Summer's Almost Gone

Summer's Almost Gone

Friday, August 14, 2015

Course Reflection

Over the period of this course I learned about some great tools for teaching.  In fact, in many ways, it feels like I'm starting teaching over again, but at a higher risk. Learning to teach involves making mistakes, and from what I've learned throughout this course, many of the mistakes that involve students and technology can have high-impact consequences.  For this reason, I'm going to integrate tech use into my ELA classroom slowly. I see strength in the PLC. PLC members can work together to determine if a tech tool poses a privacy danger or needs to be presented to the principal and/or parents, among other things. Before Chromebooks (B.CB.?), it took me years to work out kinks in lessons, and typically I was on my own. I may be getting a little old school saying this, but I hesitate to go all of the way back to the drawing board.  I see the huge potential in technology, but I also fear a knee-jerk reaction to the access we have, and the potential whiplash of trying everything at once. As of now, I have a functional classroom that produces results. I will slowly incorporate tech use into my classroom if it can help me give students more timely and useful feedback, provide more variety in the ways I get information to students, or provide useful, educational, and effective tools for students to communicate what they have learned to me and to others.

What do I find useful? Well, some things I already use but will intensify After Chromebooks (A.CB.). For one, I will up the ante on Google Suite. I think the potential to timely feedback on students writing and critical thinking is powerful here, though I need to strengthen my understanding on how to organize the work without needing to excessively click (click, click, click). Some of the add-ons will be very helpful for this as well, such as Kaizena. I really see no excuse for students not to write well in the coming year. As for a trial run, I think I will give Goggle Classroom a shot in Reader's Workshop. I see the potential to improve engagement and prevent some distractions in this class. Plus, handwriting can be some of these kids' only downfall; typing can be a great boost to them. As far as whole-class presentation and relearning, I think some of the screencasting tools can be useful, not to mention Peardeck, but that's as far as I'm willing to venture this year (I already use Prezi and Slides for almost everything). And for assessment, I want to dabble with Google Forms; I had no idea it contained so much potential for relearning and fast assessments. I really hope to find this intuitive and effective.

Thursday, August 13, 2015

Activity 9: Digital Citizenship

Scenario 3: Mr. McFly had a couple of clear oversights in this scenario. First off, he is working with minors and should have allowed ample time to notify the principal and the students' parents about what technology the students would use in class. Second, one of the first things he should have done is to teach the students how to change privacy settings so that unknown users could not publish or view student work. I understand that often time teachers "work on the fly" but with the complications that come with technology use and how quickly work can get out into the world, more foresight needs to be practiced in order for parents, administrators, and students to prepare for the activity they will be participating in.

The threat in this type of situation is very real, and I could see myself falling into this type of trap, being new to use this type of technology in my classroom. Fortunately for me, others have made the mistake and I can learn from them, but for some I'm guessing they learned through the school of hard-knocks. I feel that the best way to avoid making a similar mistake is to use the Mounds Views Acceptable Use Policy and seek help when you're unsure. Plus, just because we have the tech. available doesn't mean we need to use it for everything. When it comes to work with other peoples' kids, precautions and safety need to come before initial use.

Scenario 2: Mr. Kirk has bravely headed in a new directions, but clearly did not think through possible issues that would arise from the kids. As is true with Mr. McFly, it seems that Mr. Kirk is learning the hard way. He seems to have hoped for the best and ran into the worst of students behavior, in the form of bullying. Ethically, Mr. Kirk should have had the discussion about online bullying being just as serious as offline bullying, and he should have covered the consequences...and possibly ran through some scenarios.  Mounds View Acceptable Use Policy clearly covers many of these issues and appears to be the go-to document when venturing into new territory with technology. Mr. Kirk should have established some clear consequences for off-task and threatening behavior with the students so that he did not need to completely sacrifice technology learning with his students.

Overall, implementing technology use in the classroom has it's challenges. I'm happy that Mounds View Schools has clearly defined what kids can and cannot use in the classroom. This way I don't need to learn some of the difficult lessons that people have learned in the past. Unfortunately, I think there will always be challenging situations that will arise, and at least more people will be dabbling with tech. in the classroom so that there's a larger support group to fall back on. As far as I can tell, taking ample precautions is a must when trying something different.

Wednesday, August 5, 2015

Activity 8: Google Forms Assessments


This is my first self-made Google Form. I've used them in the past, but J.J. liked making them, so I always just let him. It seems like a million possibilities exist for using Forms as an assessment tool, which I'm excited to try throughout the year as I get used to having Chromebooks.  I especially like the options to shuffle questions and answers as I think this will be a useful tool for retests; it will save a lot of time and make retesting feasible.




Here's my practice branching form:


Final Thoughts: With time, I see Google Forms being incredibly helpful in assessing students and providing feedback. With the direction we are going at Chippewa, I think this could be used as a relearning tool that provides links and practice for each objective and lets kids work at their own pace.  The forms are fairly intuitive, but it will take time to make tests this way and create learning opportunities. I see this as something a resource teacher would need to spend time creating for groups.

Activity 7: Assessments

I use Socrative as a classroom review tool for roots, prefixes, and suffixes. Here's a copy of one of my quizzes (I don't know how to embed a live quiz from Socrative):
Socrative is a good tool for very concrete information and factual assessment. It also allows for the teacher to ask an open-ended question to which the students reply, which can then be saved to email and printed out. I've used to this to assess knowledge of paragraph and complete sentences. I will continue to use Socrative throughout the year; kids like it.

