Category Archives: Animations

Teaching for creativity

In a recent interview with the New York Times[i], Laszlo Bock, the Senior Vice President of People Operations at Google said the following:

“…the number one thing we look for (in an applicant) is general cognitive ability, and it’s not I.Q. – it’s learning ability. It’s the ability to process on the fly. It’s the ability to pull together disparate bits of information.”

For our pupils to succeed in the modern world, they need to be able to think creatively. In her article “Teaching for creativity: from sage to guide to meddler”[ii], Erica McWilliam makes a convincing case for seeing creativity in lessons as a core learning outcome. The trend for employers to value creative skills means that our pupils will not be successful in the modern world unless they can think creatively. How are they to develop those creative skills necessary for success in life if their teachers value rote-learning over creative thinking?

McWilliam’s article goes on to explore three different models for a teacher; the Sage on the stage, the Guide on the side, and she proposes a new model: the Meddler in the middle. The Sage tends to lead from the front, spending the majority of her effort enthusing and engaging her pupils. She is a skilled orator, and can generate enthusiasm and excitement. However, there can be the tendency for the class to remain passive while the teacher remains the expert. The Guide spends the majority of her time coaching and helping students through a series of pupil-led tasks. McWilliam makes the argument that “…this (approach) can often collapse into passive child-minding and worksheet distribution”. The Meddler creates opportunities for hands-on learning collaboration that puts everyone in the thick of the action. By its nature, this requires the teacher to spend less time talking; to allow her pupils to take risks and make mistakes; to work collaboratively and creatively.

Of course, there are many ways in which digital tools can enable a pupil to work collaboratively and creatively. Recently, as I have blogged before, I have been experimenting with making stop-motion animations with classes in science lessons, using the iOS software “I can animate”. A typical animation lesson involves minimal talk time from the teacher and pupils have found it relatively easy to get on with using the software. Pupils certainly take risks and make mistakes; the animations do not always look great at first go, and a few iterative cycles are usually necessary to get something that pupils are pleased with. There are great opportunities for collaboration too; while pupils may create an animation in pairs, they are always keen to see the results of other groups’ work. This is where I have been most impressed with the merits of creating animations as a teaching tool; pupils have spontaneously peer-assessed each other’s work, commenting on the technical accuracies of each others’ animations. I have rarely been able to engineer such high quality peer-assessment in the past.

The lesson, too, develops those processing skills that Laszlo Bock is looking for in new employees at Google. For example, armed with their understanding of particle motion, pupils must apply creative thinking to making their animations scientifically accurate, but also visually appealing in a limited time-frame. Let’s hope that some of them one day get the opportunity to show him what they have learnt!


[i] The New York Times (2014, 22 February), How to get a job at Google; http://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/23/opinion/sunday/friedman-how-to-get-a-job-at-google.html

 

[ii] Erica McWilliam (2009): Teaching for creativity: from sage to guide to meddler;

Asia Pacific Journal of Education, 29:3, 281-293; http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02188790903092787

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Creating animations in science lessons

Animations aid understanding

Pupils have been watching animations in science lessons for years; educational films use animations to help to explain a model or underlying micro-structure. More recently, web-technology has increased the access to animations, and animations feature on an increasing number of web-pages describing a scientific concept.

A couple of years ago, while teaching a junior physics class about Brownian motion, I showed them a short animation produced by Minute Physics, “Albert Einstein: The Size and Existence of Atoms”. Watching the video certainly helped them to improve their understanding of the concept. This, in itself, wasn’t new to me; after all this was just the latest incarnation of an animation used to show the underlying microstructure that explained the concept. In effect, this is what Einstein, and others before him, were able to imagine when they saw the movement of the tiny particles of pollen or smoke dancing under the microscope.

Pupils as makers

However, I also thought it would be interesting to get my pupils to create an animation to explain the concept. I have tried a variety of ways to create pupil animations, but I think that making stop-motion animations is the best. Although it is a lengthy and painstaking process, pupils really enjoy the tactile experience of moving around particles on the desk to represent the molecules in a gas, and I think it helps them to internalise and really understand the intricacies of the model.

Feedback from students has been excellent; it is clear that they enjoy the lesson, and like working creatively in science lessons. But I was most convinced that this was a worthwhile project when I started to observe some quite spontaneous but really sophisticated peer-review taking place. Pupils were watching each other’s animations as they were being built, and noticing the scientific inaccuracies in the models, as well as praising them for their work.

Recently, I tried a similar exercise with an upper sixth class; this time considering the workings of the internal combustion engine. Again, the results were impressive, as you can see from the short film below.

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