Monday, January 28, 2013
NETS
After reading up on NETS standards for teachers, students, administrators, and coaches, I was still left wondering what exactly are the standards? I understand the foundation of the standards and why they have been developed however I was left wondering about the down and dirty. What exactly do students need to be able to do at specific grade levels? I stumbled upon this site that clears up some of the unknown. However, only some of the unknown. The use of "age appropriate" technology litters the grade level performance indicators. This link http://blog.iste.org/ might be more helpful, although I have not yet been able to sift through all the contributors, I'm hoping at least a few are actually classroom teachers!
Sunday, January 27, 2013
Digital Storytelling
The Impending Snow Day video reminded me of this gem. These kids are brilliant and have brought digital storytelling to a new and argumentative level.
RSS
So I figured RSS would be some complicated tool that would take me forever to wrap my head around and implement; however, it couldn't be easier. Google Reader has got to be the easiest tool to use and now all I have to do is keep subscribing and try to keep up with the information that is delivered. I found this clip very useful, although not visually stimulating.
Tuesday, January 22, 2013
3D --Animoto Project
We just started a unit focusing on building with and identifying three dimensional shapes and their properties. I find that the most difficult part for the kids is the language used during this unit. Not only is the vocabulary brand new, it is not regularly used in life or at school. Yes during this unit, but not again until the math benchmark testing or until next year! Let's face it, it isn't every day that you hear Kindergarten students walking around using words like rectangular prism, sphere, and cylinder. Students are introduced to the solids by sorting and classifying classroom objects into the following three categories.
I made the video below as a fun way to reinforce the language used during this unit of study.
"This look like a box." |
"This look like a ball." |
"This looks like a can." |
One focus of the unit is which solids are easy to build with, and which are challenging. This student told me that triangular prisms are hard to build with because of the "points" and because they have "slides" on the sides. However, take a close look at the fourth layer up from the bottom. He managed to balance two triangular prisms on their vertices When I asked him how he did it, he said, "It's easy...I mean it is just balance Mrs. Haggerty."
I also found this great idea at A Place Called Kindergarten.
Monday, January 21, 2013
Blogs--teacher tools too
I've viewed blogs and wikis as learning tools for students. But after searching and reading through a plethora of blogs created by Kindergarten teachers, I've clearly missed a very important point--they are tools for teachers as well. Although this is probably obvious to most, perhaps being a novice is why I missed this blinking neon sign...or maybe it is because I'm approaching my ninth month of pregnancy. Either way, the bus finally pulled up and I'm on it!
I've started archiving blogs that are created by Kindergarten teachers and it is easy to see that this is a way to revolutionize ideas, as well as begin a business as was the choice of some educators. Why not make a few extra bucks for your work?
At any rate, I particularly love this one.
I've started archiving blogs that are created by Kindergarten teachers and it is easy to see that this is a way to revolutionize ideas, as well as begin a business as was the choice of some educators. Why not make a few extra bucks for your work?
At any rate, I particularly love this one.
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
Technology with Kinders
I've always struggled with providing students with authentic audiences for their writing. Moms and dads on a class celebration night, although exciting, becomes boring and antiquated after a while. That's why I'm dying to begin blogging in the classroom, but am struggling with how I could implement it with Kinders. I need to look at it more creatively and have been searching others' blogs to gain some ideas and inspirations.
I love the ideas found in Technology with Intention and have been very inspired by this one too!
I love the ideas found in Technology with Intention and have been very inspired by this one too!
Tuesday, January 15, 2013
Apple Picking
This little gem was made on Animoto...I might be addicted.
Using Technology in Kindergarten Writing
Blogs, Wikis, Podcasts, and Other Powerful Web Tools for Classrooms
Read/Write Web was an unfamiliar term up until reading these chapters, and as of now, I can see how the dream of Bernes-Lee is coming to fruition through forms and forums of communications such as blogs. The Web has been used as a source to gain information, but is now transforming daily as a way to share information even for those who may not consider themselves technologically savvy. Tools like Blogs and Wikis open up a new door for individuals on the Read/Write Web, as well as for education.
It is stated time and time again throughout the first two chapters that education and educators are slow to react to this technological advancement, which may be true in most cases; however, as an educator I'd like to argue that perhaps some of this has been due to our misunderstanding of or lack of understanding of the implications a blog carries both positively and negatively (among other factors as well, of course). I clearly have not been an active blogger up to this point and part of the reason why is because I have had no use for it, or so I thought. However, after completing the reading it is clear to see that a blog can transform a classroom for students, teachers, and parents alike. The idea that a classroom in Connecticut can collaborate with an audience all over the world is mind blowing, yet the educational gain is extraordinary. The idea that primary sources can be brought easily in the "classroom" (I'm using that term to include the blog), as well as authors, scientists, and other students can only provide students with a unique learning experience.
Safety is the largest concern I would have, but as I read I realized that I hate to share personal information online. For example I have avoided Twitter, have an inactive account on Facebook, and struggled to write anything in this blog's profile about my personal life, yet I preach that online banking is the way to go! Talk about providing access to my life. However, after completing these chapters it is clear that safety is in the hands of the blogger and that this is going to be an important part of students' lives from here on out. So it is time to get over the fear and learn how to protect ourselves, our blogs and our students. I think what I read that was most powerful was teachers cannot protect students, but instead provide them with the tools so that when faced with inappropriate content, "they have a choice as how to respond when faced with such a situation." (Richardson, 2010).
It is clear that blogs can have a place in all classrooms, it is just a matter of how they are used and managed. For example, I have been trying to figure out how to utilize a blog in a Kindergarten classroom. And it is clear that I will have to be creative and that I will need parent support, but in the least it will provide access to important information in order to keep parents involved in our learning and better able to support their children at home. (No more newsletters, no more copying, no more stuffing folders...a dream come true!)
Richardson summed it up when he stated that,
"Blogging can teach critical reading and writing skills, and it can lead to greater information management skills. I can help student become much more media and information literate by clarifying the choices they make about the content they write about, it can teach them about how networks function--both human and computer--and it can teach the essential skill of collaboration." (p. 37, 2010)
Sunday, January 13, 2013
Literacy in 2013
The definition of literacy has changed over time. In the past, students were considered literate if they could read and write and most of that reading and writing took place within specific constructs of text books, trade books, and perhaps newspaper articles. When I was in third grade, my class made a video project (VHS) about the jungle and it was considered cutting edge. A message about learning we could share with other teachers, students, and parents within our small community interested in our grade three class. And at the time, an audience that reached outside of the classroom boundaries when it was our turn to bring the video home.
However, with the introduction and increased public access to the Internet, students have to do more than just read and write within traditional constructs in order to be literate. Students need to search and navigate the Web in order to find specific information and then determine the validity and reliability of the information accessed in order to share that information within a Web construct. Along that journey, students will see and respond to advertisements, blog posts and research, or become distracted by, YouTube videos, as well as create their own videos that they share with friends, family, and strangers. Therefore, students need to be critically literate, learn to interact with the text, actively engage in readings all while determining reliability and validity of information provided on the World Wide Web.
Tuesday, January 8, 2013
Distorted View
It seems that my computer gives me a different view of this blog than everyone else...is it me, or is it the computer?
PS. Still tired and pregnant
PS. Still tired and pregnant
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