Wednesday 26 May 2010

Fronter Hands On Training - July 7th @ RTC

Please inform your ICT staff - Fronter Training (Primary and Secondary hands on workshop )- Wednesday, July 7th

Thank you

We are pleased to invite you to attend the Fronter Training (Primary and Secondary hands on workshop )– Wednesday, July 7th

    • The course will run from 9.15am -3.45pm at the Redbridge Teachers Centre.
    • The training is for teachers with all different levels of experience in using Fronter.
    • Please go to www.redbridgepdc.org.uk to book your place.  Please call the Redbridge Teachers Centre if you have any problems on 0208 708 8810.
    • The workshops will be ran by Mina Patel (LGfL). Tanya Hurst(Loxford High), Rosemary Hunt( Fronter), Rob Spriddle ( Redbridge Primary) and Alex Rees (Redbridge LA).
    • The day course will consist of four sessions, consisting of different 1.25 hour hands on workshops where you may choose which workshop to attend.
    • Please bring your own lap tops with you to enable you to access the wireless internet connection at the Teachers Centre.
    • Agenda below:

Time

Trainer

Title

9.15 – 10.30 (session 1)

Rosemary Hunt

Visual Mail in Fronter

 

Mina Patel

“Free Apps”  / Web 2.0  in  Fronter

 

 

 

10.30  - 10.45 BREAK

 

 

 

 

 

10.45 -12.00 (session 2)

Tanya Hurst

Coursework Management

 

Rob Spriddle

Homework in Fronter (Hand in tool)

 

 

 

12.00 – 12.45 LUNCH

 

 

 

 

 

12.45 –  2.00 (session 3)

Rob Spriddle

Assessment in Fronter (Test tool )

 

Alex Rees

Using Fronter for Heads for Department

 

 

 

2.00  –  3.15 (session 4)

Rosemary Hunt

Primary MLE lesson plans

 

Mina Patel

Today Page and Portfolio tool

 

 

 

3.15 – 3.45

Rosemary and Mina

EOY/SOY  process and tips & tricks in Fronter

 

 

 

 

 

Mina Patel 
Curriculum Consultant
London Grid for Learning
mina.patel@lgfl.org.uk

 

 

Wednesday 12 May 2010

Could you be Lead Fronter Primary School 2010-11? (Funding available)

We are looking to expressions of interest from Redbridge schools to be the lead Fronter primary school 2010/11. The successful school will currently be demonstrating strong practice within their own organisation and be confident supporting other primary schools in building their own practice. This role was expanded last year to include a day a week of funded time for your MLE project leader / ICT Coordinator to support the activities listed below.

As the Primary lead school for Fronter you would:
  • Demonstrate and disseminate good practice within your own school
  • Hosting 2 termly after-school cluster meetings for other Redbridge primary schools to enable the sharing of good practice
  • Issuing half termly update communications supporting schools on the implementation journey
  • Managing an MLE room to enable sharing of good practice
  • Represent Redbridge schools' views at the annual Fronter regional forum
As a associate consultant:
  • Guided by the LA contact individual schools to discuss support requirements
  • Training groups of staff in schools as required
  • Supporting other schools strategically providing models of ensuring good practice is developed across the school, exploring how they could work in context.
  • Supporting other schools tactically guiding decisions on how certain educational benefits can be effectively achieved on the Fronter MLE system (e.g. sharing school calendars, gifted and talented collaboration, literacy enhancement, etc.)
(funding for guaranteed until Easter 2011)

Previous lead schools have been:
  • 08/09 Lead school HIghlands Primary
  • 09/10 Lead school Redbridge Primary

If you are interested in this role please contact Alex Rees by 24th May to discuss it further.

Alex Rees
alex.rees@redbridge.gov.uk

Monday 10 May 2010

The Webfronter course is back!

By popular demand the 'Fronter Advanced Administrator' course on the 18th June has been changed to a 'Webfronter' course. The 'Webfronter' course will go through how you can design and publish your own school website within the Fronter system.

Please book onto this course via www.redbridgepdc.org.uk which will be updated shortly to reflect this change.

Alex Rees
alex.rees@redbridge.gov.uk

Book now: Redbridge Technical Forum 03 - Thursday 27th May

“Switched on and networked for learning.”

This conference is the third in a series of events set up for technical staff supporting and administrating the computer systems within Redbridge primary and secondary schools. The programme is designed to ensure that whatever previous experience you have – whether as an expert systems engineer or as someone completely new to the role – you will find the RTF of real value with relevant information and fresh ideas you can apply easily within your own school.

This term there is a definite hands-on feel to the day. The morning will be a mix of best practice sessions, LA news and Hardware presentations with suppliers bringing in a range of their latest greatest education friendly kit. The afternoon will include the popular 'In my school' slot followed by some really practical FREE tools that you take back to your school to have a positive impact almost immediately.

Registration will be at 9am for a 9:30am start, and the event will close at 3:30pm. To book a place at the Redbridge Technicians' Forum 03 please go to www.redbridgepdc.org.uk and search for "Redbridge Technicians".


