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Web articles

Interviews with key people, examples of innovative educational practice, and the creative application of new technologies.

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  • Building Schools for the Future: Implications for Design and Technology

    June 2009

    John Chidgey looks at the implications of Huildin Schools for the Future (BSF) in Design and Technology departments in terms of learning and curriculum.

  • Just a few lessons short of a BETT Learning Festival

    June 2009

    Merlin John asks whether you can harmonise an international ICT conference with a world class trade show for a mother of all learning festivals?

  • Internet access for all: how the home access programme brings us one step closer

    June 2009

    Children whose parents can’t afford a home PC and Internet access face a huge disadvantage when it comes to researching homework and accessing learning materials. Becta is addressing the problem through an ambitious government-funded programme that will provide grants for home PCs to children eligible for free school meals. As the pilot comes to a close, plans are underway for a national roll-out. Kim Thomas reports.

  • Storybooks, puzzles and laptops: how do children learn?

    May 2009

    Digital technologies are all around us. But how do parents set about introducing them to their children? And how do children react to these technologies? Sarah Eagle has been researching these questions for her PhD, and talked to Kim Thomas about her findings so far.

  • The revolution will be Tweeted

    May 2009

    An East London primary school uses handheld gaming devices to demolish the myth that innovative teaching is not possible in the current education culture. And Ofsted proves the point, writes Merlin John.

  • “You ain’t seen nothing yet…” Scotland’s ICT renaissance

    April 2009

    Scotland is enjoying unparalleled success in embedding ICT in learning and teaching. Learning and Teaching Scotland’s outgoing Director of Learning and Technology, Laurie O’Donnell, explains why to Merlin John.

  • From poetry to PE: how PSPs help students learn

    April 2009

    Received wisdom says that video games are creating a generation of children who are passive and disengaged. But as some secondary schools are starting to discover, the opposite may be true: gaming units such as the Portable PlayStation are proving a versatile tool for engaging children in learning. Kim Thomas reports.

  • All on board for an IKEA of learning spaces?

    March 2009

    Learning spaces are moving up the education agenda, and a serendipitous opportunity to visualise and model them has already made waves with BSF schools and local authorities. Merlin John reports.

  • Students get a Second Life

    March 2009

    Second Life, the 3D virtual world, may have a reputation as a place for idle chit-chat and illicit liaisons with strangers, but it’s very much more than that. Professor Gilly Salmon, of Leicester University, told Kim Thomas about how Second Life is helping students learn.

  • The attention seekers

    February 2009

    Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) has traditionally been treated with powerful drugs. But a new technology, which monitors children’s brain activity as they play specially-designed computer games, may provide a gentler way of improving concentration. Kim Thomas talked to Zara Skidmore from Games for Life.

  • Adventures in real life – the onward march of TrueTube

    February 2009

    In the shadow of London Bridge, an award-winning online service for young people is planning innovative interventions to reach its audience. Merlin John talks to TrueTube editor-in-chief Erik van der Schaft.

  • The management of chaos: flexible learning in an inflexible system

    February 2009

    What does classroom learning look like when pupils are encouraged to take responsibility for their own learning, progressing at their own pace and being assessed at a time and place that best suits them? Jim Fanning (Assistant Headteacher at Tideway School) reports on progress with his school’s use of learning platforms.

  • Round-up from BETT 2009

    January 2009

    Merlin John reports back from BETT 2009, with a round-up of some of the more interesting projects and tools on show at this event.

  • The rich heritage of democratic education

    January 2009

    Professor Michael Fielding of the Institute of Education delivered a thought-provoking keynote speech at Futurelab’s Challenging Learner Voice conference last October. Between sessions, he talked to Kim Thomas about what we can learn from the tradition of democratic education in the UK.

  • In pursuit of innovation – the power of global networking

    December 2008

    Here comes the judge. Merlin John, fresh from adjudicating at Microsoft’s 2008 Worldwide Innovative Teachers Forum, is impressed by a global network created within just four years.

  • Living on the Edge

    December 2008

    Edge is an educational foundation working to raise the status of vocational learning. Four years ago, it set up the Edge Learner Forum, which aims to involve young people in the Edge campaign. Simon Binns, who helps run the Forum, and Huda Al Bander, an active member, spoke to Kim Thomas about the Forum’s projects.

