Monday, June 29, 2015

C4Ta#3

C4Ta#3 Post 1 

Summary of Post 1: In John Spencer's latest post, Go Make Something, he mentions how people always have something to complain about. Although with these complaints, there is no effort to come up with a solution. He provided several examples of situations where some educators were solving conflicts with applying project-based learning. He asks his readers that the next time we have a complaint, respond with the questions: "What have I made to help solve the problem? If not... Who do I know that is solving this problem? How can I promote that solution?"

He then lists the risks of being a maker. John says that they are real and they should not be glossed over.

  • You expose your idea to the potential of failure- "Once you actually commit to making something, you face the very really risk where it might tank entirely."
  • You expose yourself to scrutiny- You get criticized and it might hurt sometimes.
  • You feel exhausted- Ideas take time and aren't always easy. They also take energy.
  • You upset people- You might make enemies because of your opinions.
  • You face your limitations- You have to admit and ask for help because we don't know everything.
On the other hand, John lists the benefits of being a teacher-maker. 
  • You get to test what works, and what doesn't work in education.
  • It's often fun- Although criticized sometimes, good and fun does come out of making things.
  • You get to serve others- Changing someone's life can be very impactful.
  • You learn what you don't know- Everyone is constantly learning, even as a maker.
John says ultimately kids need teacher-makers. Although parents play an important role in their own students life, the teachers are the stakeholders. Teachers remember what it requires to be a student and to be able to do the things they do. John encourages his readers to, "Start a movement. Build a platform. Craft a product. Design a system. Solve a complex problem. Invent. Create. Ask. Build. Learn. Be a maker." 

C4Ta#3 Comment 1


Comment 1: I really enjoyed reading your post. As a secondary education major in college, I'm excited to read new things and see what other teachers have to say about the classroom. Although I won't be in the classroom for a couple of years, it's nice to see different strategies to use and I can see myself applying this in my own one day. Thank you!

Screenshot of John Spencers Blog Page


C4Ta#3 Post 2

Summary of Post 2: In John Spencer's latest post, Seven Stages in Moving from Consuming to Creating, he shares his point of view being an educator and a father. As an educator, he said it was ultimately frustrating to see students using technology to consume it, rather than create with it. Spencer said he did not see until he had children of his own that "creativity is inherently social." We learn from other people and students look up to adults as well. He witnessed them going through a process of noticing, exploring, copying, and finally finding their own way. Not only did he see this in his own children, but also in the students he taught in the classroom. Ultimately, Spencer said there are 7 stages that we go through from move from being consumers of the media, to creators of the media. 

1. Exposure- Either passive or direct. We get hooked on something we like one way or the other.
2. Active Consuming- Actively seeking out, not as a fan, but as a consumer. In the way that is more focused on the aesthetics or focused on practical utility.
3. Critical Consuming- Taste becomes more refined. You become start to become an expert of your interest.
4. Curating- Both a fan and critic in this stage, according to Spencer. You start picking out the best and start commenting on it. 
5. Copying- as it sounds.
6. Mash-Ups- Collaborating other interests you like in the mix as well.
7. Creating- You start being original. 

Spencer admitted in the end, the steps aren't locked in place. Some students skip steps, and some go through the simultaneously. He then ends that going from consuming to creating is more of a journey than a jump. 

C4Ta#3 Comment 2

Comment 2: I personally find myself consuming more than I do creating. But coming to college has really opened up the creating aspect for me. Being out on your own, I find myself having to create more out of consuming what I've been taught. As a kid though, especially with the imagination, I remember doing the same thing as well. It's a journey, rather than a jump.

Screenshot of Spencer's Blog



Blog Post #11

What can we learn from these teachers?

Screenshot of Lecture
In Brian Crosby's lecture, Back to the Future, he was trying to get across to why students are so disconnected. Within his fourth grade classroom, he shared several examples of projects he had done in his classroom. Mr. Crosby focused on empowering students to be learners in his classroom. With his projects, he wanted the students to do things on their own by collaborating, connecting, and motivating themselves. Towards the end of his lecture, he points out that he feels teachers who are not on board with PBL, are just racing their students through school. Crosby said we, as educators, have to make sure we give them opportunity to build schema in the world. Overall, we need to go back to building schools that honor kids.



The Blended Learning Cycle was a video made by Mr. Paul Anderson. His definition of the blended learning cycle included Blended learning and the Learning cycle. Blended learning includes information that is found online, mobile, and in the classroom. The Learning cycle is based around the five E's: Engage, Explore, Expand, Explain, Evaluate. With these two cycles blended together, he formed an acronym that he often uses to incorporate the Blending Learning Cycle in his classroom. His acronym is QUIVERS. QU stands for the question. I stands for investigate. V stands for video. E stands for elaboration. R stands for review. And S stands for summary quiz. With this acronym, Mr. Anderson saw improvement in learning. He said he now feels his students are actually learning and understanding the subject. One last thing Mr. Anderson noted was that he doesn't feel you learn something unless you can explain it yourself.

