Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Low Tech Learning

At the root of all learning theories, there is inevitably, always, something about how more learning takes place when there is doing. There is no denying that. The more you do, think, and create; the more you learn.

When technology is added to the mix, there seems to be a notion that tech is the answer to all the problems. While getting a device in everyone's hands great, there are also times when teachers and students need to do some lo-tech tasks/projects/etc.

Doing the same thing day in and day out (especially if all the students' teachers are using technology all day long) can lead to students being bored with the work.

There is still a need to accomplish things with your hands.

Just because you have technology, doesn't mean it's the best tool in your toolbox to use. Sometimes, paper and pencil is good. Sometimes, the good old, tried and true, turn-to-your-neighbor still works wonders. Sometimes, just asking questions and having the students answer them is acceptable. Sometimes, not moving around the room and staying at a desk is needed. Sometimes, scissors and glue, is the best thing since sliced bread. Sometimes, creating using your entire hands and not just the pads of your fingers is just what the doctor ordered. Sometimes, students need a break from tech. Sometimes, students still need to experience learning in a hands-on way.

Make sure you get back to your roots occasionally. It helps with understanding where you came from. 

Renaissance Printing Press. It helps to understand the computer today.

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Saturday, November 8, 2014

Philosophy of Technology Integration (and some thoughts on PD)

Our school is now a 1:1 Chromebook school. Each teacher had to come up with their own personal philosophy of technology integration / blended learning. I thought I would share mine here. I did know I believed all of these things, I just never really had anything on paper. We had to do this during our PD time or at home. 
- Sidenote 1: PD time for my school: 45 minutes before school. From 7:00 to 7:45. Every day of the week. Mondays are designated RTI days. Fridays are designated as team planning. Tuesday through Thursdays change each week. Sidenote 2: I'm not a big fan of group PD. I coach basketball after school. School ends at 3:00. Basketball ends at 5:00. That's 10 hours. So I want my time before school to work on things that will directly influence my students. I don't like sitting in meetings where there is no benefit to myself or my students. I want to spend my time helping plan great lessons. I want to spend my time dreaming of ways to engage my students. I am a very connected educator. I spend a lot of my downtime finding treasure on twitter. Sometimes I feel that large group PD is so useless to connected educators because the connected educators have already heard the news and more often than not, implemented it into their classrooms already. I think meeting everyday is too much. Twice a week is enough. Rant over, back to regularly scheduled programming. 
Although, I'm not a fan of doing things just to fill up time. I feel that I grew through doing this. I do think it's great to put your philosophy onto paper. It helps you as a teacher and as a learner. I originally thought of just using "Use Technology. Use it a lot." as the entire philosophy. I know that it technically would work and it is fairly accurate in describing what should happen with technology, but there were some parameters that I needed to include. I think this "assignment" was good for me, because it forced me to really think about how I will use technology in my classroom.  What's your philosophy? Is there anything that you agree with? disagree with? Anything I didn't cover that I need to? 


Fingertips.jpg


This notion that you must be taught something is no more.  With technology putting education at the fingertips, the student has become the receiver, applier, and creator of knowledge. The information that is available is constantly evolving and improving.  As an educator preparing students for what an unknown future may be like, I need to focus on the skills that will make students successful no matter their chosen field.





My Background


I have always been someone who was fascinated with technology. The information age seemed to begin during my educational career, so I pick up on it very easily and am self-taught at a lot of technological programs. I have found that “playing around” is the best way to learn something new and that is my approach with new technology. I have learned the most from accessing my PLN on twitter.  Twitter’s “community” of educators is phenomenal in that it gives you the ability to connect with others around the globe immediately.



Thoughts on Technology Education


Technology that is integrated into the classroom must be relevant and appropriately challenging. It can’t be a stand-alone entity that is used to just to say you used technology.  Technology must be used alongside the curriculum to enhance the learning.


Technology is just a tool in the learning process. Sometimes, I’m quick to forget that the #2 pencil and lined paper is technology and it still has extreme value. Doing something digitally may not be the best way to accomplish something. I have to remember it’s about the learning, not the technology.


Technology can be overwhelming. There are thousands, if not millions, of ways that technology can be integrated into the classroom. I must be cognizant of what I am using the technology to accomplish. It is better to be extremely knowledgeable on a few items of technology than having hardly any knowledge on many. With that being said, it is equally important to use the most appropriate piece of technology. Technology is meant to make things easier. No matter how hard you try, square pegs don’t go into round holes.


Technology forces us to re-imagine the classroom. Today’s classroom is not a 30’x30’ square with four walls, one door, a whiteboard, a teacher desk, and 30 student desks. The world and the internet is now the classroom. I propose a shift from using classroom to learning environment. Students now communicate and collaborate with each other and with others outside the school network, including adults and others on the other side of the world. I need to start thinking of the classroom as a room with an endless amount of doors to a never-ending amount of more rooms, and an unlimited amount of connection tunnels between all the rooms. No longer is information only available through a 10 pound textbook.


Technology aides in helping students become life-long learners. I can’t begin to tell you how many students have asked me a question while sitting in a computer lab and not realizing that the information was sitting right in front of them. With students and technology being 1:1, learning can happen instantly almost anywhere.


What Using Technology Looks Like


The goals of 21st century learning in the elementary classroom are helping each child communicate, collaborate, and exercise creativity and critical thinking while both consuming and producing content that connects them with their world in ways that are personally meaningful and relevant.


What does 21st century learning look like in my classroom, err learning environment?


The content. Technology allows for the content of lessons to be delivered in many different ways. Lectures have gone by the wayside in favor of videos and simulations. I’m not saying there isn’t a time and place for lectures. But when thinking about the way that students learn today, it is not the most effective.  There are now many avenues in which to deliver content to the students.