  • Tearing down the prison walls

    November 2008

    David Gribble is one of the leading voices in the movement for democratic education. He taught for many years at Dartington Hall school, founded Sands school and now runs the International Democratic Education Network. After speaking at Futurelab’s recent Learner Voice conference, he talked to Kim Thomas about how his experiences as a teacher helped shape his views.

  • Lighting the touch paper to learning – where to put the match

    November 2008

    Policy adviser Charles Leadbeater, fresh from his work on 'What's Next? 21 Ideas for 21st Century Learning', talks to Merlin John.

  • “There are no more broken noses”

    November 2008

    Since winning Futurelab’s Innovate to Educate award two years ago with her design for an interactive playground, Clara Gaggero has graduated from the Royal College of Art and gone on to design further educational spaces. She talked to Kim Thomas about her designs and the importance of consulting the users.

  • Fragmented treasures awaiting prospectors for personalisation

    October 2008

    Mobile devices have the potential for harvesting elements of our fragmented lives to be reordered for learning, says researcher Elizabeth Hartnell-Young. Merlin John finds out more.

  • The digital panopticon

    September 2008

    Jim Fanning, Assistant Headteacher at Tideway School in East Sussex, continues his series of articles exploring the issues around the school’s use of learning platforms.

  • Something to shout about!

    September 2008

    A proposal for a mobile application called ShoutBox grabbed the attention of Futurelab when it was submitted to the Ideas Incubator in February. The application, which would enable young people to share their informal learning experiences with their peers, was devised by a new company called Mobile Pie. Kim Thomas talks to company co-founder Richard Wilson.

  • Learning – it’s a family affair

    August 2008

    Museums and libraries are great places for children to learn. But if parents can be helped to learn along with their children, then everyone wins. Natasha Innocent, a senior policy adviser at the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council (MLA), talked to Kim Thomas about the benefits of learning as a family.

  • Who personalises learning? The learners of course

    August 2008

    Teacher Fiona Aubrey-Smith stepped from a Hampshire infant classroom into a key role with an international learning platform company. She shares her insights into transformational curriculum work with Merlin John.

  • Rewarding risk: how e-scape changes learning

    July 2008

    Students at Alexandra Park School have been taking part in a research project to encourage innovation and collaboration in Design & Technology (DT) through the use of PDAs. Ross McGill, the school’s Head of DT and ICT, talked to Kim Thomas about what the project has achieved so far.

  • Mind the gap – open source is a player

    July 2008

    Don’t believe the hype – open source is bringing major savings and quality support for teaching and learning. Talk to the schools, writes Merlin John.

  • When what you get might not be what you see

    June 2008

    As managed services make their way into schools, Merlin John visits the most ambitious of all, Northern Ireland’s C2K, for a glimpse of the future.

  • From Shetland to South Africa – student voice goes global

    June 2008

    The Learning School, founded by deputy headteacher Stewart Hay, is a unique project that has enabled schools around the world to benefit from evaluations by international groups of school students. Now in its ninth year, it is flourishing.

  • Exploding the Black Box – the assessment revolution

    May 2008

    “Hate marking, love learning.” How many teachers would disagree with that? And this simple mantra lies behind some of the most innovative software for assessment for learning that is being taken up by schools, local authorities and even the Specialist Schools and Academies Trust, as Merlin John reports.

  • Primary pioneers

    May 2008

    Pupils at Sandaig Primary School were podcasting pioneers, and now they’re also into blogging, wikis and making videos. John Johnston, a class teacher at Sandaig, spoke to Kim Thomas about how Sandaig came to embrace Web 2.0 technology.

  • Consolarium’s games plan hooks teachers

    April 2008

    Don't believe the media hype - games bring learning to life, says Derek Robertson. Merlin John reports.

  • Naturally curious

    April 2008

    5x5x5=creativity is about enabling children to fulfil their creative potential. Working alongside educators in schools and nurseries, artists help children develop their natural curiosity and explore their own ideas. Its Director of Research, Penny Hay, talked to Kim Thomas about the organisation's aims and achievements.