Mr. Anderson's Lecture Screenshot



Newspaper Headline
Making Thinking Visible was a short video showing how PBL is used in the classroom. In the video, the students were asked to come up with a headline for a project they were working on. Overall, this was the starter headline for a whole project coming soon to them. At the end of the project, the students were asked how the headline changed after going through with the project. We can see here that learning evolves and you can always build on what you started out with. Raise the bar, don't set standards.





In Sam Pane 5th Grade, the students in this fifth grade classroom were leaning how to be good digital citizens. To display what they learned, after discussing it as a class, the teacher let them loose in creating their own superhero. They were then going to make a comic strip with them and their super hero, showing how to be a good digital citizen. After a few minutes of creating the project, the teacher asked them to get up and move to another table to critique another students work. Overall, this teacher gave the students a sense of power and individualism. He also applied a real world situation, which makes it more meaningful in the end. They also had the incorporation of integrating subjects. The students were using dialogue and also building a complete narrative. Students are always exposed online, so the teacher was teaching, through PBL, how to effectively be a good digital citizen.

Comic Strip


Integrated LearningProject Based Learning was focused on a school in Canada. Three teachers of different subjects, collaborated to make learning more effective. This brings engaged learnings and deeper understanding. This cannot be easily accomplished in segregated classroom. In this video, English and History collaborated together. With collaboration, the teachers in these classrooms get more time which leads to more effective learning. It makes a difference from what students learn in just a one hour class. Overall, this is an example of collaboration working better for two subjects, rather than working independently and not getting as much across to students effectively.


Roosevelt Elementary PBL Program goes over the different steps and accomplishments of PBL. In Project Based Learning there are results of in-depth learning, integrated thematic instruction, a "real world" problem, research based, and project and presentation. Teachers are teaching students how to think for themselves while they themselves are learning to collaborate together. The educators of Roosevelt Elementary learned when students get to choose, it gives them a sense of power and a sense of ownership. It also lets them experience what adults do in the real world. Studemts learn to work independently but also in groups. Students social skills build on each other, especially when they get a sense of community. Overall, with PBL, there is more student engagement. Every child has a spark in them for what's in the world around them. Project Based Learning will allow them to focus and question what's around them.

PBL

Special Blog Post Assignment

6 Resourceful Sites from Dr. Jacobs' Website, Curriculum 21

Dr. Jacobs Website' title=

1. Pinterest
    Pinterest Homepage
One of the resources I found on Dr. Jacobs' was Pinterest. It's a website where you can pin ideas and posts from fellow pinners all over the world, to your virtual wall. You can categorize any way you prefer. You can find anything from lesson plan ideas, to classroom decorating ideas. I believe when I become a teacher, this site will be useful for me to look for a sense of direction if I need new ideas.


2. Storybird

Blendspace HomepageThis website is one I could use in my secondary classroom. This website lets us reverse the norm. Instead of coming up with a visual after they create the text, they get to see the visual first, allowing for more ideas, more creativity, and better writing. This would be something I would use so students get a different effect from a typical English class.




This resource would be great for my classroom, or any, because it allows for great brainstorming and organizational for professionals development, meetings, and the classroom as well. It not only uses text but it also uses images and videos can be viewed and shared.

Writing FIx Homepage

This website is for teachers and students, alike. I could see myself using this in my future classroom because it gives great resources for writers, including: interactive prompts, lessons, and resources for the classroom.


Shakespeare Virtual Globe Tour Page

I found this website very resourceful and interesting. Being a secondary English major, I would find this interesting to use in the classroom when reading Shakespeare. The website allows for virtual tours of Shakespeare's Globe to see where the plays were performed. This way the students are getting a visual of how the plays were portrayed.



This resource could be great in the classroom when I get my students writing papers in my classroom. This will give them a visual of different words they can use in their papers, ultimately broadening their vocabulary.


Other Websites I liked:

Thursday, June 25, 2015

Blog Post #10

What can we learn from Mrs. Cassidy?

In Little Kids, Big Potential, we get an overview of what is going on in Mrs. Cassidy's first grade classroom. Even being in the first grade, working with technology doesn't stop her students. No project is too big for them. Mrs. Cassidy has her students writing blogs, using an online portfolio, also using the classroom webpage to find things on the internet, using wikis, making videos, using Skype, and playing on Nintendo DS. All of these things incorporate technology effectively in her classroom. She is not the only one, but she is one of the few teachers in her school that realize how important incorporating technology in the classroom is for students. Even at a young age and even just browsing the surface of some programs, gives them a head start in their education.

