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MissionV Blog

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The European School in Brussels uses MissionV

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The video below was created by a 4th year (secondary, 15 years old) student at The European School Brussels II. She was part of a team of 5 students who learned how to create a virtual world to show the Water Cycle. And we’re delighted that they chose to use MissionV in what is our first project outside of Ireland.

The students completed the project as part of the Microsoft Pathfinder school initiative based around the idea of water. The project was completed in a 4 week period and the students presented the video at an online conference to other schools in the Microsoft Pathfinder initiative.

Final report on MissionV – some key findings

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Dr. Conor Galvin of the UCD School of Education and Lifelong learning was asked to provide a research assessment of the MissionV pilot programme and its impact. That report will be published in October but in the meantime Dr. Galvin and his Research Associate, Ms Isobel Burke, have just published a 6 page note outlining their key findings.

The full document can be downloaded in PDF format or DOC format but we’d like to highlight, below, some sections that we found of particular interest –

# [Teachers] observed that students’ understanding was deeper and their retention of the information encountered through the Virtual World environment [of MissionV] was – in their view – markedly better.

# Teachers in the pilot schools also reported that their students’ engagement with tasks continued beyond the school day, with children at all four schools choosing, where possible, to spend time at home refining creations and solving problems online.

# The pilot sites evidenced clearly what may be termed a “new culture of learning” among project teachers. That is, a working environment emerged around MissionV activity that was rich in creativity, as well as skill- and meaning-building.

# The schools also offered accounts of students previously lacking in confidence in their maths skills who became self-assured technology experts through MissionV and of shy students ‘coming out of their shells’.

# The MissionV pilot project created unique conditions for students to peer teach. Pilot site teachers reported their strong belief that through teaching each others, their students deepened their own understanding and reinforced their belief in their ability to succeed, which positively affects self-confidence.

# [MissionV]  provided cooperative learning opportunities for group work and peer teaching and also fostered learning community within the classroom. Such intuitive cooperative learning behaviours have been documented by researchers in other settings and the power of this model.

# MissionV has been used successfully with gifted children, learners with special needs and with different learning styles – and with impressive results according to the teachers in the pilot schools.

# Because of the ability it offers to communicate and collaborate with others, MissionV also provides a platform for the creation and sharing of open educational resources.

# MissionV offers interesting valuable insights into how the contextualised learning of simple programming and principled design activity can be incorporated meaningfully into learning activity at the primary level.

# MissionV represented not just an opportunity to use technology to teach better but also the start of a professional discussion around how Ireland can begin revisioning core elements of our education system to meet more effectively the learning requirements of young people facing a radically changing world.

Funding campaign for 48 school programme – your input please

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The Good News: 48 schools have now applied for Year 2 of the MissionV Programme. Needless to say we’re absolutely thrilled about this – it’s an enormous vote of confidence in the value of MissionV. However…

The Bad News: This year has seen budgets cut significantly and we are operating in a very challenging funding environment.  As a result we’ve had to get creative . . .

So, MissionV is excited to announce that we will soon be running a funding campaign through Fundit. And we’re looking for your input please.

How long should the campaign run for? What rewards would you like to see? What kind of video should we produce?

In fact we’d particularly welcome your input on the video, which is a very important part of any fundit campaign. What tone should we aim for? Serious or playful? Regular or novelty? What story should we tell?

How would you tell our story? How would you describe MissionV? Is it an online service? An ICT tool? A learning programme? Where does it fit in the vast landscape of educational initiatives?

To get your creative juices flowing we invite you to watch a brand new video from one of the teachers on last term’s programme – Padraig O’Beirne, principal at Gortskehy National School in Co. Mayo.

New ways of learning: Ireland 2012

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Catherine Cronin is academic coordinator of online IT programs & lecturer in IT, at the National University of Ireland, Galway. With the help of Mark Glynn and Fred Boss she has compiled a wonderful video entitled ‘New ways of learning: Ireland 2012‘ (and we’re not just saying that because MissionV was honoured to be included). Thanks Catherine!

Slides from ICT in Education conference presentation

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We went along to the ICT in Education conference at L.I.T. Thurles on Saturday and it was as inspiring as always. For four years now we’ve been attending and still it manages to surprise and delight.

Key to that this year was the choice of Ira Socol and Pam Moran as keynote speakers. Although, to call them keynote speakers is to disguise what made their presentation so good – in reality they led a very interactive ’round-table’ discussion on Learning Spaces, with ‘provocateurs’ Conor Galvin and Bernie Goldbach prodding the audience into participation.

It was a tremendous start to the day and one which kept a positive energy flowing throughout. We were lucky enough to not have our talk until the afternoon and so could relax and enjoy a number of other presentations before-hand.

And when I say ‘we’ I mean Esther Lambe and myself. Esther is the principal at St. Kierans N.S. in Broughall, Co. Offaly and I can’t thank her enough for her wonderful presentation on MissionV and what the programme meant to her students. I only gave a brief introduction and then handed it over to Esther. And she was brilliant, emphasizing a number of key points that underline what makes game-based learning in virtual worlds so different.

Esther has kindly sent me her slides so here is her presentation below –

 

Making the news in Donegal

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We were delighted to see that one of the schools on our programme – Dromore N.S. in Co. Donegal – made the news on the Finn Valley Voice.

Principal Mary McGranaghan fully agrees with the ethos of MissionV ‘to inspire and engage children in their learning, particularly those who are at risk of significantly underachieving, through the use of game-based learning initiatives. ‘

See the full article below –

Dromore N.S. makes the news with MissionV

Dromore N.S. makes the news with MissionV

Applications now open for MissionV Programme Year 2

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We’re delighted to announce that applications are now open for the MissionV Programme Year 2 (MVPY2). For more details please visit the Applications page.

Titanic simulation

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Thanks to the amazing generosity of Stiofain MacTomais at 3DColab we have been able to import their incredible Titanic simulation (which includes the Harland and Wolff shipyard) into MissionV so that the students on our programme can now take a virtual tour of the iconic boat.

Here’s a short video which gives an idea of the scale of the simulation. I have to say, walking down the luxurious stairs into the ballroom gave me a weird sense of deja vu (no doubt due to the blockbuster movie) –

Virtual worlds giving classrooms a space for ‘Caine’s Arcade’?

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Caine’s Arcade is the (true) story of a 9 year old boy who built an elaborate cardboard arcade inside his dad’s used auto part store.

Caine’s Arcade from Nirvan Mullick on Vimeo.

The heartwarming video has gone viral and attracted a lot of commentary from educators but none more pertinent than this blog post by Ira Socol.

“As you watch this short film, you will see what children are capable of when they are given space for their imaginations to roam, when they are liberated from the external motivators of “grades” and other traditional assessments…. So where in your school, in your classroom, is the space for Caine’s Arcade?”

I love the way Ira ends with that question because that in essence is what MissionV is bringing to the classroom through virtual worlds – ‘a space for Caine’s Arcade’.

MissionV featured on IDA Ireland Magazine

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We’re delighted to have been featured on the cover of this month’s Innovation Ireland ezine from IDA Ireland.

MissionV featured in the IDA Ireland ezine

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