PollEverywhere seems like a fun tool to get quick responses for things and start discussions. I might use it for Do Now!s at the beginning of the period. I usually had kids write Do Now!s in a notebook, but what fun is that?

Tuesday, August 4, 2015

Activity 6: Google Classroom

Beyond reporting PLC information, this is my first experience with Google Classroom. I can see myself using Google Classroom in small intervention classes in order to get use to the format and grading procedures, but I can't imagine jumping right into working with 140 students from five classes and having success; thank the gods we are not being forced to. However, with a small class, I like how everything is compartmentalized and easy to track. However, the nature of an intervention class is to have students move around quite a bit, so would it be difficult to add and subtract students, however they might be transferring. I do, however, like that I can hold them accountable online and that I need to keep these kids engaged however I can. So... I see the possibility and have had a little fun with the word however--however you feel about that.
 

Monday, August 3, 2015

Activity 5: Apps, Extensions, and Add-Ons



I've been using the Note Board Extension for about a year now. I use it to take notes and make lists for whatever I need to do. I like that it's available on all of my devices that I'm logged into. I also use this to keep track of my school passwords and other sites that are not necessary to keep completely secure.
As for the rest of the apps, extensions, and add-ons, there's a ton of potential, but I can also see spending too much time trying to incorporate "fads" that may not be worth trying to learn. These things give me anxiety. What if I spend an entire school year teaching students how to download, use, and share information using these tools only to realize that it was a mere distraction? What if what I change to is not as beneficial as what I do now?

Robert Frost wrote: "...why abandon a belief/ Merely because it ceases to be true./ Cling to it long enough, and not a doubt/ It will turn true again, for so it goes." 

I know many of these are powerful tools, but for my own sanity, and, hopefully, the benefit of my students, I'm going to focus mostly on how students get information, how students create information, and helpful ways that I can provide feedback. Anything else I will leave by the wayside until proof demonstrates effectiveness.


Wednesday, July 8, 2015

Activity 4: Google Suite

Google Drive is great because everything can be made available from any device that has access to the internet. Since I began teaching at Chip, I've been keeping all of my files on Drive. It's a great tool for the classroom because you can link projects and guidelines onto a web page and students/parents can access it at anytime. One drawback for me so far has been that I often forget to share the docs after posting and parents end up requesting access (I wish there was a prompt that came up when linking files). Parents also need to get use to this technology because many still email to request forms as opposed to going online and finding it for themselves; one of my goals is to streamline my web page this fall. 

Here is a presentation that I updated to use with Reader's Workshop in the fall.

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

Week 3: Screencasting

Here's my first attempt at using Snagit, which I've never used before. This video is a great example of why we should rehearse and script our work before turning in a project. This is not related to a lesson, but it is something I would show kids to evaluate and make suggestions for improvement; sometimes are bad examples help improve student work.

I love using screencasts and the idea of flipping lessons (I'm not ready for a flipped classroom), but I was not happy with Snagit. I don't know if I completely missed it, but where is the pause button? I like screencasts that allow me to pause and bring up new pages or images. Without that pause button, I feel that the only thing I would use Snagit for is to explain simple images or to narrate a PowerPoint, which is all my screencast for this assignment it.

Thursday, June 25, 2015

Engagement: Pear Deck

Pear Deck is one of the online tools that I'm excited to use next year with a classroom set of chrome books. I've posted the beginning of a Pear Deck presentation that I'd use for short stories under "Useful Links." Each year I feel that, at least in ELA, we cover some of the same material that previous years have covered. Using Pear Deck as an online formative assessment, I hope to be able to gauge what students already know and what we truly need to cover. Plus, the presentations can be made available for review outside of the classroom.

Thursday, June 11, 2015

Using Blogs in Education


Aside from having access from any where, blogs can benefit the classroom by providing authentic opportunities for students to respond to one another and have his or her voice her outside of the classroom and beyond the teacher. Additionally, students need to learn to communicate well in writing because future jobs will require communication with people around the world. In my opinion, which I admittedly read somewhere and don't remember the source, classroom education is outdated, but by integrating technology and blogs, classrooms can take on a larger presence in a student's life and become more engaging while increasing the potential for applying to future real-world situations. Classroom /class blogs have the potential to create safe-zones for students to posture real-world interactions while making mistakes and gaining confidence.
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Here's a video that explains various points of view in fiction. It's a useful video because different classes speak about point of view in different ways; it's a concept that visual aids support tremendously. An extension to this video, which would require students to use the information, is to use a blog for students to submit reviews of story and explain the point of view. Each student, for example, might be required to review a book on an assigned week, submit the post to a blog page for other students to read, and they would have the video to review if they needed extra help.  Plus, other students could read the same book and add responses to posts. It's an authentic activity that allows for student interaction through a monitored medium.




Thursday, May 28, 2015

Kickoff

Kickoff Post-
     I was motivated to sign up for tech nerd this summer because I am getting a set of Chromebooks for my classroom next year and I want to modify many of my lessons to use technology in an interactive fashion. I'm extremely excited to bring my lessons into the technological realm and look forward to online discussions that allow for quick feedback by both students and teachers.
     From this class I hope to learn how to add students to groups that will streamline collaboration, 21st century skills, and student growth. I hope to learn about apps and activities that will authentically teach students useful skills that will apply to their lives. I also look forward to learning about all of the things that I have no idea exist.
     As of now, I feel with the Google platform (if I used that term correctly). I frequently use sheets, docs, and slides for teaching, PLC, and assessments. I also have a Google calendar, which could use some organization, a Google Site for class, and have used other presentation formats, but I would like to focus on making many presentations more interactive and engaging for students, while maintaining high rigor for each student.