What are the tried and tested structures from Teachmeets?
- 7 minute short presentation (sometimes 2 or 3 lined up)
- 2 minute nano presentation (3-5 one after the other)
- Break out sessions (@SLF 4 speakers took up 4 different locations, participants chose to listen to who they like)
- Random speakers - Classtools fruit machine.
- Web conference participants (@SLF Ian spoke from Islay. Yugma? Skype?)
What alternative ideas/structures could be included that would work during a TeachMeet event?
Lucky Dip - random topics (from a list on wiki) and random speakers (those who have signed up) from TeachMeet Borders
Fishbowl - from Fishbowl conversation Wikipedia
"Four to five chairs are arranged in an inner circle. This is the fishbowl. The remaining chairs are arranged in concentric circles outside the fishbowl. A few participants either volunteer or are selected to fill the fishbowl, while the rest of the group sit on the chairs outside the fishbowl. In an open fishbowl, one chair is left empty. In a closed fishbowl, all chairs are filled. The moderator introduces the topic and the participants start discussing the topic. The audience outside the fishbowl listen in on the discussion.
In an open fishbowl, any member of the audience can, at any time, occupy the empty chair and join the fishbowl. When this happens, an existing member of the fishbowl must voluntarily leave the fishbowl and free a chair. The discussion continues with participants frequently entering and leaving the fishbowl. Depending on how large your audience is you can have many audience members spend some time in the fishbowl and take part in the discussion. When time runs out, the fishbowl is closed and the moderator summarizes the discussion.
In a closed fishbowl, the initial participants speak for some time. When time runs out, they leave the fishbowl and a new group from the audience enters the fishbowl. This continues until many audience members have spent some time in the fishbowl. Once the final group has concluded, the moderator closes the fishbowl and summarizes the discussion."
Speed Geeking - a variant on the speed dating concept, this involves stationing some presenters round the venue and then giving them a slot in which to make their presentation. At the end of the presentation, the audience members move round to the next presentation. See Speedgeeking
We have used a variation of this at robofesta as a way of meeting as many people as possible - no presenter, but everyone in the group has 2 minutes to say who, what and why. Who they are, what they do and why they are there. Max 5 persons per group.
Democratic Selection - whilst I feel it is important that in the spirit of TeachMeet the vast majority of speakers are selected randomly, it does seem that at most TeachMeets there are a small number of speakers/presentations that almost everyone wants to see but who are not chosen. To allieviate this issue, TeachMeet attendees - both virtual and actual - could vote on the wiki in advance for the 1/2/3 presentations they most want to see, the top 3-5 being guaranteed a slot to present in. They could even be allocated specific time slots - eg 1st presentation, last presentation, last before break, first after break.....
TeachMe!
Isn't there an opportunity for a TeachMe, where pupils feed back to groups of teachers on what technology means to them, and what has worked in their classrooms? Just a thought. (@mrlockyer)
Youtube/TED Talks
Are we also not missing a massive opportunity to spread the TeachMeet word by filming the different talks on good quality DV, and then uploading them to our own TeachMeet channel on Youtube, a la the TED talks. They are either 2 or 7 minutes long, which is perfect for Youtube, and they will also have the opportunity of being exposed to far more educators, worldwide. (@mrlockyer)
Comments (2)
Iain Hallahan said
at 10:21 am on Apr 19, 2009
It's not letting me edit the page (again!) but I think the mini-note idea used at TMNEL09 was the ideal solution to the "Democratic Selection" issue raised above. Good work fellas!
Iain Hallahan
Nick Tait said
at 9:52 am on Sep 5, 2009
PechaKucha- Saw this at the Lighthouse Design centre. 7 Pictures, each picture lasts 30 secs, presenter has no control to change slides or speed up/slow down speed. Worked well.
Nick
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