I am really thankful for the opportunity to participate in this class, especially as a late enrollee. While there were some tools with which I was already familiar and using, it was an awesome opportunity to sharpen my skills with the tools I was already using and broaden my horizons on what else is out there that I could be using to enhance my instruction. It really helped me focus on my goals and be thoughtful about how each and every tool could be used to hit those standards and deliver the content.
Tools I liked using Prezi, because while I had encouraged my students to use it all last year and had even set up an account that they all could access, I never found the time to sit down myself and create one. The Study Tools activity was awesome and I found myself using them beyond this class with the 9th grader I tutored all summer. The screen recording feature is probably the one that I am kicking myself for not using in previous years. It is so simple to use.
Looking back, in comparison to all of the other tools I learned, I found the digital storytelling tools the least helpful tool and not likely something I will use right away. I didn't like the limited creativity in Story Bird or the overall look of ZooBurst. Mostly, I just couldn't think of that many ways that I would use this with my 5th graders or how it would really be worth their time. Maybe this will change as I think more about it?
Learning Process I wished that I would have been able to meet with my other Island Lake friends at our weekly meetings throughout the summer so that I could learn along with them, but it just wasn't plausible this summer as a mommy of a 2-year-old. So, I played with and experimented on my own, activity by activity. I appreciate that the class was broken into activities and there was a "suggested" timeline. It was great to be able to learn the various tools on my own time. I tried to really make each activity purposeful and use concepts that I actually teach so that the products I created were truly something I can and will use with my students. Most of all though, it REALLY helped to have the tutorial videos already posted for us. This prevented us campers from having to spend precious summer time finding tutorials and instead let us get right down to business exploring and manipulating.
Implications I think what I am most likely to really build on this year is organizing my YouTube channel and using that as my storage locker for flipped classroom math videos instead of simple posting on the website or putting in Moodle. I know that I will spend a lot of time tweaking my Flipped Classroom strategies this second year around by incorporating other ways (beyond videos) for students to learn at home and in the classroom. For example, I see myself using the new Google Forms with pictures to create a weekly problem solving activity and the Quizlet flashcards to focus more on the vocabulary in each unit.
I think the biggest challenge I still face as the school year begins is student accessibility to technology. I do have a class set of iPads (10) that students can use and there is a cart of 18 laptops that is housed in my classroom but available to the entire school. Having this is great but I have to share! I discovered last year, when I really started incorporating technology into my classroom through the use of Moodle, implementing Flipped Classroom, etc, that not all students have access at home which means many of them relied heavily of school devices. Despite the district that we teach in, there are students who either have no technology at home (even no cell phone) or whose only piece of technology at home is their iPod - which really limits what they can do beyond watching videos and accessing Moodle. This issue will require a well-planned, face-to-face discussion with parents at the start of the year to emphasize the important role technology plays in learning today without being pushy or demanding. Knowing what I know from last year's class's accessibility at home, I will need to be much more thoughtful in what I can have students do at home to prepare for or complete part of assignments so that they are ready to go at school when the technology is available.
This was a fun way to "take a class" - being able to connect and interact with other MV teachers through the blog "following" and the commenting features. I tried to look at blogs of teachers in middle and high schools from all around the district and saw SO many great things going on. We have some very dedicated and forward-thinking staff working in this district and I feel lucky to be a part of it.
Saturday, July 27, 2013
Activity 6: Study Tools
These tools were fun to experiment with! I could see myself using any of these in the classroom.
QUIZLET: I have assigned Quizlets made by other teachers before, but I have never created my own. I decided to create a set of vocabulary cards for the first 5 chapters of the book Fever 1793, which I read with my 5th graders. It was amazingly simple to use - just enter in the terms and definitions (or use their auto-definitions and pick which definition you prefer). I wrote my own definitions as they were used within the context of the novel. I like that sharing it requires only a link - nothing to embed, no special steps. Because of the ease of sharing, I could definitely see assigning my students to make their own Quizlets as a review activity for others to use. I could use this in math as well to review vocabulary terms - even in the geometry unit, because you can upload images to go with the definitions (great feature). The downside to Quizlet is that its simplicity is not visually appealing and may look boring to the kids.