Alex Rees
alex.rees@redbridge.gov.uk

Thursday 6 May 2010

Facebook concerns in Primary Schools

We are aware that recently primary schools have become increasingly concerned with the use of the Facebook social networking site amongst their students. Every anonymous survey conducted by staff within our primary schools consistently shows that students (mostly KS2 although not always) are setting up Facebook profiles to keep in touch with their friends. If your school has become concerned about this then this article suggests the steps you could take.


Remove the usernames if necessary

Very simply Facebook does not allow under 13’s. The difficulty is in removing their online profiles once they have been made.

Facebook has a “Report and Underage User” form . However you have to know the profile address of the child you are concerned about. These profiles are of the format http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=123456789 and whilst a search within Facebook may give you a profile address for a given name (e.g. John Smith) their directory listing may not be enough to ensure you have the right profile (e.g. children often use a fake photo when making the profile to appear older).

Since you must be logged into Facebook to either search for profiles or to remove profiles this is a time-consuming course of action unless you have a specific reason to do this for a particular child or group of children. It is however a more realistic thing to ask parents or children to do following the appropriate eSafety lesson or presentation. It is always easier for a child to remove their own profile with their parents help than it is for a parent/teacher to put a formal request through Facebook.


Review your eSafety strategy

A good eSafety strategy involves a 3-pronged attack: Policies, Infrastructure and Education.

1. Ensure you have appropriate POLICIES to encourage correct behaviours and actions. Policies should encourage the correct preventative behaviours and also appropriate responsive behaviours should an issue arise. The key policy to have in place is a good “Acceptable Use Policy” explaining what staff and students can use school technologies for. Ideally this should be signed by staff and students’ parents so that the expectation is very clear. Other related policies that should reference eSafety appropriately include a school’s “Anti-bullying policy”together with the general “Safeguarding policy”. For further advice on drawing up these policies: http://www.nextgenerationlearning.org.uk/safeguarding-learners/Case-studies/Acceptable-use-policies/

2. Review your technical INFRASTRUCTURE to ensure your systems enable students and staff to access and use web sites that you are comfortable with. A website filtering system can be reinforced by using monitoring software that will ensure that worrying actions can be picked up. Whilst monitoring systems can appear to be a bit ‘big brother’, often the installation of such systems can generate significant eSafety discussions within the school and then the software acts as a deterrent from thereon. All Redbridge schools automatically have access to LGFL web filtering to remove inappropriate content coming in, and LGFL has recommended Policy Central monitoring systems which schools can purchase (http://www.forensicsoftware.co.uk/) to ensure that systems are being used appropriately.

3. Have a strong EDUCATION programme. Whilst the first two points focus on ensuring that children and staff are safe within the school, the majority of internet usage by young people happens outside the school, and increasingly using mobile devices. Ofsted have reported that “where provision for e-safety was outstanding, all the staff, including members of the wider workforce, shared responsibility for it. Assemblies, tutorial time, personal, social, health and education lessons, and an age-appropriate curriculum for e-safety all helped pupils to become safe and responsible users of new technologies”. A good eSafety strategy is far more about strong education than it is about the previous two points. For more details on the Ofsted eSafety report please see: http://redbridgeictsubjectleaders.blogspot.com/2010/02/ofsteds-official-view-on-esafety.html


Advise the parents

If Facebook (or equivalent systems) are becoming an issue in your school you may choose to write directly to the parents. In this situation consider saying the following:
  1. New technologies and the internet are tremendously useful tools to support children’s learning. There is a wide range of good quality websites designed to support learning such as your Fronter learning platform, and BBC Learning. We emphatically promote good use of technology at school and at home.
  2. Whilst children want to communicate with their friends outside school Facebook is an inappropriate place for young people to socialise. Facebook’s terms and conditions states in their “Statement of Rights and Responsibilities” that “You will not use Facebook if you are under 13.” (Section 4:5). It is your responsibility as parents to ensure your children do not use it.
  3. There are age appropriate websites that young people may more safely use for social networking (e.g. http://www.superclubsplus.com/ and http://www.clubpenguin.co.uk/ . As a school we recognise that whilst the Internet is a great tool, it is not the only place to socialise and learn new things. As a parent it is your responsibility to ensure your child has an appropriate balance between screen and non-screen time.
  4. The next eSafety event to be held at the school will be on XYZ date. We will look at some of the technologies available to our children today and how we as parents can ensure our children have a good experience of technology without encountering the dangers.
  5. We recommend that you discuss your child’s use of the internet regularly and if there are issues raised that you need further guidance on look at the childnet website (http://www.childnet.com/kia/parents/) or come in and talk to Miss ABC, who is the senior member of staff overseeing our own eSafety strategy.

As a school you may also need to refer to the incident that raised your concerns initially but the above 5 points are nearly always relevant to communicate to parents. (It is also possible to order the Childnet material on a CD free of charge for distribution to parents. To order ring 0845 60 222 60 quoting reference 00308-2007CD0-EN. )



If you work within a Redbridge school and you have a more specific eSafety discussion you would like to have with a member of the School Improvement Team please do get in touch.

Alex Rees
Alex.rees@redbridge.gov.uk