Sunday, October 18, 2009

BP15_2009103_Peer Comments

With a name like this, one does not know what to expect. I thought of the Hulk, (lol) but have come to use this resource for many things. Princeton University continues to update and enlarge this site that I have used for years. My favorite aspect of the site is that is is kept updated and always has new things. It has become my go-to place for the latest art gadgets. Like the Getty, it is well-funded and thus reliable.
The screen shot makes it clear just how many different aspects of teaching art are facilitated by this site, since each word surrounding Mona Lisa is a link. From blogs to suppliers; from lessons to games and activities; from links to association resources for advocacy, this site has it all. When I am in need of some lesson resources, it is always my first stop, and often the only one. For inspiration or even for sub plans, this is site is the best one I know. Check it out for yourself.

2 comments:

beckie lamborn said...

The Incredible Art Department, look at all the activities Mona Lisa is juggling!! I will have to check this site out!

cmtobias55 said...

I checked this site out and it is filled with lessons for every age group.
Just about everything and any thing anyone wants to know about art can be found on that sits. It is a wonderful resource.


BP14_2009103_Best Web 2.0 Tool for the Week

This is my favorite Web 2.0 tool for the week. Edu2.0.org.




http://www.edu20.org

BP13_2009103_Web 2.0 Tool 6




http://www.ctap4.net/projects/middle-school-math/52-middle-school-math/134-middle-school-math-project.html

This site is a site sponsored by the State of California is a Web 2.0 references tool for their state standards for middle school math it is called the Middle School Math Project. As you can see on the image above there is a color code system that teachers and students to the appropriate web 2.o resource. Despite the fact that I live and teach in the state of Florida I can use this matrix as a cross-reference. I think this is a valuable tool for me to check another system to see if there are different methods of teaching the same concepts that might be more effective. This site also list math project that center around central themes like measurements, functions, integers, fractions and geometry just to name a few.











BP12_2009103_Web 2.0 Tool 5






http://www.exambuilder.com/
Exam builder is another site that could be useful in teaching math. This site allows teachers to do everything they would expect to do with an exam builder. Teachers can create exams in many different formats like fill in the blanks, essay, multiple choice, and matching. Exams can be administered on paper or on line. This is a really good tool to use when students have been absent for a long time to keep up with the progress of the class. There is also a test item analysis feature that shows class and individual performance on each test question. This is an excellent way for the teacher to know if a particular concept is being understood. If 75% of the class is missing questions 15 through 20 then the teacher will have to readdress that concept in a different manner in order to promote greater understanding. Over time or working with other teacher a department can build large test bank pool of questions that will cover every area of the curriculum. This would be an excellent resource to collaborate with fellow teachers.


BP11_2009103_Web 2.0 Tool 4



http://www.edu20.org/

This is an awesome website. You can become a student and join a school, you can join a school to become a teacher, or you can start your own school and recruit your own students and teachers. You can join districts. This web 2.0 tool states that it has over 95,000 members and it is growing fast. This site contains every academic area that you would find in a traditional school. Each school has its own administration, facility, and parent participation. This is a way for anyone to start a virtual school. This is a good opportunity for certified teachers to become entrepreneurs in the field they know best, “education”. The site is easy to use and it has many video tutorials to guide you through the process. I also see this as a way to offer web 2.0 content to augment regular classroom instructions.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

BP10_2009102_Flickr Lesson Plan

I found a lesson plan titled “Tagging with Flickr”. The lesson takes about 30 minutes. Students will open a flickr account with 8 untaged photos. This lesson stresses the importance of tagging. Tagging is something that individuals usually do to share their work. Students are to work in groups to share their observations about tags for different photos. Students should consider with deliberate thought, Why we tag, Who we tag for, and How to make tags better.

