More on digital tools on this YouTube video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y-wm3Hazx
Thursday, September 17, 2009
Friday, September 4, 2009
Our Notes on Alan November's Presentation: September 2, 2009
Main themes: web literacy and potential revolution is the change in the culture of teaching and learning where children take a lot more responsibility in teaching and learning in class.
- Technology helps reconnect with and learn about kids. Learn their interests.
- Children have a developmental need to connect with other people
- What web literacy [web syntax and grammar skills] do our students need to know to be successful learners and producers in a global community/economy?
- Who should teach web literacy, how and when
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- Think of your class as one collaborative team!
- Your students can help you apply and use technology. Ask them what they know. Ask them to help!
- Looking at change in the mission of K-12; how do you setup for change within an existing structure/organization
- Including different points of view - considering different points of view (e.g Pope's speech within Turkey)
- "Bad results" - misleading results - can be produced from google/search engines as a result of bad use of key words. Eg. use country code .ty to get turkish references vs. Fox news references.
- search engine results reveal what has been searched e.g. Places in Lexington on Google Maps includes "Buckman Tavern" a British! landmark for that area. American Revolution - different points of view.
- With google docs in real time you can understand what your students are thinking. (Activstudio tools/skills can help teachers do this, too!)
- Goal: Prepare children to be globally competitive
- "The more technology there is in society, the longer it takes to move your kids out of your house".... the escape!:
- Teach children critical thinking in the web
- Do students know how the google algorithm works?
- Do they use skills to decipher web authors when they research for you
- Use students' technology knowledge and skills to assist you with what you don't know.
- Altavista is a good search engine for finding links coming to technology.
- link: martinlutherking.org host: .edu link:www.stormfront.org
- assessing the process along with assessing the product
- primary sources in the process of building a review of Number the Stars
- if you assess the product and not the the process - you may not be seeing/assessing how the students work or learn -- so can you change the mission to assess/work with students on the process [We can't give the same kind of homework we've always been giving.]
- Students are eager to be teachers, they learn as they teach and produce. e.g. Hours on a tutorial to help her class. Student told Aland - different/engaging for her to work to help others vs. to help just herself for "regular" homework2.
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- The real revolution is the change in the culture of teaching and learning where children take a lot more responsibility in teaching and learning in class.
- Who should own the learning? The culture that the American education system is designed on is that teachers own the learning. Should this be changed
Books:
Web Literacy for Educators and
Empowering Students with Technology by Alan November
Web Literacy for Educators and
Empowering Students with Technology by Alan November
- Use country codes to search internet for points of view.
- Using Google Maps maps.google.com.
- Marshall McLuhan - "The medium is the message."
- Use Google Docs for classroom collaboration, as a team, in notetaking.
- Use kids to teach YOU how to use web tools to enhance learning!
- AltaVista search engine, limit search to host:edu (sites hosted at universities) to help students evaluate and sites on the web.
- YouTube is fastest growing site on the internet and kids need to socialize around the world. Number the Stars: book trailer from Copenhagen
- Use Podcasts of teachers' presenting lessons as homework.
- Have students make podcasts of a week's learning and kids have a record of what was learned.
- http://www.bobsprankle.com/blog/
- Mathtrain.tv about prime factorization - a student produced tutorial
- Jingproject.com for creating screencasts
- host:nasa.gov search in altavista - don't need www or http - to produce a quick video tutorial.
- Free tools on internet for producing all kinds of learning.
- Use Skype to teach similar units in classrooms around the world. Have debates.
Implications for Instructional/Assignment Design
- If students take notes using Google docs, teacher has the ability to see student notes - students can reflect on notes with teachers, classmates.
- Google docs essential tool for students/class collaboration
- With Google docs, students have access to material from any computer with Internet access
- link:www.martinlutherking.org (really white supremacist website)- go deep for web exploration, validation of sources on Internet
- One of the most powerful teaching techniques on the web is to show students the work of other children around the world - YouTube is a good resource for doing this (number the stars - book trailer created by an elementary school student)
- At High Tech High in San Diego they give students the 10 most difficult concepts in the curriculum to ask them for ideas on how to teach them
- assessment - we usually assess the final product and not the process for getting to the final product
- what used to homework probably should be class work & vice versa
- if a student makes a mistake on WH , mistake become embedded int he brain and any delays in formative feedback will further embed the mistake
- good HW - podcast of teachers presenting
- Wells, ME - Room 208 weekly podcast - "How to make a podcast" http://www.bobsprankle.com/blog/
- http://www.mathtrain.tv/
- relevance of homework?
- Classroom tasks for students: daily scribes, recording things going on for weekly review reflecting on learning, kids create tutorials, software:jingproject.com
- students who take notes from a pod cast do better than with live notes
- jing.com assists with development of lesson plans/ tutorials
- real revolution is not technology = it is a change in the culture of teaching & learning where children take a lot more responsibility for contributing to class ( collaborative notes, tutorials, etc.
- Who should own the learning??? currently - teachers (teachers work harder than kids in the classroom) - we underestimated what kids can do
- revolution - redefining literacy to be more than decoding paper
- use Skype to connect with students around the country and the world.
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