  • Using VLEs at Tideway School

    April 2008

    Tideway School has been involved in a range of small-scale research projects investigating the use of a Virtual Learning Environment (VLE) in the classroom. Following a successful pilot in 2007, the school is now embedding its VLE in lesson delivery for a whole cohort of Year 11 pupils. Jim Fanning, Assistant Headteacher, reports.

  • Junior safety zones for the ‘world wild web’

    March 2008

    Social networking and Web 2.0 may be coming to primaries in a safer, bespoke form. Merlin John talks to two teachers testing innovative new social networking learning services.

  • A primer on e-learning

    March 2008

    New Zealand distance educator Ken Allan reviews current definitions of e-learning and presents an analysis of the technological and pedagogical merits and difficulties associated with it. He discusses how e-learning can support teaching and learning and highlights developments in approaches to its use, as well as evaluating a range of e-learning tools.

  • Fixing Humpty Dumpty

    March 2008

    Tim Gill’s book, ‘No Fear’, highlighted the increasingly risk-averse approach we take to bringing up children. Here he talks to Kim Thomas about his concerns that our over-protective attitudes have resulted in a loss of opportunity for children to play freely and to learn independence.

  • ‘Music for all’ teacher hits the right notes

    February 2008

    A Devon secondary school has taken an extraordinarily effective step towards achieving a key consensual target of music educators – to broaden and deepen the musical experience of all children – by teaching all of its Key Stage 3 students to learn a musical instrument.

  • Learning with a webcam

    February 2008

    New Zealand distance educator Ken Allan explores the webcam's recent adoption in many areas of education and points to the need for awareness of privacy issues and the adoption of acceptable use policies.

  • A window onto the world

    February 2008

    A school in Birmingham for deaf children has been using mobile technology in a new and surprising way. Deputy head Alison Carter told Kim Thomas what happened when Longwill School gave pupils PlayStation Portables.

  • Working with online learning communities

    January 2008

    Ken Allan, a distance educator at The Correspondence School in Wellington, New Zealand, analyses the components of online learning communities and discusses strategies for encouraging non-participatory members to become active.

  • For the 21st century teacher “the only constant is change”

    January 2008

    Scottish teacher Ian Stuart tells Merlin John how the UMPCs used by every student in his island school are "a conduit to the curriculum".

  • Playing it smart

    January 2008

    Lizbeth Goodman is Director of SMARTlab, an organisation that brings together people from creative and technical disciplines to develop new technologies that benefit some of society’s most disadvantaged groups. She talked to Kim Thomas about how SMARTlab’s unique way of working has resulted in the some highly innovative projects.

  • A little information can be a dangerous thing

    December 2007

    The headteacher of a Sunday Times ‘top five’ school recently said that we live in a “data obese” society, and described the school league tables as “a cancer”. With such a perceived surfeit of information, how are schools to make sense of the data that is filling their servers? Merlin John visited the Fischer Family Trust and the new Institute for School Effectiveness for some answers.

  • "The last siege tower is education"

    December 2007

    Donald Clark, a director of Ufi (the University for Industry), former CEO of EPIC, and an e-learning specialist for more than 20 years, has strong views about schools, teachers and modern educational orthodoxy. He talked to Kim Thomas about where it all went wrong, and why he’s optimistic that schools will eventually succumb to the technological revolution.

  • Template for transformation

    November 2007

    Knowsley, in Merseyside, is acknowledged as having one of the most ambitious, transformational projects for Building Schools for the Future. Merlin John talks to the visionary behind the blueprint, Damian Allen.

  • From robotic sniffer dogs to urban space stations

    November 2007

    Scientist, artist, engineer, environmental activist: all these terms could be used to describe Natalie Jeremijenko, but none would do justice to the unique combination of flair and academic rigour that she brings to her work in educating people about the environment. At Futurelab’s recent ‘Why Don’t You…?’ conference, she spoke to Kim Thomas about her latest projects.

  • A world-class learning festival

    October 2007

    The Scottish Learning Festival has matured into a world-class event that has even grown a ‘fringe’. Merlin John explores its replicable seeds for success.

  • Simulated mess

    October 2007

    The messiness and unpredictability of the real world is often what makes exploring it fun. If we could allow school science students some access to this mess while still maintaining discipline, perhaps we could help to turn more of them back on to science. Computer simulations might be able to help.