The instructor also wants students to become comfortable using Flickr as a tool to search for tagged photos. I can see this as an excellent source to search for photos for different purposes. The instructor describes tagging photos as a skill and I agree. If a student is looking for photos that depict outdoor activities, then that student must use the search terms that would produce such photos. This is where tagging comes in. For example a photo is tagged with the word “homer” you will get images of Homer Simpson and images of baseball players hitting home runs and you will even get photos of things that have to do with neither. This is why the instructor stresses that careful consideration should go in creating tags. This is a good lesson plan; I hope to find a way to use it myself.

http://capping.slis.ualberta.ca/cap07/SarahPolkinghorne/lessonplan.html


BP9_2009102_Favorite Web 2.0 Tool of the Week

My favorite Web 2.0 tool for this week is GoAnimate.com, I really like this site, I hope that you will also find it useful.



Here is my latest creation using GoAnimate.com


Sunday, October 11, 2009

BP8_2009102_Web 2.0 Tool 3

http://www.buddyschool.com/

Here is another web 2.0 tool. BuddySchool.com is a platform for people who want to study or tutor online. Learners can select a teacher and a schedule of lessons. Teachers can tutor online and make money at the same time. This would be an excellent resource for students that need a tutor for extra help. There are hundreds of different subjects and thousands teachers and tutors that cover everything from art to visual basic. Students can also study any of the major languages. The most popular subjects are English, Math, Spanish, French and Chinese. The most common subjects are of course math, science, language, and humanities. There are less common subjects like archeology, piercing, and partners. The fees teachers and tutors charge for their services range from free to over $50 per hours. However the average price is between $5 and $25 per hour.

To choose a tutor students choose a teacher for the appropriate subject by checking the teachers rating. Students should attempt to select tutors that have a high positive feedback rating and plenty positive comments from satisfied customers. A credit card of pay pal account is required; therefore students should only use this site with parent permission and supervision.

Each instructor has a profile that includes the number of lesions given, with positive and negative comments, and a positive feedback rating. Some tutors give sample-tutoring sessions for you to check their skills. I recommend that you shop carefully; there are a lot of people offering services. This is also a good opportunity for teachers to offer their services. If you build a good online reputation this can be a lucrative sideline. One tutor is reported to have conducted 2533 english lessons @ $13.00 per hour since 2008.








BP7_2009102_Web 2.0 Tool 2

http://www.toondoos.com


Here is another web 2.0 application. This one is by My Toon Doos.com

I had fun using this recourse. Student can use this to create stories. This promotes critical thinking skills in students. I have encouraged my students to create an account at this site. I will use this as a reward for my students. When students finish their classroom assignment, they can log on to this site and create a cartoon. Children are really creative and I enjoy seeing their creative work when they use technology to produce it. Many of my middle school students have never even created a Power Point Presentation and for those that have even fewer have created it for a grade. Even though my students have and use every high-tech device you can name from a flashing ink pin to the most sophisticated smart phone available, they still are not using technology to assist in their learning.

Web 2.0 tools are great way for students to become aware of what is available for them to use. None of my students were aware of Toon Doos and neither are they familiar with the concept of web 2.0. I like the fact that this is what I call an open recourse; you can do with it what you wish. I would like my students to use this resource to explain their knowledge of math vocabulary words or to show their understanding of a particular math concept. By nature as directed by technology, children are captivated by cartoons and Toon Doos allows students to interact in a personal way with their favorite cartoon characters. For basic services this site is free and it is very easy to use.

BP6_2009102_Web 2.0 Tool 1

GoAnimate.com is a website that I find useful and fun for application in my class. You can use stock images or your own to create a real life or an animated cartoon.

In this case I am going to use it as a lead promo for my schools robotics team. We are a part of the Best Robotics Competition to be held at the University of West Florida in Pensacola, Florida on Saturday, October 17, 2009. One of the requirements is for each team to develop a series of multimedia products to promote our robot and the strategy we will use in an attempt to wind the competition. I created this using GoAnimate.com



http://www.GoAnimate.com

Students may choose from a verity of brand names like Star Track, Star Wars, Cartoon Classics, and many more to create their animated media product. These are the types of images that students can identify with. This makes them have a vested interest in learning. Students will be able to use critical thinking and creative skills to create a product that is innovative using web2.0 tools. For example, 95% of the score that teams receive in the robotics competition come from an area not associated with the Physical robot or its performance. The judges’ palaces a lot of weight on the organization and how it integrated the different departments to create the end product. We will use multimedia products to show how our community partners worked with our design team, and marketing to develop a total product.