Mrs. Cassidy Interview Screenshot

In all 3 interview videos with Dr. Strange and Mrs. Cassidy, we see the importance of technology in the classroom. In Interview Part 1 with Kathy Cassidy, Dr. Strange asked how Mrs. Cassidy got involved with technology and when it all started. Mrs. Cassidy explained she started getting involved ten years prior when the school provided her with five computers. The computers had nothing but internet. So she had to do research on how she could incorporate technology and teach students things without programs. That's when she first started her webpage. A couple years later she started a class blog and then has been trying to add something new ever since. Dr. Strange then asked Mrs. Cassidy if she had done most of it by herself or did she have to have help getting started. She replied that it was mostly done by her, but she had support from her tech supporter. Whenever she had questions, or whenever he needed a guinea pig, they helped each other out. Not only that, but Dr. Strange wanted to know if she had support from administrators. It was honestly shocking to hear her answer. She didn't get a definite "yes" or support, but they didn't deny her use of technology in her teaching. Mrs. Cassidy said she sent out forms at the beginning of each school year for parents to sign, asking for their permission to let their children participate in activities on the internet. She explained parents love the idea of having their students do things online. It gives them a chance to access the page anytime and it's broadening their children's knowledge. Kids and technology go hand in hand. The kids love it! She also pointed out, like many other educators we've blogged about, technology isn't going away. There are benefits for using it in the classroom. For her first graders when they blog, they get so excited when someone comments back on their blog. It shows they have an audience and that they're not just doing it for Mrs. Cassidy's sake. Even though some teachers don't want to change, they need to. Teachers should be technologically literate. We are all learners and we should continue to learn to help others learn.

Twitter Logo

Interview Part 2 with Kathy Cassidy is a short segment. Dr. Strange asked Mrs. Cassidy about her PLN. She said we should look into technology by what we're interested in. She mentions how important twitter has opened up for her. This is where Dr. Strange found Mrs. Cassidy. She also explains that a PLN evolves over time. Whenever you start one, it doesn't happen right away. It's a continuos cycle. We always want to continuously learn from others who are in the midst of learning as well.



Question MarkLastly in Interview Part 3 with Kathy Cassidy, Dr. Strange had students ask Mrs. Cassidy questions they had themselves. One student asked her how often she has her students blog. Mrs. Cassidy said it depended on the school year. Although, the usual amount is once a week, maybe even twice a week. Another student asked if she feared cheating with her students in the classroom. She explained she never has had the fear of cheating. The work is more collaborative and if anything, you have to piggy back off of other information. Next, another student asked if Facebook could be a potential resource in the classroom. Any social media can be useful or harmful in the classroom. It's the way you present it. If it were a school account that had specific purposes, she said it could have potential. A different student then asked how Mrs. Cassidy protected her students from resources on the internet. She said it's first about protecting the students themselves and then secondly protecting what they say. She take cautions by only using first names and no pictures. She said she hasn't had a problem since she started. She ultimately picks where the children can go according to the class website and as long as they stick to that they shouldn't have any problems searching elsewhere. The only problem she has in her first grade classroom is the students wanting to venture off to websites to non-educational games. Overall, Mrs. Cassidy answered many students questions, but before she left Dr. Strange asked her a favor of seeing her backyard. Being from Canada, it was snowing at the time the video was made and all of the viewers were in awe.

A couple of techniques Mrs. Cassidy used that I would incorporate into my classroom would be the use of blogging and videos. This could help my potential students in their writing skills and also punctuation and grammar. I would use videos to help with public speaking and also using them for projects with books we would read in my classroom. Some impediments I might run into would be having trouble setting everything up, but once we get going, everyone will be learning, including myself. I think these techniques will benefit my classroom in broadening my students' use of technology and putting themselves out in the real world when they blog. These are crucial skills needed for when they get into the real world. They should already use these skills in the classroom, and I plan to help them achieve this.

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Project #9

Project #14

In this lesson plan which I collaborated with my group, we focused our lesson plan on a first grade classroom. We are asking the students to get into groups of 4 and to choose either a frog or butterfly to research from egg to adult. Then they will each be asked to choose a photo and describe their photo, the catch being they can't describe their own. They must choose another team members to describe. Then collaborate it all into a Google Slides Presentation.


Frog Clipart

Butterfly CLipart
   


Project #12A

Blog Post #9

What can teachers and students teach us about Project Based Learning?


Number 77 Essentials for PBL is one resource that every teacher could use the knowledge about. When talking about projects, there are efficient and non-efficient ways of going about accomplishing them. A project is meaningful if it meets two criteria:

1. The students must perceive the work as personally meaningful.
2. It must fulfill an educational purpose.

As the title says in the same resource, there are seven essential elements of meaningful projects:


1. A Need to Know
  • "Teachers can powerfully activate students need to know content by launching a project with an "entry event" that engages interest and initiates questioning. "
  • "Many students find school work to be meaningless because they don't have a need to perceive."
  • Giving the students a compelling project gives them a need to know.
2. A Driving Question
  • Captures the heart of a project in a clear, compelling language in the form of open-ended, complex, and proactive.
  • The question can be abstract, concrete, or focused on solving a problem.
  • Going without a driving question, is like writing an essay with no thesis statement.
3. Student Voice and Choice
  • "Although on the limited choice scale, the learners can select a topic to study within a driving question or choose how to create, design, or present product."
  • Students feel the project is more meaningful when they have a say in the project.
4. 21st Century Skills 
  • Projects should give students an opportunity to collaborate, communicate, think critically, and use technology which will help them in the work place and life.
5. Inquiry and Innovation
  • Students conduct real inquiry which means they follow a trail that begins with own questions which leads to search for resources and discovery of answers, and often leads to generating new questions, testing ideas, and drawing their own conclusions.
  • It also involves innovation, with a new question, product, and solution, independently.
6. Feedback and Revision
  • Makes learning meaningful because it emphasizes creating quality products and purposes. Students must understand everything is not perfect the first time.
  • Frequent feature of the real world.
  • Use rubrics and other criteria on students products.
7. Publicly Presented Product
  • More meaningful when presented to an audience, not just the teacher.
Checklist