  • Switching on to learning

    October 2007

    John Howells has been Principal of Leasowes Community College in Dudley for 21 years. In that time, he has introduced some radical changes, including whole days when students focus on a single subject. John outlined his philosophy to Kim Thomas, and explained the role technology plays in helping students take responsibility for their own learning.

  • Can serendipitous browsing lead to serendipitous learning?

    September 2007

    People surf the net not only for fun, but also to discover and learn. We have all experienced the thrill of serendipitous discovery as we look for one thing but stumble across something else of value to us. Is this just ‘wilfing’ or can it lead to real learning?

  • Machinima and education

    September 2007

    ‘Machinima’ are 3D animations created in real time using computer games. Educators are learning to exploit the potentials of this creative, flexible and accessible medium, writes Diane Carr.

  • Making waves

    September 2007

    Radiowaves is a web-based network of radio stations used by school students in 20 different countries to create and publish audio programmes for a wide audience. Kim Thomas talked to Tim Riches, Radiowaves’s Managing Director, and Bronwyn Murie, a history teacher using Radiowaves for the first time.

  • Travels in time and space

    August 2007

    Primary and secondary schools in Kent have been discovering how to use a geographical information system (GIS) to find out more about the geography and history of their local landscape. Kim Thomas talked to lecturer Jason Sawle and teacher Gerard O’Sullivan about the project.

  • Extended learning

    August 2007

    Jim Fanning from Tideway School reports on a project in his school which is investigating some of the issues surrounding the use of Virtual Learning Environments (VLEs) in the classroom.

  • How personal is personalisation?

    July 2007

    The focus on the technical elements of learning platforms may be eclipsing the transformational nature of e-portfolios, the heart of the learners’ experiences, writes Merlin John.

  • An open approach to learning

    July 2007

    Not content with making many of its course materials freely available on the web through its OpenLearn project, the Open University is throwing some collaborative learning tools into the mix. Laura Dewis, OpenLearn’s Communications Manager, explained why to Kim Thomas.

  • The Fountain Journey – one teacher’s story

    June 2007

    Fountaineers is a collaborative project which aims to design and build an ‘intelligent’ water fountain that is programmable and reconfigurable by primary-aged children. In this article one of the teachers involved in the project shares her experiences.

  • Stepping out into learning with digital technologies: the London Knowledge Lab

    June 2007

    With the explosion of collaborative technologies outside school, and a perceived gap in students’ classroom experience within schools, there has never been a greater need for up-to-the-moment, thorough educational research. The London Knowledge Lab, created three years ago, is now taking the bit between its teeth with a distinctive, multidisciplinary approach.

  • Creating learning trails - the fun way

    June 2007

    Islington City Learning Centre has been using Futurelab’s Create-A-Scape software to devise location-based learning trails for local schools. Peter Barrett, Project Manager for the Kings Cross partnership, talked to Kim Thomas about how Year 5 children at Blessed Sacrament Primary School fared on their local history learning trail.

  • Every child matters – apart from the 100,000 out of school

    May 2007

    According to research, 100,000 children are missing from normal schooling. Yet despite considerable evidence that online learning can prove extremely effective in motivating and re-engaging young people out of school, existing successful online services are only scratching the surface of the problem, as Merlin John reports.

  • Money matters

    May 2007

    Wendy van den Hende is the chief executive of the Personal Finance Education Group, an organisation helping to educate schoolchildren about money management. She spoke to Kim Thomas about pfeg’s aims and its latest project, Learning Money Matters.

  • Mapping the invisible

    April 2007

    Martin Dodge is an academic geographer whose work has involved mapping the geography of cyberspace and unpicking the politics of pervasive computing. His aim, he tells Kim Thomas, is to make hidden relationships visible.

  • Resistance is not futile – it’s the haptic key to investigating 3D worlds

    April 2007

    It may be in fits and starts, but haptic technology - the physical feedback that introduces human sensitivity to control techno-muscle - is on its way. Merlin John investigates some of the latest real-world applications.

