We all have the occasional awful experience when giving training. Here are mine!
Read MoreThe scream by Terry Freedman
The scream by Terry Freedman
We all have the occasional awful experience when giving training. Here are mine!
Read MoreDo a search on the internet and you will discover that there are many, many articles on this theme, most of which agree with each other only in one or two areas.
Read MoreI wonder if there is anything more discombobulating than announcing, with great fanfare, a brilliant resource to a class full of teacher trainees, only to be greeted by a dreadful error message instead?
Read MoreWorthy cogitations about what I might have done to avoid being faced with a non-working whiteboard — and why that situation arose in the first place.
Read MoreHow the admin involved in a course led to its being abandoned by one group of trainers.
Read MoreUsing an external IT trainer is risky. Here are a few things to insist on to reduce the likelihood of a ruined training day.
Read MoreIt’s always a good thing to stipulate in advance all the things you need in order to run a training session —including even the most basic and obvious ones….
Read More
Photo by Štefan Štefančík on Unsplash
Here’s the first article in a series about my worst training days — the ones in which I was the trainer I mean! This was first published in 2018, but is still highly relevant.
Read MoreWhat does it mean to be a maverick? To me, it means not going along with the general consensus about something, just because it’s a consensus. There is always a natural tendency to think “all those people can’t be wrong”, or “there’s no smoke without fire”, but in fact all those people could be wrong and there could be smoke without fire.
Read MoreBefore considering any ideas, we ought, perhaps, to consider the question: why bother? After all, the situation is so fluid that any strategy you prepare now could be rendered out of date by next week. If one thing has proven to be certain about the pandemic, it’s that nothing is certain. It’s almost like trying to build a house on sand.
Read More
We can only please, by Terry Freedman. I think I saw this sign in a local hospital
When I took up a senior management position in a local authority, an irate headteacher phoned me on my second day. She had had her laptop taken away for repairs two weeks ago, and had heard nothing since. I told her I’d look into it. I had the following conversation with the relevant team…
Read MoreThis is a test of some code. Don’t bother reading it.
Read More
Image by OpenClipart-Vectors from Pixabay
Teaching and learning have moved online to a greater or lesser extent, with varying degrees of success. What has this meant, and what might it mean?
Read More
Learning together. Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay
You would be forgiven for thinking that every teacher in the country has spent lockdowns being so immersed in technology that they have all become experts. There is no more need for staff training in IT skills — and so no need to conduct a staff audit.
If only!
Read More
Book reviewing, by Terry Freedman
If you’re looking for some good reading material, these “graphic novel” books may be just what you need. They’re all non-fiction, hence the quotation marks.
Read More
Edtech marketing, by Terry Freedman
Given that students in secondary schools can, when they reach a certain age, decide to give up Computing, marketing the department is an important thing to do. Even in primary schools, where options are not a consideration, it’s important to establish a brand for Computing.
Read More
exasperated, by Terry Freedman
Have you ever seen an article on here about pre-menstrual tension?
Read MoreWhen my room was flooded at three in the morning while staying in a Marriott hotel in Los Angeles, an assistant helped me to relocate to a different – and drier! – room. As compensation for the inconvenience, she gave me a voucher for a free breakfast in the morning. Bleary-eyed, I accepted it. On waking…
Read More
There has been quite a bit of research carried out concerning the effects of technology on health, mental health and wellbeing. Although the picture is not 100% positive, there seems to be more on the credit side of the balance sheet than on the debit side.
Read More
Image by OpenClipart-Vectors from Pixabay
When I set up a calendar version of the archive on this site, it didn’t occur to me that this would give rise to two incentives.
Read More(c) Terry Freedman All Rights Reserved