PBL WordsIn Tony Vincent's PBL for Teachers, he creates a presentation on what PBL consists of. He describes that Project Based Learning has students working over an extended period of answering a driving question that is deep and requires students to complete an end product to share their learning with others. Tony says Common Core Standards are the WHAT, which means it is: evidence based, filled with rigorous content, aligned with college and work expectations, clear and understandable, and applicable of knowledge. Project Based Learning is the HOW, which means it is: inquiry based, open ended, problem solving, and personalized. Just as the first article mentioned, students learn collaborative skills, communication skills, critical thinking and career life skills. Technology plays a role in PBL. He lists plenty of examples, such as: Xtranormal, PowerPoint, Zooburst, Popplet, Glogster, Meeting Words, record MP3, Edmodo, Google Docs, Prezi, Qwiki, Blabberize, Pic Collages, Educreations, QR Codes, Pixton, Linoit, SchoolTube, Skype, pen.10, Dropbox, iPiccy, Go Animate, PBworks, Posterous, Class Dojo, Dabbleboard, Movie Maker, Screenr, Rubistar, and Google. This long list gives endless possibilities of opportunities to involve PBL in the classroom and gives options to applicate to the real world at the same time. While technology plays a vital role, students are more vital because they take charge in Project Based Learning. In the video, Tony quotes Einstein, "I never teach my pupils. I only attempt to provide the conditions in which I can learn."Lastly, Tony notes PBL involves a purpose, addressing an audience, crafting a driving question, identifying learning standards, creating a rubric, grouping students, brainstorming branching questions, meeting deadlines, focusing on the process, and refining the end product. PBL does all of this while also letting students have a voice and choice in the lesson. No wonder school systems are switching over to PBL. Students are more involved and are learning how to apply their lessons in the real world as well.

Students thinking


PBL: What motivates students today? is a video made by Susan Ball asking students questions about school. Students noted some thoughts of what motivates them. One student said when a teacher congratulates them or honors their work in the classroom, it makes them feel good and accomplished. Another student mentions what motivates them to do well in school is that they want to do well in life. They have goals of getting a house and a job to provide for their family in the future. On the same topic, another student says what motivates them is making good grades so they can get into college. College opens up all sorts of doors to the future and is almost required nowadays to make it by. Lastly, another student notes what motivates him to do well in school is his mom. Without good grades, she takes away fun things and that's the last thing this student wants taken away from him. Then Susan asked the students what rewards work for them in the classroom. Many students say they get specific things, each day of the week depending on how well they do in class that week. They gave examples of Music Monday and Wacky Facts Wednesday. Other students said they like food, candy, brownie points, and paper money to spend on prizes at the end of the week. Although this video is a couple of years old, these rewards still seem to work in the classroom. These ways still help motivate students in the classroom.


10 Sites Supporting the Digital Classroom is as it sounds. Mike Gorman made a list of ten sites that would be helpful to teachers in the classroom.

1. Titan Pad- is used for collaboration and sharing a document; simplistic Google Doc as Gorman says.
2. Wall Wisher- Gorman describes it like collaborating virtual post-it notes on a virtual wall.
3. Corkboardme- Gorman says it's like Wall Wisher but can be used to support group collaborative projects.
4. Google Docs-  Gorman gave the free school version.
5. Microsoft Live- online collaboration tools, again Gorman gave the school link.
6. Today's Meet- Gorman describes this website to run a back channel for the classroom. It gives isolated room for the teachers and students.
website screen
7. Will you Type with me- same opportunities as Titan Pad. It also has the ability to import additional files including Word, HTML, and PDF, according to Gorman. It also allows output to same files along with OpenDoc, Plain Text, and Wordle.
8. Linoit- described as electronic classroom display board. Teachers or students can leave the classroom and it can be visible anywhere on any computer. You can create it in minutes using multi-colored post-it notes, pictures, drawings, weblinks, and videos. Students can also contribute by being given a URL.
9. Skype in Education- Gorman says this is a way to bring experts into the classroom.
10. Quick Screen Share- pretty self explanatory, gives the ability to share a screen.


Probability spinnerNight book coverPBL in High School English and Math shows one school's transformation to implementing PBL into their system. The school focused on the subjects of Math and English because people don't think to use PBL in them as much. English teachers mentioned it was harder for literature because authentic problems are philosophical questions and going beyond that is a challenge. But the teachers questioned, "How do we give students more?" In English classes, before PBL, it was all about the text but now it is about engaging with texts as writers themselves. In one lesson, a teacher was giving a PBL project on Weisels' Night, where the students were asked to look at the consequences of remaining silence. Along with that they were asked to apply it by researching groups in the same context. They were asked to see beyond how the groups broke from silence as the author did. PBL changes the teachers, but especially the students perspective on the subject and what it entails. The teachers are currently trying to figure out what works best with trial and error. The teachers also mention that they are not switching every lesson and unit to PBL. They just apply where they feel is necessary and useful. In the math department, the teachers were focusing on the lesson of probability. With this, they gave their students opportunities to make games of their choice as long as it followed guidelines. They found it to be very successful for the students. Overall, the school has seen enormous outcomes already for PBL and see why the change was necessary.

