Examples of Technology in Education and Global Collaboration

Are you an educator or homeschooler who would like to connect your students with other children around the world? Classrooms that are thousands of miles away from each other are working on “global collaboration” projects together, sharing their diverse perspectives, teaching each other about their countries and their cultures, and learning how to navigate technology- all while virtually “meeting” each other. Here are some of my favorite examples of elementary classrooms connecting globally. By no means is this an all-inclusive list; instead, read it and be inspired at the connections these innovative and forward-thinking teachers have made.According to a recent article in the Chronicle, titled “U.S. Will Make Broader Global Skills for College Students a New Priority

department officials believe that it’s critical that all graduates [...] have certain “21st-century skills” that will enable them to compete in a worldwide marketplace, such as understanding international perspectives and being able to work collaboratively with peers from different cultures and backgrounds.

How can we participate in collaboration projects with our youngest students, where they can begin to absorb cultural nuances, and appreciate the different perspectives from around the world? Check out these age-appropriate projects, designed to allow kids to work together virtually:

BLOG Projects

A Teddy Bear Traveling the World and reporting back on a blog

PreK through elementary students can participate in the “Outside my Classroom Window” project. Share what you see when you look outside your classroom window!

6 classes from around the world (Australia, Belize, Canada, Ghana, New Zealand, USA) share their int’l project “Our World, Our Stories” on their blog

Check out this blog with a weekly creative writing challenge. They post the prompt, students post their 100 word, creative piece.

Weather Around the World grades 5-8 connect with students from around the world and share their weather.

Voices of the World- a global project that connect students using their voices rather than text and images.

Twitter

How a kindergarten class uses Twitter to learn about the world

Kindergarten Around the World is a twitter-based virtual exchange project, allowing young students to experience and explore a way of life different from their own, by building a relationship with a class of similarly-aged children.

skype

Around the World with 80 Schools Skype Group- is a challenge for schools to connect with 80 different schools around the world via skype.

Multiple platforms

The Global Read Aloud Project: read a book that classrooms around the world are also reading! Then discuss on the blog, the wiki, edmodo, twitter, etc.

ChildFund Connect is a global education program that uses multimedia technology to help Australian children connect and learn with their peers in developing countries.

How 2 kindergartens- in Japan and Canada- collaborate on projects through blog comments, twitter, postal mail, Google docs and Skype

2nd- 6th graders in a gifted class share their global learning and skype experiences on their blog

facilitating organizations with Project Sign-ups

iEARN The iEARN Collaboration Centre enables youth to learn with, rather than simply about, the world. Browse student produced media or join interactive curriculum-based groups in which students are creating, researching, sharing opinions, and becoming global citizens. Here are two examples of elementary schools participating in global collaboration projects:

The Global Classroom Project:

Our #globalclassroom community includes more than 220 K-12 teachers from 32 countries around the world; and is hosting a wide range of primary (elementary), middle, and secondary global projects (organised and run by our participants) - through to June 2012.

Elanguages has a list of projects that teachers can register for, organized by age (starting at the under 5s!).

Classroom pen-pals are a great way to learn firsthand about children’s lives in other countries.

Finally, I recently read an article by Jose Popoff, titled “On International Projects.” Mr Popoff, an experience teacher who has incorporated several global collaboration projects with his high schoolers in Honduras, gives teachers 12 tips to consider when planning an international project. He touches on everything from building a relationship with the partner teacher, to being culturally aware of nuances between the 2 countries.

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2 Responses to Examples of Technology in Education and Global Collaboration

  1. New to you–anything for middle schoolers?

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