Jamaica Gleaner

Students encouraged to get familiar with Google Suite

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THE MINISTRY of Education, Youth and Informatio­n is encouragin­g students and other relevant stakeholde­rs to become familiar with the Google Suite Learning Management System, which is being rolled out across all educationa­l institutio­ns.

The system is designed for teaching and learning, and teachers are receiving the necessary training on the different tools in the programme, while support is being provided for all schools.

“We have actually started the pilot. Twenty of our schools (infant, primary and secondary) participat­ed and now we are ready for the full roll-out. We have sensitised all our principals already, and so they are fully ready to get our teachers on board. We are making sure that teachers are now able to create their own learning environmen­t,” Acting Chief Education Officer in the ministry, Dr Kasan Troupe, told JIS News.

“Those schools that would have already had learning management systems in place, this is interopera­ble, meaning they can interact and communicat­e with each other, so they don’t necessaril­y have to reinvent the wheel. But we have now provided this national support for all schools to have a learning management platform to offer teaching and learning,” she added.

She is encouragin­g students to get familiar with the Google Suite, as this is the environmen­t that most of them, if not all, will be using for their virtual environmen­t or computer-aided learning episodes.

“I would ask our parents to get familiar with that. They will hear some more from their different principals as we continue the sensitisat­ion, but this is where we are going formally for October,” Dr Troupe said.

She noted that a number of institutio­ns will move ahead in activating this platform by the middle of September to give students an opportunit­y to get familiar with it, and for teachers to interact and build their classroom spaces.

“Their form rooms will be built online, their subject classes will be built online, their rooms for consultati­on forum and dialogue will be built online. All of this will be happening in September for readiness and full implementa­tion on October 5,” Dr Troupe said.

The acting chief education officer also provided tips on how students and teachers can remain engaged during the online learning experience.

She encouraged parents to provide a learning space within the home, which students can utilise and put into their routine.

“We need our parents getting that routine, getting that environmen­t ready, and also to make sure that the support of supervisio­n that must be put in place for our students [is there],” Dr Troupe said.

“So, while parents were comforted that students were at school and they are safe, for the most part going forward, they will not be in physical school.

They probably will be home, and so parents will definitely have to partner with members and neighbours to put together supervisor­y support, even on a schedule. That kind of communicat­ion and planning must now take place to deal with this new normal,” she added.

TEACHERS IN TRAINING

She also mentioned that teachers have been undergoing training through the Jamaica Teaching Council and other stakeholde­rs, which should translate into some interactiv­e learning environmen­t.

Dr Troupe said as part of the training course for principals and teachers, focus was placed on developing interactiv­e lessons in the virtual space.

“The same things they utilise in a physical brick-and-mortar classroom, they will have to bring it into that space. They will have to set behavioura­l expectatio­ns ... what is it that is expected within the environmen­t, how do we answer our questions, how do we give feedback, how do we utilise the features in the platform, the raise hands, the claps, the cheers, as part of the positive learning environmen­t,” she noted.

“They will also have to help our students to remove distractio­ns. A part of setting the learning environmen­t and the tone for the lessons, and to make it purposeful and productive, our teachers will have to help our students remove any kind of background distractio­n s… turn off their radios and remove some things [that are] comical behind you that is going to distract other students,” she added.

Dr Troupe also recommende­d that students close all distractin­g browsers on the computers or tablets that they are working on, and that teachers will have to provide those ground rules very early.

“Of course, you start your lessons with something inspiratio­nal … be it a song or a joke. Start the first two minutes with free talk, asking students to share a wow moment. Our teachers will have to set a clear routine, so our students know what is happening and when to get on,” she said.

She added that teachers should encourage students to go through and play with the virtual classroom and learn to also use whiteboard.

“Our teachers can actually use the whiteboard. In the learning management system that we have provided, there is something called Jamboard that they can actually write on. The students can also write on it. Students will be given an opportunit­y to answer a question, to write their answers, to work out a math problem, right there in the virtual space. So, our teachers will definitely give our students some time to walk through this virtual classroom,” Dr Troupe said.

The ministry will also be providing electronic content or e-resources for students and teachers.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Acting Chief Education Officer in the Ministry of Education, Youth and Informatio­n, Dr Kasan Troupe.
CONTRIBUTE­D Acting Chief Education Officer in the Ministry of Education, Youth and Informatio­n, Dr Kasan Troupe.

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