       

Thursday, June 18, 2015

Blog Post #8

What can we learn about teaching and learning from Randy Pausch?

Randy Pausch Lecture

In the video, Randy Pausch's Last Talk, our speaker talks about how his lectures go about and he specifically goes over his topics for the lecture presented, including: his childhood dreams, enabling dreams of others, and lessons learned. Randy explained that the points behind his lectures is he always thinks to talk about a topic like it is his last. He is very sick and he doesn't know when his last day will be, so he speaks as if every day is.


Rocks Spelling anything is possible
He first approaches his audience with his childhood dreams. What do we get out of that that involves teaching and learning? He uses his childhood dreams as examples of what he has learned from his dreams. One thing he states is: "ANYTHING IS POSSIBLE!" Inspiration and permission to dream is also huge. His childhood dreams included: Being in zero gravity, playing in the NFL, winning stuffed animals, being Captain Kirk, and being a Disney Imagineer. Randy said he never got to play in the NFL nor did he ever come close, but he learned more from not achieving the dream of playing more than any other dream. His old coach taught him many things. At their first practice, he wanted the team to know fundamentals were more important than bringing a bunch of balls to throw, especially when only one person had it at a time. One rehearsal, Randy said he was yelled at continuously and his coach rode him hard. The assistant coach came to him afterwards and told him if Coach had given him no comment, then that meant he had given up on him. He believed Randy could achieve anything, and that's why he continuously rode him that rehearsal. He knew by doing this, he was pushing him that extra mile. He gives us the quote, "Experience is what you get when you didn't get what you wanted." He says most of what we learn, we learn indirectly. The coach's purpose for Randy was to send kids out to learn more than just football. In his other dreams, he said you realize some of the things you won't be able to do. He did learn other things through his dreams, including leadership when he met his childhood idol Captain Kirk, instead of being him like he dreamed. He noted Captain Kirk was never the smartest character on the ship but he had leadership qualities no one else had. Then he lastly goes into depth about his dream of being a Disney Imagineer. Although being declined nicely several times to work with the imagineering program, he said he wasn't going to give up. This is what Randy termed as getting past his brick wall. Our brick walls are there to let us prove how badly we want something. One other thing he learned from Disney is if you wait long enough, people will surprise and impress you. Overall, after working with Disney on a top secret imagineering job, he declined it as a permanent job because he wanted to go out and enable childhood dreams of others.

Building virtual worlds

In the second part of his lecture, he asked, "How can I enable childhood dreams of others?" He went on to Carnegie Mellon University and started a course called Building Virtual Worlds. After his first project from his first class, he was amazed at the work his students created and didn't know if they could go beyond that. Randy said he called a colleague for advice and he asked what he should do next. His colleague told him to say, "Not too bad this go round, but what can you do better?" The overall message given is don't set a bar for kids. Because once they get there, they won't go beyond it. It gave his students excitement, which gave excitement to others, when the whole university started coming to watch their final products at the end of the semester. They were excited to share their hard work, because Randy never gave them a bar to set themselves to, they exceeded their own. After several years of that course, he moved onto another called The Dream Fulfillment Factory. This class was for graduate students. He basically said he had no patience for book learning. They did all of that in undergraduate studies. Randy defined this course as one involving project based learning. All in all, after the semester, he said the best gift an educator could give is to be self reflective. He applied "head-fake" strategy his whole career. This basically goes beyond the fundamental basics of the matter.


In the last section of Randy's lecture, he talks about lessons learned. Randy says that we don't get anywhere without the help of our parents, colleagues, friends, teachers, or mentors. We don't get where we are in life alone. Advice he gives to us is to: tell the truth, be earnest, apologize when you screw up, focus on others and not yourself. Not only this but he mentions that the brick wall lets us show dedication. To get around it, he advises to: not bail, get a feedback loop and LISTEN to it, show gratitude, and don't complain, just work harder.

Friends


In the final minutes, Randy gives his last pieces of advice.

  • Be good at something. It makes you valuable.
  • Work hard. 
  • Find the best in everybody; no matter how you have to wait for them to show it.
  • Be prepared.
I believe this is what Randy is saying about learning and teaching. Be open to anything and everything. Don't let one small issue stand in your way. Figure out your way around it and find help along the way. 

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

C4Ta#2

CTa#2 Post 

Summary of Post 1 made June 8, 2015: In the blog post, Gamifying Classrooms by Jeff Utecht, our speaker talks about how "gamifying" the classroom is motivational for teachers and more importantly, the students. The term is easily mistaken for, as the author said, "using games in the learning environment". "Gamification is using the ideas that are found in games to motivate students in a fun, competitive and engaging way that speaks to their inner kid." Jeff mentions that it is really taking off in upper elementary levels and middle school levels. He also gives links to COETAIL Final Project and to Gamification of Education to understand the process more.

