I haven’t been very active on my blog recently, nor on Twitter, as I have frantically been preparing for my AST assessment which was yesterday. I’m pleased to report that I passed and am now officially an Advanced Skills Teacher.
Well that was my first piece of good news, the second is that it’s nearly that time of year again . . . . . on 24th November is the 8th Microsoft Partners in Learning Forum at the Microsoft Campus in Reading. This was a fantastic event last year and is also free! You can check out the video from last year here.
This year I am lucky enough to be delivering a workshop with the fantastic Ray Chambers from Lodge Park Technology College called “Kinect and Kodu, A Games Based Approach”. Ray will be highlighting the excellent work he has been doing with Kinect in his classroom and I will be talking about the use of Kodu to make games in different contexts.
Other workshops include:
- Everyone is a Maths genius, can computer science/technology prove it? (Dr Chris Imafidon)
- Computing: The Science of Nearly Everything? (Dr Tom Crick)
- Be a Maker: learn to build gadgets with .NET Gadgeteer (Dr Scarlet Schwiderski-Grosche)
- Medicines and innovation – the missing link (Kandarp Thakkar)
- Guerrilla Teaching & Learning (Daniel Raven-Ellison)
- Who’s afraid of the big bad ‘network’ (Dan Roberts)
You can read in-depth information about these workshops at the Partners in Learning Website. From reading the descriptions of each of these workshops I’m sure the Forum will prove to be yet another outstanding event, I just wish I could attend all of the workshops myself!
You can sign up to the event directly here. I look forward to meeting some of you there on 24th November!

I am going to be running my successful Kodu in the Klassroom seminar again on 13th July in Margate, Kent. This time it will be free though!
If you are unfamiliar with Kodu, you can check out my previous entry
I have recently been playing with
The bonuses don’t end there though, if you want to try out your program without having to connect to your robot you can change to simulation mode which brings up a virtual robot and environment on screen to use for testing, this saves a lot of time when it comes to debugging!
The students will have the opportunity to build their robots and learn how to program and control them in real time using Xbox controllers. The technology faculty have agreed to build an arena, so I just need some keen students and some bluetooth adaptors for the netbooks! I’m very much looking forward to this project, I may even attempt to expand to a local primary school too if it all goes well!
Yesterday, as part of my Microsoft Evangelist role I was invited to run workshops at