BP5_2009102_Educational Uses for Social Bookmarking


Social Bookmarking is a different way of saving bookmarks other than saving bookmarks onto your computer. Social Bookmarking is a way to bookmark your favorite sites and share them with other people. Social Bookmarking is Internet based and allows anyone to access his or her books form anywhere in the world where there is Internet service.

Social Bookmarking allows educators around the world to share their interests. Teachers may create a social bookmarking site for their academic department. This allows all teachers in the department to contribute to a growing database of web resources. The teacher and students can share the same bookmarks. Students and teachers can also collaborate on projects with other schools, sharing bookmarks between all parties involved. CR2.0 (2009)

Classroom2dot0, (2009). Social bookmarking. Retrieved October, 11 2009 from http:// wiki.classroom20.com/Social+Bookmarkingre

I can use social bookmarking to build a source of math websites for my students.There are thousands upon thousands of math websites, however it is difficult to sometimes find the right one that is appropriate for my needs. I often find that other teachers have located sites that I would like to use. To share this information the website link is sent to me in an email then I access the site and I add it to my bookmarks on my computer or the URL is written on a piece of paper and never makes it to my bookmarks. In addition when I am working from home I do not have access to my bookmarks that are located on my teacher computer, therefore I am deprived of valuable resources I need to develop assignments unless I can remember the name of the website. With social bookmarking gaining access to my valuable websites will never be an issue no matter where I am in the world.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tNRL5h9tTNM&feature=player_embedded#

This is an example of an excellent math website I found through social bookmarking. This resource reinforces basic math skills though speed. Believe it or not many middle school math students continue to like knowledge of basic multiplication facts from 3 x 1 to 12 x 12. This resource allows me to easily assess my students’ basic math abilities and prescribe remedies to help student learning. There are many examples of how I will use this new knowledge of social bookmarking as a part of my personal learning environment at assist student learning, this was just on of them.



Sunday, October 4, 2009

BP3_2009101_Google Reader Blog

The first five RSS feeds I have chosen are as follows:

(1). Experiencing E-Learning ? This site provides information and tools that will help me to develop an E-Learning site.

(2). About Mathematics.com ? This site has many resources concerning mathematics including worksheets, links to other math resources, and tips on mathematics instruction.

(3). Learning Theories ? This feed is a continuation of what we have been studying concerning learning theories. This is a rich resource with information on Maslow, Howard Gardner, Erickson, Vygotsky, and many more. This will be a resource I will refer to often.

(4). The Rapid e-learning blog ? This feed also provides information and tools that will help me to develop an e-learning sight.

(5). The Chronicle of Higher Education (Jobs) ? This feed allows me to stay abreast of trends and job opportunities in higher education

BP2_2009101_Anti-Teaching

In reading the article, ?Anti-Teaching: Confronting the Crisis of Significance?, I am reminded of a textbook I used in a business management course. The textbook listed a series of paradoxes that applied to business management. One paradox stated, ?to gain more control of an organization you need to give up control.? This meant as a manager you cannot effectively maintain control of an organization by micro managing everyday details. As a manager you need personnel that you can delegate authority to and trust them to make the correct decisions to get the job done. As the manager delegates more authority he or she will be rewarded with increased efficiency. The more authority the manager delegates the greater control he or she will have because now the manager?s time is not tied up micro managing every detail of an operation. This same concept can be applied to the classroom. ?To increase student learning the teacher needs to teach less.?