CTa#2 Comment

Comment: I feel using this type of approach could be helpful, especially with our generation leaning towards a more technologically based society. I enjoyed learning and exploring into the Gamification world, if with just a brief overview with your links.

Game Board


CTa#2 Post

Summary of Post 2 made June 4, 2015: In Jeff Utecht's blog regarding COETAIL, which has listed in the logo that it is "A community Aproach to Learning", he talks about the details for registration of this program is now available and the actual program is coming in September 2015. He gives several links to see ideas of how COETAIL, and how the 18 month program is beneficial in the classroom.

CTa#2 Comment

Comment: This is a very interesting approach to the classroom. It is not something I've ever heard of before but reading your blog made me more aware of what other opportunities are out there.

COETAIL Logo

Project #13

My group and I did a lesson plan for a first grade classroom, classifying and identifying leaves and their characteristics.

Varieties of Leaves


Project 13 Rubric
Project 13 Project Planner-BIE
Project 13 Calendar-BIE Resource


Monday, June 15, 2015

Blog Post #7

iMovie LogoAVL LogoIn the video by Dr. Strange and also Elizabeth Davis and Michelle Bennett, Using iMovie and AVL in Kindergarten, they talk about the different approaches teachers are making with students. They especially talk about the progress being made in the kindergarten classrooms. Michelle spoke about how she went to observe a teacher in her school, Ms. Tubbs kindergarten classroom, and she couldn't have been more amazed. Her students were creating iMovie trailers for their story of the week. Ms. Tubbs' kindergarteners were writing the scripts, listing their names, describing the pictures, etc. Michelle also explained that Ms. Tubbs approached her students through stations, with iMovie being one of them. Then we heard from Elizabeth Davis. She went over the different functions of Alabama Virtual Library (AVL). She mentioned how valuable it was as a learning tool and she also pointed out that Kindergarteners are even using it as well. She notes that it is a great way to teach students basic research. Students are able to pull up images, visit encyclopedias by their age groups, etc. One example she gave of her kindergarten students was how they were researching by pulling up a different animal each week so they could get practice. All in all, in this video, we see the media specialists used several approaches of learning through technology. Ms. Davis and Ms. Bennett were applying real world applications and broadening the students horizons from day one. This helps students know what is out there and how to apply what they learned in school from here on out.


Learn PictureWe all Become Learners was a video made by the same media specialists from above and Dr. Strange. In this video, the educators talk about how we all are learners and will always continue to learn for our whole education career. There are changes to the dynamics of learning, to where we are all using a device of some sort. As of right now we are seeing teachers teaching students, students teaching students and students teaching teachers. Everyone is constantly learning! But our job as educators, is to dig deeper. Ms. Bennett spoke about how she tries to teach mechanics in her library time. This supports the teacher by teaching specific parts of the device, so they can move on as a whole, to the lesson when they get back to the classroom. Michelle also pointed out that we all become learners in each others own PLN. Teachers aren't worried about teaching the mechanics, or they shouldn't be. Teachers get students to teach, which changes the dynamics of learning because we all have devices. When we learn from each other, we teach each other. We see the same learning approaches as the video above. Technology has taken a toll on our generation, and generations to come and we need to embrace it.


Note From Principal Clip Art

Out of the many videos to choose from, I was limited to the several high school interviews with Dr. Rosado and Dr. Strange. I really wanted to apply mainly to my age group that I am pursuing my education towards and these were the best resources. I chose one elementary video to see the differences between elementary and secondary approaches. In the first video I chose, Interview Rosado How to Get a Job, Dr. Strange and Dr. Rosado, principal of Gulf Shores High School, have a video chat on what he is looking for in a new teacher at his school. Dr. Rosado starts out that hiring has changed, even from just three years ago. When he is hiring a new teacher he is looking for: someone who knows technology, someone who works technology, a team player, and not a lecturer. He then clarifies that it is not just technology, he is looking for someone to use different ways to approach and teach students. He wants real world applications. One of the departments at GSHS, specifically the engineering department, is building a boy scout building in the community. Not only that, but the marine biology classes are building actual reefs. Dr. Rosado explained that we as educators, should focus on: getting ourselves involved in real world projects, be learners ourselves, and do team activities. We must go outside of the realm we were taught in growing up. We see the approaches to learning in this video is to apply real world matters, not just broadening our horizons through technology.


Principal's DeskInterview Rosado Part 2 is just as it says. Dr. Strange asked Dr. Rosado several questions throughout regarding GSHS. One being, "How has technology changed your school?" He says that there are still lockers, but they are hardly used because the students use the backpacks provided for them. He also says there are hardly any textbooks left either. There is also technology in the hallways. Educators can see whether a student is doing work or not but for the majority they are. Dr. Rosado also mentions that technology isn't perfect. There are still students off task and though they monitor quite frequently, they can't catch all of the students off task. But with good lessons given by teachers, it diminishes the negatives and promotes enthusiasm and engagement. It is also calm in the hallways, surprisingly. Dr. Rosado explains it as "calm in a sense of hallway discipline and management." One other change that technology has brought is the school is nearly paperless. As of two years ago, Rosado said he spent about $6000 every year on paper and copy supplies and now he only spends about $400 a year. By going paperless, he says they're not getting rid of the library but it offers up questions of what it will bring in the next few years. Dr. Rosado explained that they took part of the library and turned it into a Dolphin Cafe, to give it more of a college type feel and environment. There is a charging station to use and also a wall that the art department was appointed to design. With all of this, Rosado is applying real world applications just within the school itself. Not even necessarily in the teaching aspect. Even the hallways and library can impact a students learning. He is taking new approaches to better educate his facility, faculty, and students.