  • A mobile with a mission

    March 2007

    Carried out in partnership with the University of Nottingham, Futurelab’s MobiMissions project sees teenagers setting and responding to missions on their mobile phones. Kim Thomas talked to Futurelab learning researcher Lyndsay Grant to find out more.

  • Transforming learning spaces to personalise learning

    March 2007

    With current debates about what a 21st century education should look like, the Fountaineers project is showing that children and teachers have enormous scope to influence the reconfiguration of their buildings and outdoor spaces - and the ways in which they learn.

  • Overcoming the resistances to innovation in the classroom

    February 2007

    Are classrooms places of change? Is there an inherent worth in change? Is there a benefit in empowering teachers to change their own practices to suit the needs of their students? Futurelab is investigating the role of teachers as innovators, and is examining what models, methods and techniques can be used to aid in developing new practices within classrooms and schools.

  • Not boring!

    February 2007

    NESTA’s action-packed Planet Science website has been a huge success. Now it’s launching a new venture, Planet SciCast, which aims to get schoolchildren and adults filming their own science demonstrations. Kim Thomas talked to Katie Walsh, Planet Science’s project manager, to find out more.

  • Brown’s billions

    February 2007

    How should researchers and educationalists passionate about the positive impact of ICT feel about Chancellor Gordon Brown?

  • Using digital video in the classroom

    January 2007

    Joanne Murray and Paula Rolston at Cookstown Primary School have taken the bold step of turning their classrooms into creative workshops.

  • Stepping stones to lifelong learning

    January 2007

    The PebblePad e-portfolio was devised by staff and graduates from the University of Wolverhampton as a way of supporting ‘lifelong’ and ‘lifewide’ learning. Kim Thomas talked to PebblePad’s creator, Shane Sutherland, about an ambitious project.

  • Schools of the future, education of the past?

    December 2006

    Carolyn Gifford asks whether the Building Schools for the Future programme will provide an education for the future as well as bricks and mortar.

  • Using wikis to assess collaborative achievement

    December 2006

    Mhairi McAlpine from the Scottish Qualifications Authority explores ways in which wikis could be used in assessing groupwork.

  • Travelling between worlds

    December 2006

    Edith Ackerman is a distinguished developmental psychologist who now teaches in the School of Architecture at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Here she talks to Kim Thomas about how the interaction between physical and virtual spaces supports children's learning.

  • Virtually there?

    November 2006

    Bob Harrison explores the concept of the 'virtual school', reporting back from a visit to Stanford Virtual High in San Francisco.

  • Open thinking and open spaces

    November 2006

    Bruce Jilk is an American architect whose innovative, flexible designs for schools have gained him worldwide recognition. At the recent Futurelab conference, he talked about how his designs reflected his learner-centred philosophy. Kim Thomas met up with him over coffee to hear his thoughts on architecture, schools and learning.

  • Timetable for change

    November 2006

    The creative use of time might be one of the ways of kick-starting innovation. In most schools the timetable stands for order and stability; might it also be a barrier to innovation and change? Jack Kenny looks at how three schools have used time creatively to improve teaching and learning.

  • Enquiring Minds: the story so far

    October 2006

    We are now one year into Futurelab's innovative Enquiring Minds project, which is exploring ways of giving a children a say in what they learn. Kim Thomas caught up with Futurelab researcher Ben Williamson to find out how it's all going.

  • Time to start listening

    October 2006

    Acknowledging and responding to the learner voice should be at the heart of our drive towards personalised learning, says Fiona Colligan. However, the concept has received little more than lip service.

  • Building a vision

    September 2006

    The Building Schools for the Future (BSF) programme offers a significant opportunity to change the way education is organised in schools, reports Steve Sayers.

  • Journeying to the future

    September 2006

    The Dudley Grid for Learning has become a byword for innovation in educational technology. Kim Thomas talked to John Davies, Learning Futures Adviser at the Dudley Grid for Learning, to hear about work in progress.

  • New technologies and adult learners

    August 2006

    What can new technologies offer to adult learners that traditional teaching methods can't? Kim Thomas reports.

  • UCLan - a digital university

    August 2006

    The University of Central Lancashire (UCLan) is the sixth biggest in the country, and has developed a strategy of investing in new technology to offer a blended learning environment to both its residential and distance students. Mike Ahern, Director of Information Studies at UCLan, explained the thinking behind it to Kim Thomas.