TAGXEDO: The second study tool I tried was Tagxedo. I have used Word Clouds in my classroom a couple times before, mostly in Language Arts - but I always used Wordle. I found Tagxedo much more fun to use because of the ability to customize and change the shape. I decided to summarize the book Maniac Magee that I read with my students and put my summary into a Tagxedo. I like this because I can have the students write summaries (not so fun) but then put their summaries into Tagxedo - this will allow them to see visually how complete their summaries are, which words are "standing out" and get them to ask themselves "Should THOSE be the words that stand out and why?" I put my Tagxedo into the shape of a footprint because Maniac likes to run and gets everywhere on foot. I like the idea of the kids choosing a shape that is significant to the story and justifying why. In math or science, I could have kids brainstorm all of the vocabulary that goes with a particular unit and put those into Tagxedos. I WILL use this for character building with my homeroom class in September - students creating Tagxedos of themselves (or of a classmate) and then printing them and hanging in the classroom.
QUIZLET: I have assigned Quizlets made by other teachers before, but I have never created my own. I decided to create a set of vocabulary cards for the first 5 chapters of the book Fever 1793, which I read with my 5th graders. It was amazingly simple to use - just enter in the terms and definitions (or use their auto-definitions and pick which definition you prefer). I wrote my own definitions as they were used within the context of the novel. I like that sharing it requires only a link - nothing to embed, no special steps. Because of the ease of sharing, I could definitely see assigning my students to make their own Quizlets as a review activity for others to use. I could use this in math as well to review vocabulary terms - even in the geometry unit, because you can upload images to go with the definitions (great feature). The downside to Quizlet is that its simplicity is not visually appealing and may look boring to the kids.
or for all study activities associated with these words, go here:
Ch. 1-5 Vocabulary Practice for FEVER 1793
Ch. 1-5 Vocabulary Practice for FEVER 1793
TAGXEDO: The second study tool I tried was Tagxedo. I have used Word Clouds in my classroom a couple times before, mostly in Language Arts - but I always used Wordle. I found Tagxedo much more fun to use because of the ability to customize and change the shape. I decided to summarize the book Maniac Magee that I read with my students and put my summary into a Tagxedo. I like this because I can have the students write summaries (not so fun) but then put their summaries into Tagxedo - this will allow them to see visually how complete their summaries are, which words are "standing out" and get them to ask themselves "Should THOSE be the words that stand out and why?" I put my Tagxedo into the shape of a footprint because Maniac likes to run and gets everywhere on foot. I like the idea of the kids choosing a shape that is significant to the story and justifying why. In math or science, I could have kids brainstorm all of the vocabulary that goes with a particular unit and put those into Tagxedos. I WILL use this for character building with my homeroom class in September - students creating Tagxedos of themselves (or of a classmate) and then printing them and hanging in the classroom.
Saturday, July 20, 2013
Activity 5: YouTube Channel
I already had a YouTube channel connected with my Mounds View Schools account and have used it primarily to upload science videos for my science class to access. As a Flipped teacher, I was uploading all of my flipped videos for my math students onto Moodle. However, I like the idea of anyone being able to access my videos from anywhere, as YouTube is multi-device friendly. I am still kind of playing around with the "Playlists" feature - as of now, I have playlists set up within my channel based on class/content area. I don't find the Channel Home interface visually appealing to my students, but it doesn't seem like I have a lot of control over that. Perhaps though don't really need to see the Channel Home page since mostly they will just be accessing videos from my embed codes within Moodle/my website.
I use Knowmia on the iPad to create and record videos for my math class. In order to post them onto YouTube, I have to login to my Knowmia account, download my video as an MP4 to my laptop, and then upload onto Moodle. This is definitely an extra step compared to just linking/embedding directly from Knowmia.com but the advantage of having all of my own videos in one location for everyone to access (parents and students alike) outweighs this. Here is a video I created last year introducing angles to my math students.
I use Knowmia on the iPad to create and record videos for my math class. In order to post them onto YouTube, I have to login to my Knowmia account, download my video as an MP4 to my laptop, and then upload onto Moodle. This is definitely an extra step compared to just linking/embedding directly from Knowmia.com but the advantage of having all of my own videos in one location for everyone to access (parents and students alike) outweighs this. Here is a video I created last year introducing angles to my math students.
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