MacBook ClipArtAlthough this video seems similar to the first, Interview Rosado Part 1 talks about applying the real world in the school. Dr. Rosado, principal of Gulf Shores High School, had another interview with Dr. Strange. He spoke about the "digital renaissance" happening. He says its been hard for teachers to follow this adjustment because they were taught a different way to teach, and now they are being told to apply real world applications. His educators, as well as many if not most, are comfortable with books. Now all teachers and students are using Macs. Students are now on the same level because they are taught on the Macs. It is our responsibility to teach the student but we must change how we approach them. Dr. Rosado says teachers are now putting their lessons into an app called Moodle, which makes it available for all to see as long as you have a password. Not only has technology had such an impact of GSHS teachers but also the students. Dr. Rosado also mentions how the availability of technology has reduced discipline. He received 350 less discipline forms just within the first year of bringing technology into the school systems. It has affected attendance. With technology coming in quicker than imaginable, it is making huge improvements in such a short amount of time. Although it brings changes for the teachers, we need to keep in mind that we are always learning. Technology is the continuous approach to learning at GSHS and we see the impact is has made on everyone.


Son reading to Father


Lastly, in the video Mrs. Lauber Interview, Dr. Strange interviews a second grade teacher. She was asked if technology benefitted her in the classroom. She said yes. Especially since each student had their own iPad now. The better the tools, the better and quicker the task is done. Mrs. Lauber explains that the students have technology around them constantly, at home or at school. But she doesn't always rely on it. She starts out with paper rubrics so the students know what she wants. She starts the rubric by asking an essential question per lesson. She then uses Moodle to demonstrate videos, tasks, articles, and presentations. So pencil and paper hasn't gone completely down the drain today, but it isn't being used as often. One thing that was striking in this interview, was when Mrs. Lauber pointed out that the children do more on their own with technology. She is just a facilitator. There is more peer tutoring than anything. Then Dr. Strange provoked the question, "Do your children know what rubrics are/ how to use them?" Mrs. Lauber says the students understand rubrics. She described her using them as a way to let her students know what she wants, just on a smaller scale. One last thing Dr. Strange asked Mrs. Lauber about was real world reading. Mrs. Lauber then mentioned DIBBLES. DIBBLES are no longer state mandated, but is now simply used to test fluency. Throughout the year, students are tested three times to see how they are progressing. This provides opportunities for teachers to know at what level their students are reading. The goal is to go above and beyond. Again, Mrs. Lauber teaches using real world applications.

English Teacher Teaching


I believe after watching all six videos, I can tell I have some strengths for what's happening in the classroom but mostly weaknesses. I can tell that I will be prepared for technology in one aspect, but I have a long way to go. As Dr. Strange always says, "We are all learners." I have several weaknesses that I can already tell too. I know I will struggle with basing lessons on real world applications. Just thinking about trying to apply the real world to a secondary english classroom seems tough, but what part of educating is not tough? I know it's rewarding in the end. With more classes and instruction, I can gather more ideas so I can apply it in my own classroom one day. Another weakness I see is also incorporating technology as much as other classrooms do. Again, being an english major, it's hard to imagine how to incorporate technology beyond Moodle. I think in the next year and a half, I need to apply myself and look into actual classrooms for ideas on how other english teachers do it. With these applications, I feel I can accomplish being a better teacher and educator in the future!

Tuesday, June 9, 2015

Monday, June 8, 2015

Blog Post #6

What do you learn from these conversations with Anthony Capps?

In this post, we were required to look at several video conversations between Anthony Capps and Dr. Strange. They went through several useful tools and covered lots of information in about an hours time. Their first video they focused on, Project Based Learning, Part 1, came in two parts. In this first video, one important question that was addressed was, "How do you approach project-based learning as a teacher?" Anthony goes onto talk about, first, that as educators, we have the wrong idea about projects. Instead of how we portray them now, we need to shift in means of getting them to learn something. In essence, creating something as they learn the knowledge. As said by Anthony and Dr. Strange, the goals of a good project is: have an authentic audience, have the students interest in mind, involve the community, and drive the content. Anthony really harps on, as educators, we are given content standards by the state to drive our appointed grade level. We must think of what kind of projects can we create that will give our students an opportunity to need to know the content that we need them to know. Anthony also gave an example of his students in PBL. He and his third graders wrote letters to our congressman regarding someone in history, serving in military capacity. It got the students involved and interested in what they were doing because they felt they were making an impact. Overall, in this video, the statements, "Review Everything!" and "Teachers are learners as well" concludes the video.

