Monday 14 March 2016

Ted Ed

What is it?

Having spawned from the hugely popular TED which is based on innovation and spreading ideas, Ted Ed is an education platform which enables teachers to amplify and expand their thoughts on a global scale. It contains 5 stages called Watch, Think, Dig Deeper, Discuss and Finally, which can be implemented or ignored at the teachers’ convenience. Here's some I made earlier:


How?

As a teacher wanting to incorporate Ted Ed into your classroom, you have two options: to use a video stored on the sites archives, or create your own lesson.

With reference to the former, there are thousands of ready-made, useful, and engaging lessons for teachers to utilise and search for at their perusal. There is a wide range of levels covering primary up to University, and subjects ranging from Psychology to Social Studies.

As for the latter, it really is easy as pie to create your own Ted Ed lesson. This video shows how to do it:



Why?

  • Basing a lesson around a video (whether you’ve uploaded it from Youtube, or created one yourself) will engage students from the outset, and contain a context which will hopefully induce learning.
  • You can log in through Facebook, or set up a TED account in minutes. Oh and by the way, it’s free!
  • It’s exceedingly simple, straightforward and manageable for students of all ages and levels.
  • For the teacher, it isn’t very time consuming to make and it’s stored permanently in your area.
  • You can give instant feedback to your students on the multiple choice questions in the Think section, and review their work in other parts, therefore as a teacher you can keep tabs on student progress. There is also a space for students to respond to this feedback if they require more clarification, or if they just want to contest it!
  • The Discuss section allows the teacher to create discussions based on the lesson focus, aims and objectives. They can be guided or open, which doesn't only aid teachers and students but helps to connect the vast community to each other.

Why not?

  • You can’t embed other tools into Ted Ed (such as Kahoot which was reviewed in January on this blog).
  • The Think section only allows you to use 2 types of question (multiple choice or open).
  • There is only one framework available which could potentially lead to de-motivation or complacency if overused.

Teaching context?

  • Could be used as part of a flipped classroom, with the video being viewed before class then the activities done in-class. For example, the Dig Deeper questions could be used to tie in the external, online work back into the classroom. 
  • Or alternatively a Ted Ed could be the whole focus of the lesson in a face to face environment. By putting students into groups, teachers would be encouraging collaborative and cooperative learning.
  • It could also be set as homework, which would most definitely aid the quieter students in the class as it’d enable them to work at their own pace.
  • You could hand over autonomy to your students by asking them to create their own video/lesson, and asking other students to complete it. This would actually be a really innovative and hugely powerful way of encouraging your students to become proactive outside the classroom, as well encouraging them to gain presentation literacy prowess.

Final thought

Here is a webinar I presented about Ted Ed (from 30 minutes – 60minutes) so feel free to check it out:

http://bit.ly/1M2rW1q

1 comment:

  1. Hi Gary. Ted Ed is really worth knowing and trying out with students. I like that the videos are current and always on fascinating topics. Yes, it could be better if there were more question types, but is there also a record or tracking tool to see which student has accessed the video and who hasn't?

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