Friday 1 May 2020

Digital Fluency Intensive Program (Week 8)


Date: 1 May2020 Agenda: Computational Thinking




Today is the second last day of the DFI program. This session, we started with Connecting. We connected in our regional groups and shared our pedagogies and strategies which work in our teaching and which don't.
Dorothy starts  session by talking about empowered. As an educator, you’re in a position to empower your students to become better learners and better people. Most of the time we recognise the positive influence we have on our students, but there may be times when we feel we need new ways to motivate them and create a culture of involvement.
Every teacher wants their students to feel involved in the learning process. Knowing how to empower students is a valuable skill. Student empowerment is an approach to teaching that puts students at the center of the learning process, allowing them to make decisions about their education and giving them the confidence to achieve their goals.


                                                               

Then, Gerhard continue session by describing computational thinking and Hangarau Matihiko.  A digitally fluent person can decide when and why to use specific digital technologies to achieve a specific task or solve problems.  A digitally capable person can create their own digital technologies solution. Teachers are supported to acquire digital fluency required for effective teaching, planning, assessment and professional learning
Teachers learn how digital technologies used effectively can have a significant impact on accelerating achievement outcomes
Supporting teacher digital fluency and confidence to deliver the curriculum in a digital environment in a 1:1 digital learning environment.
In education, computational thinking is a set of problem-solving methods that involve expressing problems and their solutions in ways that a computer could also execute. It involves the mental skills and practices for 1) designing computations that get computers to do jobs for us, and 2) explaining and interpreting the world as a complex of information processes. 



Computational Thinking






An investment in knowledge pays the best interest. –  Benjamin Franklin







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