PBL Cycle


In Strange's and Anthony's second part of the video,  Project Based Learning, Part 2, they go more into depth on the subject. Anthony mentions, in the classroom, some projects don't go well. Both he and Dr. Strange also say in PBL, you are going to get more than you, as an upcoming educator, expect. So, never limit students by giving them exactly what we want them to do. Let them go beyond what you want them to do and they will. Dr. Strange says, PBL involves a powerful method by which students learn. It takes a lot of planning, a lot of work, and fancy footwork to make it successful. As an educator, if a project is not successful, it is successful in the way students are still learning and reflecting upon it to better next time. Another note to mention is, Anthony pointed out the only time his students have disliked projects is when it involves collaboration. Nonetheless, administrators, on all levels, have high approval ratings for PBL. These two videos are very valuable for my education, and these are just stepping stones for what I have ahead of me.

iCurio logo

In our third video, iCurio, featuring Anthony and Dr. Strange, they talk about a online tool called, as the video is called, iCurio. iCurio has three parts to it. The main feature and purpose it serves as is it's a search engine that is filtered for educational purposes. The search engine aspect doesn't restrict you to just text, it incorporates video and audio, as well. Other components are the storage capacity and timelines. In the storage capacity, students get practice organizing online. In the timeline feature, students are able to search by criteria. This website is useful for all grade levels.



The fourth video, Discovery Education, by Anthony and Dr. Strange, talks about the benefits of the website to teachers and students. The actual website, Discovery Education, has everything beyond the realm of all subjects, as Anthony puts it. It brings experts in the classroom via video. It is used to bring texts, overall, to life. Discovery Education let's you couplet text with images because students, nowadays, are starting to watch and listen, more than they are reading and writing.

Discovery Ed. Logo


Tips Post itOur fifth useful video in this blog called, Anthony and Strange Tips for Teachers, Part 1, is just what it says. Both, Anthony and Dr. Strange give five key things to remember as a teacher.

1. Learning: Be interested in learning yourself, if not, you won't be a successful educator. Continually learn.
2. Let your work be a fun experience for you! Hard work is never ending but rewarding, nonetheless.
3. Be Flexible.
4. Keep Students Engaged. Anthony says 100% of the time. That may be crazy you think, but remember, "No child is left behind." Get them motivated.
5. Reflect: It is the goal. Self evaluation is critical in the process of learning.


In the second to last video resource named, Use Technology, Don't Teach it, they is a very important concept every upcoming educator must understand. As the title says, "Use technology, DO NOT TEACH IT." Technology comes natural for kids; let it stay that way. Teaching technology shouldn't be part of the curriculum, instead, educators should scaffold the technology they're using. In other words, build on it. Anthony gave an example. He said, one week he incorporated a research tool, and then the next, he incorporated a video tool. The following week, he used both, to his advantage, in a project for his third-graders. The benefits to technology is, it is shareable and real. Both men shared:  to use technology to get students excited and share what they're working on. Don't expect perfection. Work on it and then reflect on the mistake. Lastly, they mention to educators, if you're worried, try it yourself. This way you can understand what students are asking if they come across the same questions you had. Remember: "Questions are more important than answers."

Technolgy


In our last resource, Additional Thoughts about Lessons, Anthony mentions one last thing in this section. He wanted to explain how a lesson is four layers thick. It consists of: the year, going into the unit, going into the week, and finally getting down to the day. He advises to follow these four steps for effective teaching.

Project #3

Saturday, June 6, 2015

Project #7

My Passion Is...



My Sentence is...




Movie to Parents of My Potential Students



Movie to Potential Students


Blog Post #5

PLN Chart
Just from watching several of the videos posted on PLN's, Dr. Strange and the other resources provided made me realize how important they are. In Dr. Strange's document, Developing a Personal Learning Network, he lists several ways on how to discover and start a PLN. Specifically, he lists the characteristics, how to establish a PLN, and shows his two personal PLN's as well. Dr. Strange advises to start by picking a topic of interest and build on that search by checking out different users who share the same interest. He advises a good way to start is by using twitter. On the class blog,  another resource named, PLN, by Michael Fawcett, describes how his PLN changed his teaching career. Fawcett is a teacher in New Zealand who is very interested in space. That's where his PLN search started. He stated that overtime he eventually heard back from NASA after all of his exploring and diving into his PLN. Fawcett also says, "If you haven't started your PLN, what're you waiting for?" and then rephrases, "We're here, and we're waiting. Where the bloody hell are you?" Listening to his video made me think this is the ultimate resource of teaching.

Connection across the world


So, what is a PLN? It stands for a Personal Learning Network. PLN's will help me as a teacher by exploring into other teacher's resources using Twitter or other blogs I have looked further into. This will further my education and make me a continuing learner because as Dr. Strange says, "The tools, however, are always changing. You have to be a lifelong learner!" Without realizing it, I have already started exploring and creating my PLN with the help from my twitter account. I look at my followers, to look at their followers and lists, and the exploration is never ending. My first additions I'll especially look into other educators PLN's with the same interests as me and ones who share the same passion for English to further my learning.