Friday, December 4, 2009
Monday, November 23, 2009
SKYPE in the geography classroom
Monday, November 2, 2009
Friday, October 30, 2009
Final Ed Tech Post--Assessments
http://docs.google.com/Doc?docid=0AQw6iZIhEMqvZHNtbnZueF8xOWc3ZGJ6ZGQ0&hl=en
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
Multi-media presentation about TOKBOX
Students would really enjoy making videos like these--and they could be manufactured COMPLETELY IN THE CLASSROOM using any laptop with a webcam. I'm planning on giving students the opportunity to give short oral reports on rainforest stakeholder groups--maybe I'll use tokbox! The videos could be emailed to me and I could grade them, show them, embed them.
Another good application for education would be the video conferencing feature, that could be used by students working in groups--no more trips to the library to "work on our report"! We can all work from home.
Tokbox is a natural to be combined with screentoaster, as a teacher would combine computer screen presentation pictures with a tokbox video about it.
A tokbox video could be part of a larger presentation made with dabbler, or google presentations (combined with screentoaster) and probably with other tools I don't know about.
TokBox - Free Video Chat and Video Messaging
Monday, October 26, 2009

The Oregon Education Technology Standards
Creativity and Innovation
Communication and Collaboration
Research and Information Fluency
Critical Thinking, Problem Solving and Decision Making
Digital Citzenship
Technology Operations and Concepts
http://www.iste.org/AM/Template.cfm?Section=NETS
For thirty years, educators have been trying to define the duty of the schools regarding technology--specifically computer technology.
Initially, everyone thought we would have to teach children to become computer programmers--that in the future, educated adults would all know how to write code for their computers. As a result, many kids learned how to type in lots of gibberish letters, numbers and punctuation marks they hadn’t even known existed, just so they could make their computers draw a rose or a bell.
Later, folks decided that computers would soon replace books, pencils, notebooks, worksheets--even teachers--in the classroom of the future, and that students would learn everything they needed to know through “interactive” exercises. In response, schools invested in reading games, punctuation games and math games and children sat at classroom computers “practicing” their skills.
Rich schools (or poor schools with deep-pocketed benefactors) computerized their classrooms. The new “a-chicken-in-every-pot” fantasy was “a computer for every student.” Some schools installed terminals on every desk--no room to write or read a textbook--everything a student would need would be online! No need to interact with other students or a teacher--the computer was expected to fill every educational need.
At every step, schools have invested in hardware, software, training and ideologies that were always only a few months away from obsolescence.
The 1998 NETS are available on the NETS site illustrate the evolution of thinking about computers and kids. The first one is “understand the nature and operation of technology systems.” People still thought kids needed to know how computers worked. I don’t have to understand how my car works to drive to Kansas City!
The current NETS and OETS, with their broad, thematic scope and higher-order cognitive demands could be talking about any academic discipline. Finally, we’re beginning to understand that the technology is a tool to learning. Creativity, communication, critical thinking, citizenship--these are educational goals that can be reached in many ways--and technology is recognized as a means, not an end.
We don’t have to teach kids how to use the technology--we have to teach them how to use the technology to LEARN.
The big picture of what these standards are now trying to accomplish is to prepare students to live and learn in a technological world.
The best strategies for teachers that connect to these standards are simple, natural, imbedded and can’t be done another way better. For example, for my unit on the rainforest, I’m setting up a skype session between my classroom and my son who lived in the Amazon Basin for two years. Students can ask him themselves--since he lives in New York, we will use technology to bridge the distance. (Communication and Collaboration)
When I was a little girl and I asked my dad a question, he often said, “Look it up!” He meant in the encyclopedia, which he had taught me how to use. He didn’t show me how to use the index, or teach me about alphabetized entries, so that I would be an expert on encyclopedias, but so I could find stuff out. The same is true with the “Research and Information Fluency” standard. We don’t have to teach kids how to use computers so they can be experts on computers--we have to teach them the same attitude my dad taught me--you want to know something, look it up. And we need to teach them to compare, discern and judge the answers they find (that’s part of “Digital Citizenship”).
A strategy for teaching this kind of research fluency (and digital citizenship) might be to send several kids to the internet to find some specific information: “What was Shakespeare’s wife’s name?” “What was the name of the theatre where his plays were produced?” Then have them bring back what they learned and where they found it and compare their sources and answers with other students. Perhaps each student could try to find the information in five different places, then see if anybody found better--or different--or more complete information than their classmates--and where they found it.
The key is taking what we know is important about learning and education and ENHANCING it through the use of technology. Not everything works better when it is done technologically--but when technology broadens and lifts learning, that’s when we use it.
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Analyzing Student Data in a Spreadsheet
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Monday, October 19, 2009
Yodio - OTEN Yodio by momu
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
WEB 2.0 and its most interesting tools
My favorite tools are Tokbox and RSS (google reader). For teachers (or anybody) being able to make a quick little video, using the webcam that's part of your computer would be great. It looks like you just click "record" and talk to your computer. What a quick way to create a performance assessment that's personal and technical!
I like the google reader (RSS) also. I've wondered about it for a long time, because I've seen the little letters by the links I use to follow newspapers and other news sources. I would really like having them send me the updates. As a teacher, if I assigned students to post on blogs--especially if they were posting on their own blogs and commenting on one another's posts--it would make me crazy to have to track down all those posts and comments.
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
Blogs Away!
Autobiography
Obviously, I am not a digital native. We bought our first computer in 1988--a Mac Classic. I learned how to use it by practicing the tutorial, which began by instructing the user in proper mouse use, and by experimenting with it.
We've had a number of computers since then--both PC and MAC--and our family of four keeps three computers pretty busy today. We all have cell phones, I skype with my grandchildren and our kids have blogs and I'm on facebook. So, although I am not a native of the digital country, I am certainly a naturalized citizen.

