Teach Middle East Magazine Jan-Feb 2016 Issue 3 Volume 3 | Page 23

Sharing Good Practice site editors. They became conductors, orchestrating the project and allowing for work with specific groups to be done in more depth. They buzzed from team to team, providing peer support and suggesting edits and improvements. The rules were set from the start that any new content on the site needed clearance from one of the editors and editorial release forms were provided for ‘staff’ to complete and submit to the editor’s in-tray for review. Ameerah Kerr (with the clipboard) conducts an appraisal with (L) Shuruthii Chandrasega and Lucy Wright (R). cohort in Year 4 as the familiarity with this similar interface bred confidence. I didn’t explain the full extent of the project just yet (suspense can be a powerful thing). I did explain that they would each be assigned specific roles within the team and that their performance in this session would determine the role they were given. SESSION 2: Welcome to the team The second lesson began with two major hooks: Firstly, they found out that the website project was in fact a competition between the classes. The winner would be determined by tracking the number of hits that the site got. Free Stat Counter widget was used to track this data. It should be highlighted that it was made very clear to t