Management Centre. This event is for exisiting Glow users, with experience of creating and using Glow Groups within their classrooms and is an opportunities for practitioners to come together to work on Glow Groups which will be shared Nationally.
There are still a few places remaining, so if you are a Secondary Mathematics teacher, or a Primary teacher with a keen interest in mathematics and numeracy, and are interested in joining this event, please fill in the application form on the glowscotland website. (The closing date for applications has now been extended to take account of schools returning from the Summer break.)
The event will give participants the opportunity to collaborate with like-minded teachers from around the country and the chance to continue working together after the event. It will be a great two days and we hope you can join us!
MoreTwo very successful Glow events have recently taken place at Stirling Management Centre. These ‘Building Glow Communities’ events focused on getting English Teachers and Primary 4-7 teachers respectively to work together to create Glow groups to support learning and teaching.
These groups will be used by the teachers who created them to share ideas and resources and to allow collaborative activities between their pupils. The groups are also open to all teachers and pupils nationally so that they can follow what’s going on.
Teachers can apply to join the groups with their own classes and take part in the activities.
You can find the P4/7 groups created by the participants under National Groups/Building Glow Communities. Groups include ‘The Victorians’, World War 2, Scotland and European Tour Guide Mission. The English Teacher groups at are at National Groups/Literacy and English/Building Glow Communities and include Transition P7/S1, The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas and War Poetry.
If you have any problems viewing or applying to join the groups please contact Lesley Dickson at l.dickson@ltscotland.org.uk
We are still taking applications for the next events for early years, maths, the expressive arts, science and social studies. Visit Glow Scotland to apply for a place.
Please note that while the emphasis of the events is very much on sharing and collaboration it would be useful for applicants to have some previous experience of creating Glow groups.
If you would like an event held for your subject area or sector please register your interest with Glow Administration.
MoreNew in the Homecoming National Group is ‘Wha’s Like Us?’ This group is aimed at classes where there are pupils who have come from different countries to live in Scotland. It will allow pupils living all over Scotland to talk about their experiences living in this country, along with their classmates.
There will be regular monthly topics for classes to work on together, and a chance for pupils to upload their work, chat, discuss and Glow Meet.
The first topic will be school life, starting next week, Tuesday the 5th of May. The future topics will be chosen by the group members. Any class, primary or secondary, can get involved – just follow the instructions on the group.
Access requests are now open – come in and explore and think about how you’d like to use the group. It’s the intention that the group will change and grow to meet the needs of the classes using it, so essentially it can be designed by the users collaboratively. Hope to see you there soon! Join Wha’s Like Us and start linking across the country!
MoreWe are each others best and most under used resource.
On our travels up and down the country we (the Glow team) continue to be thrilled at the innovative and creative ways that staff and pupils are engaging with Glow. We realise too, that having the opportunity to see how others are using Glow can be a valuable experience. With that in mind, the Glow team has created a national Glow Group that allows for this sharing of good and interesting practice. So if you are in Aberdeenshire or Argyll, East Dunbartonshire or East Lothian you can now view Glow groups from all over the country. There is a catch of course – in order to join in and share this wealth of good ideas somebody has to take the initiative and post up their group for sharing. So if you are reading this Blog then that would be YOU!
The process is straightforward and to lead you through it we have uploaded a short guide into the Glowing Potential national group. It’s in this national group that we are encouraging you to allow others to take a peek at what you have been doing. We ‘d love to see groups shared from a variety of levels- classroom groups, school groups, local authority groups. The guide provides simple advice on how to allow others into your group with limited permissions. So if like me, you are particularly nosey and like to know what’s going on this could provide an excellent opportunity for the sharing of ideas and resources on a national scale.
But what if my Glow group isn’t as good as some others that I have seen? Don’t worry! We absolutely understand that Glow groups are constantly evolving and will always be ‘works in progress’ Don’t let this put you off. The more the merrier and as we build upon the each others ideas so we evolve or own practice. If altruism isn’t enough of a worthy incentive then to further encourage those a little more reticent we have decided to award some prizes for the ‘best’ Glow group of the month as voted (X factor style) by you. So if you’d like to win a Glow team member in your school for a week and other equally exciting stuff then you have to be in it to win it.
Go on and do it now. National Site – Glowing Potential glow Group - Sharing Groups tab. See you in there.
MoreI was warmly welcomed at St Martin’s RC Primary and Nursery School, in Tranent, today.
Dave Gilmour, the East Lothian Council Key Contact for Glow, and I were helping a small group of primary and nursery teachers get to grips with Glow. It was informal and informative. I was really impressed with their ‘have a go’ attitude and the way they very quickly came up with questions about Glow groups and how to use them for different teaching and learning purposes. It was clear to me that while quite a few of the group were trying Glow (hands on) for the first time, they would not be slow in trying it out with children in their classes.
I spoke with Christine Muir, a nursery teacher. I showed her some basic tools or web parts, how to create a Glow group and how to add members to the group. She promised to create a Glow group for her nursery classes. I assured her she cannot break Glow and look forward to seeing her ideas for using Glow for whole class teaching. I am sure she will develop some of the ideas we talked about: using the National Site and content for teaching literacy eg Bo Bear, using Glow meet offline with pupils to record speaking and acting etc and sharing digital images of pupil work from her Glow group.
It would also be great if nursery teachers in ELC could develop Glow groups for outdoor learning, eg Forest Schools projects, and share these links in the National site in the National Parks and Outdoor Learning National Glow Group. I know teachers in ELC have a wealth of experience in this area. If they record what they do outside in Glow groups, then pupils can bring their learning back indoors and enjoy sharing the experience even more.
It was great to visit St Martin’s RC Primary School and great to work with such positive teachers. The fantastic pictures above are by Frank Carty: seen on the walls surrounding the school.
More
Find us on