  • Children photographing their social worlds

    August 2006

    What does the world look like through a child's eyes? Teachers and researchers are often involved in attempts to find out how children think about and perceive things, and one useful method is photography.

  • Physical inactivity and childhood obesity

    August 2006

    Is technology to blame, or could it have some answers? Tash Lee reports on recent projects that have experimented with using technologies to promote and support physical activity.

  • The school of the future

    August 2006

    Kim Thomas explores the opportunities for enhancing personalised, flexible and community learning presented by the Building Schools for the Future programme.

  • Towards a Personalised Educational Landscape

    July 2006

    Peter Humphreys sets out Personalised Education Now's core principles of personalisation, which provide an agenda for transforming our learning systems and a context for digital technologies.

  • A charter for children

    July 2006

    Keith Johnson, Head of Luckwell Primary School in Bristol, was fed up with the 'discrete gobbets' method of learning imposed by the National Curriculum, so when he came across Futurelab's Learner's Charter, he decided, with the support of staff and governors, to try it out. Kim Thomas finds out how he got on.

  • This Is Not A Game: Alternate Reality Gaming and its potential for learning

    July 2006

    Alternate Reality Gaming (ARG) is a predominately online melding of fiction and puzzle solving. Tash Lee explores the history of ARG, examining its unique characteristics to consider whether the genre might have some applications in learning.

  • The future of history

    June 2006

    There was a time when the only resources history teachers had at their disposal were textbooks. These days ICT has the potential to make a vast pool of information and research tools available to students. Kim Thomas takes a look at the history classroom of the future.

  • Telly for teachers

    May 2006

    Teachers' TV celebrated its first birthday by announcing that it now has more than 1,000 programmes on its website. Kim Thomas talked to Martin Trickey, Director of Interactive at the channel, to find out more about how the past year has gone and what he's planning next.

  • It's all in the mind

    April 2006

    Bristol University academic Dr Paul Howard-Jones is using magnetic resonance imaging techniques to discover what happens in the brain when it's being creative. The findings could provide new insights into how people learn. Kim Thomas talked to Paul to find out more.

  • Teaching robotics with LEGO Mindstorms

    March 2006

    Thanks to the ever-decreasing cost of computing, mobile robots are now cheap enough that it is feasible to provide a class of undergraduates with enough equipment to enable all of them to get hands-on experience of building robots.

  • The personal touch

    March 2006

    As a former headteacher with 25 years' experience of working in Birmingham primary schools, Peter Humphreys knows the education system from the inside. These days, as chair of Personalised Education Now, he's putting forward a radical vision of how that system can be transformed.

  • Pervasive and ubiquitous computing

    February 2006

    What do the terms pervasive and ubiquitous actually mean? Despite being used interchangeably, they do refer to different forms of computing.

  • Augmented reality: a new approach to learning

    February 2006

    Kim Thomas talks to Adrian Woolard, Research & Development Executive for Creative R&D in New Media at the BBC, about an exciting new technology.

  • The power of the podcast

    January 2006

    Podcasting is a simple technology, but universities are finding that it helps students learn more effectively, writes Kim Thomas.

  • Speckled worlds

    December 2005

    Imagine a world where you can metaphorically 'spray' computers onto a piece of jigsaw, allowing them to autonomously and intelligently assemble and reassemble together.

  • Putting computers in school is a really dumb move

    December 2005

    Peter Cochrane, founder of technology consultancy ConceptLabs, has had a distinguished career in IT, including six years as Head of Research at British Telecom. As his background would suggest, he has some bold ideas about technology and education. Kim Thomas talked to him to find out more.

  • Wireless Sensing Networks: an overview of US development

    December 2005

    In November this year, Futurelab was invited to participate in the Wireless Sensing Network (WSN) Mission to the US, in particular to California. This article summarises our main findings, focusing in particular on the key features which played a role in the development of WSN technology within the US.

  • Mobile presence

    November 2005

    The vision of the mobile learner as being able to move between different spaces yet remain connected to peers, experts, resources and information suggests many exciting possibilities for developing learning practice. Yet how does this mobility affect the ability to communicate within learning relationships?