Forward December 2014 | Page 33

PR E PA R ATORY S C HO OL Meeting Andy Griffiths! Everybody knows Andy Griffiths. His books are amazing! But how many people actually get to meet him in person? I was lucky enough to be one of them. On Wednesday 10 September, my mum, brother and I travelled to Big W in Karrinyup to meet him. I was so excited! When I arrived I realised we were early because only one other person was in the queue. But before we knew it there were hundreds of people, filling half of the shop! I guess Andy Griffiths is really that popular. When I first met him I was excited, overwhelmed and I thought I was going to faint. Andy Griffiths is just as funny in person. He talked to me and was a real comedian. He said he had just come into Big W to buy some new underpants! At school last year I put together a paper bag book report on the Andy Griffiths book, Just Doomed. I took that with me, along with a copy of The 52 Storey Treehouse. Imagine my surprise when Andy Griffiths took out all of the things in the bag and took photos of them. He said he was going to put them on Instagram. How cool! My copies of The 52 Storey Tree House and Just Doomed are now signed by Andy Griffiths. They are kept in a safe place and I can’t tell you where! I really enjoyed my experience meeting this legendary author. Andy Griffiths is awesome! Bennett with Andy Griffiths. Bennett Rogers, Year 4 iPads in the Preparatory School Significant excitement and great enthusiasm begins immediately an iPad is brought into the classroom as a learning device. The need of this digital generation to ‘be connected’ is very strong. They seem to pick up the necessary skills surprisingly quickly and have a thirst to engage and create instantly. In the Preparatory School we currently have 87 iPads which are being utilised by teachers and students in all learning areas and across the whole school. These iPads are located in multiple locations for ease of use and quick access. The uses and benefits of this mobile learning device are endless. The iPads are being used to create digital narratives, capture and edit photos and video, manipulate data in tables and graphs, record and replay oral reading, consolidate spelling skills and speech to text dictation. The possibilities continue to grow! With these iPads you can take the classroom anywhere, anytime, anyway. The huge numbers of apps (short for applications) that are available free or at a very low cost are growing daily. Many of these apps are ‘drill and practice’ type tools; although increasingly many ‘create’ type apps are being developed. How the teachers are integrating these iPads into their teaching pedagogy is testament to their dedication to ‘give it a go’. The use of iPads in the classroom is directly benefiting every student and challenging them to interact, share, collaborate, classify, create and evaluate. These skills are fundamentally important for all modern day students who are commonly referred to as ‘digital natives’. Mr Simon Edgar Deputy Head – Curriculum 33