I think that a Virtual Learning Environment (VLE) with a course management system would be a good solution. In order for a teacher to teach less and increase student learning at the same time a strong alternative must be available. A VLE combined with a Personal Learning Environment (PLE) and Web 2.0 tools would create a classroom where the teacher teaches less and clearly transfers the responsibility for learning to the students. In addition a VLE combined with a PLE would address Multiple Inelegances and Brain-Based Learning for students. These are all the components I would employ if I could create a new school form the ground up. I would also hire a Feng Shui consultant to help design the new campus.
?A growing number of architects, educators and environmental psychologists now point to other research showing clear links between elements of design and student achievement.? Zernike (2001)

The teachers? primary responsibility would be that of course management, instructional design, and assessment. Teachers would have the freedom to design instruction using the appropriate approach. In some cases a Direct Approach may work best, in another case a Problem-Based or Experiential Approach may work best. The teacher is also a facilitator that guides students along in the learning process. All students would have laptop computers with wireless capability. In this way learning activities would not limited to the classroom or a computer lab. The entire campus would be a learning environment. Classrooms would have ergonomic furniture and not set up like traditional classrooms. Creating a stress free ergonomic learning environment would appeal to elements of Brain-Based Learning and Multiple Intelligences.

The Web 2.0 tools and the PLE would give students the means to collaborate with peers, teachers, and other professionals that would give learning real meaning in a real life environment. Students would be able to post blogs for a variety of purposes that would enhance learning. Web 2.0 tools would also allow students to collaborate on projects with students in other school across the country and even around the world. I think the view of how I would construct a school from the ground up is the key to constructing a 21st century school that would stimulate learning and understanding beyond simple test. Is technology itself enough? No, because human need interaction form other humans and especially our young students in the k12 education system. However, educators must make technology work to fit the needs of the 21st century classroom.

Zernike, K., (2001). The Feng Shui of school design. The New York Times. Retrieved October 3, 2009 from http://schoolstudio.engr.wisc.edu/fengshui.html

Saturday, October 3, 2009

BP1_2009101_Educational Uses for Blogs


There are so many examples of how blogs are used in education you can spend years exploring them all. If you do see a blog that addresses your educational needs, just start one, it is as simple as that. The educational uses for blogs are only limited to your Imagination. Instructors can use blogs to start discussions on discipline specific topics, instructional tips for students, class administration information, and as a method of providing links to other important information. Students may use blogs as eportfolios as well as a tool for group discussions, coordinating activities, course-based journals for assessment, personal reflective journaling and a knowledge management tool for their own learning and studies. Also, teachers and students can subscribe to RSS blog feeds to stay current with information concerning specific topics. http://www.edtechpost.ca/wordpress/2003/10/09/Matrix-of-some-uses-of-blogs-in-education/

One thing that should be pointed out concerning blogging, as an educational tool is that blogging is not just a fashionable buzzword to fit the times. The development of discussion boards and web blogs are a result of modern technology applications and is based in part on the theory of Social Constructivism. “… only through communications can human life hold meaning. The teacher’s thinking is authenticated only by the authenticity of the students’ thinking. The teacher cannot think for her students, nor can she impose her thoughts on them. Authentic thinking, thinking that is concerned about reality, does not take place in ivory tower isolation, but only in communication”. (Freire 1970)

http://www.ascilite.org.au/conferences/perth04/procs/farmer.html.

This quote by Paulo Freire is an example of the importance that is place on the social experience in education. Lev Vygotsky is given credit for providing the basics for Social Constructivism through his theory of the Zone of Proximal Development. One aspect of this theory accretes that student, with help from adults and other students who are more advanced, master concepts and ideas that they cannot understand on their own. Technology provides essential tools to support teaching and learning goals in the context of a social constructivist classroom. These tools include telecommunication tools (blogs) that provide for a means of dialog, discussion, and debate. Students can interactively communicate with their peers, teachers, and other professionals in other parts of the country or the world. This type of collaboration can provide learners with meaningful real world learning experiences.

http://viking.coe.uh.edu/~ichen/ebook/et-it/social.htm

Despite the potential benefits of the potential benefits of using blogs as a tool to enhance the educational experience many school systems and parents do not support blogging especially at the elementary and middle school level. Parents and school officials are concerned about Internet safety. Never the less there are blogging sites that cater specifically to the k-12 environment. An alternate solution could be to set up a blog portal on the school server. In this way school officials can control access and content of the blog site. If educators are to begin to use technology to a greater degree to enhance learning then greater efforts must be undertaken to make available technology accessible with the appropriate safegards.