The process. The process of education is changing. It has changed from the traditional method of sit-and-get and write essays where the teacher will grade it after submission. With the advancements in technology, students are now able to collaborate alongside the teacher and other students while they are actually completing their assignment. The constant feedback will help shape learners a lot better than after the assignment is completed. Another aspect of how the process is changing is that digital assignment are now given where there is nothing physical to be handed into the teacher. Teachers are now using learning management systems to manage assignments, announcements, and basically anything related to the classroom. Since technology is now available in students’ homes, some of the content can be learned at home. This frees up valuable time during the school day for teachers to devote their time on helping students fully understand the content. While things are changing, these changes are preparing students to succeed later in life.


The products. I believe that while content and process are incredibly important, where I see students benefiting the most from technology is the products created. When students learn something, they need to apply the knowledge in one way or another. The multitude of ways that students can now accomplish application/creation is unreal. When using our Interactive Notebooks in social studies, I try and make the students apply what they learned through creating something that shows off their knowledge. Doing this lets students make sense of the learning in their own way. What is most intriguing about the products created today is that in some situations, the students can become the teacher to others. When students are able to think critically about a topic by determining multiple viewpoints, then are able to create something that represents their thinking, and while creating they are collaborating and communicating with others they are using skills that will benefit them for a lifetime.





Summary


To sum it up, technology is readily available to my students and when using it appropriately will challenge my students and allow them the opportunity to acquire the skills to be self-directed lifelong learners.
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Wednesday, September 10, 2014

30 Day Blogging Challenge: Day 2: Technology

I'm going to try and do the 30-Day blogging challenge from TeachThought. Day 2: Write about one piece of technology that you would like to try this year, and why. You might also write about what you’re hoping to see out of this edtech integration.

This one is pretty easy for me. All of the students will be getting Chromebooks in about a month. I look for this to change the landscape of learning in my classroom. I've been thinking about how this is going to work alongside my interactive notebooks. What needs to change? How I am going to integrate the Chromebook into what I'm already doing? How quickly I can change from paper/pencil to more of an all-digital class?

I think the impact on learning is going to be huge. No more scheduling computer labs. No more students who don't have a device. No more making different lesson plans for students who have a computer and for those who don't. (Not that that is an issue, just that it's one thing I don't have to do.) 

Along the lines of technology, I would really like for our students to be able to freely access the internet. YouTube is blocked on all the student devices. I fully understand the risks of what can happen if there is no filter, but I also see the benefit of learning that is possible. I feel there has to be a way to monitor those students who are looking at inappropriate things. 
Sidenote - I Google-searched the obituary of someone in my family a couple weeks ago. His name was Richard. He went by the word that rhymes with Slick. I typed his name in as it would be on the obituary: Richard "Slick" Lastname. My principal got an alert of what I was searching. If they can monitor me, I feel they can monitor the students' searches. 
I think if we are going to put a device in the hands of 6th graders, we need to give them the responsibility to handle it appropriately. Teaching of proper use, acceptable use, and digital citizenship will be a premium. There must be circumstances if students are not able to handle the freedom and responsibility, but we need to fully let them explore.

I'd love to hear other's takes on this. If your school district has restricted/unrestricted students' devices what are your thoughts? Is it a good thing to restrict them? 
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Monday, April 7, 2014

Tech: Symbaloo, Tagboard, Tackk

Some techie things I've seen lately that I'd like to share.

1. Symbaloo



It's been around awhile, but I didn't really see the need to do use it. Not until I made a webmix did I realize the potential of it. I just saw it as a catch-all for my most used sites/bookmarks. I think when I started seeing it as a tool for projects and my classroom did it make more sense to me. I think it would be so easy to create a webmix for specific classes, projects, strategies, etc.

Here's some good ideas -
https://sites.google.com/a/eusd.org/bheil/symbaloo
https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=symbaloo+in+the+classroom

2. Tagboard

from crunchbase.com


from crunchbase.com


Tagboard is a catch-all for hashtags used across different social media. In a nutshell, if pulls (aggregates) the same hashtags from twitter, instagram, vine, facebook, google+ into one site.

I tried to do a quick run-through over spring break to track what some of my students were learning outside the school walls. I had a couple of takers. If they tag on non-public social media (a lot of my students have private instagrams, it doesn't show up. That's a downside to me, but I get it)

Here's a tagboard I did for spring break #dcmsspringbreak - https://tagboard.com/dcmsspringbreak/163507

I found it useful for catching up with twitter chats like #tlap - https://tagboard.com/tlap

How about the #finalfour

I think it could be used for quick responses in class, sharing links with others in a class, collaborating together, as a backchannel, lots of things.

3. Tackk

Intro video - https://tackk.com/about



Tackk is a very simple quick and easy website builder. I think it's more like a one time awesome blog post. It's kind of like a digital storyteller. It's a way to get information shared in a very nicely done way. It looks very professional.

One of the cool things about it is that you don't need an account to use it. A lot of students don't like signing up for a lot of things. Another good login amazingness is that you can use your google log-in. All of my students have google education google logins. So there is no need to not be able to sign in.

In classroom use, I see this being used as a way to showcase a project, give an assignment out, do an assignment, send out a newsletter, etc. There are a lot of things you can do. I like the idea of using them as student portfolios. (something I'd like to do next year)

You can also hashtag it (no tagboard doesn't aggregate tackk yet, shucks) but you could search for a common hashtag, say like your classroom hashtag) making it easy to turn in an assignment.

How do you use Symbaloo, Tagboard, and Tackk? How could they be used?
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