Tuesday, December 13, 2011

My Website

You can visit my website here!  Enjoy it...hope you like it ;)

ICONN Resources

One of the great things about being a college student at BU was how much information I got to access through the University Library.  The Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center had hundreds of amazing artifacts and pieces of historical literature for students to examine.  And when you logged into the library website, you could search for books, articles, journals, magazines, any scholarly material really, through extensive databases...the database for Mugar Library itself, and third-party databases like LION, and my personal favorite, JSTOR.  If I wanted to find academic articles on any topic related to English Literature, I went to JSTOR and was never disappointed.


ICONN.org is the Connecticut State Library database, and is very similar to the database at BU and on other college campuses.  All you need is a library card number to log into the digital library, and you're taken to a page where you can access at least two dozen databases (infotrac) to search for materials.  There are databases for specific topics like fine arts, business, and the environment.  One of my favorite databases is Academic OneFile, since it reminds me so much of JSTOR.  On Academic OneFile, you can find, "peer-reviewed, full-text articles from the world's leading journals and reference sources...with extensive coverage of the physical sciences, technology, medicine, social sciences, the arts, theology, literature and other subjects."  I typed in a few random search topics like "Walt Whitman and the Civil War," on Academic OneFile, but I was disappointed when few full-length articles appeared.  Many of the search findings were excerpts from Publisher's Weekly, or book reviews of books about Whitman in the Civil War.  I'd therefore have to search for these books somewhere else to get any real information.  I did find some full-length articles, but not nearly as many as I would find on JSTOR or databases like it.  


So while Academic OneFile was slightly disappointing for me, if you're a Connecticut high school or middle school student, and you want to do research on the Civil War, chances are you'll find a lot of great articles on Academic OneFile.  There's also a General OneFile, but I don't see much difference between the two.    


It's so important that students have access to online databases like this, because it's the quickest and most user-friendly way to get reliable information about academic topics.  Students don't need Wikipedia when they can use databases like Academic OneFile.  Many students wouldn't know where to look for this information if they didn't have a database search engine to do it for them.  When I was doing a research paper on Walt Whitman, JSTOR was a life-saver because I didn't know who the Whitman scholars were, and I didn't know which academic journals I should read to find information about the poet.  Another great thing about Academic OneFile is you can access articles from the New York Times and other publications for free, when you'd normally have to pay for a membership to read them online.      

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Non-Linear PowerPoint

What I love about non-linear PowerPoints is they allow students to almost have a conversation with the material.  Depending on what they want, they can go from slide to slide, forwards, back, and sideways.  I wanted to create a PowerPoint where students use the slides as a form of reference, almost like an encyclopedia.

So I took a soliloquy from Shakespeare's Macbeth and highlighted certain words in the excerpt that might confuse students.  Student can click on whichever word they want and are led to a definition.  Even if students don't need definitions, they can still use the PowerPoint as a reference because I added articles and videos to the presentation as well.  On the bottom of each slide, I allow students to click back to the soliloquy.  On the bottom of the soliloquy slide, I have links to different interpretations and a video of Sir Ian Mckellen performing the soliloquy.

I'm happy with this PowerPoint.  I can actually imagine students using this presentation, especially if they were doing a specific writing assignment on this excerpt and needed help understanding it.  

Bridging the Digital Divide

Before I read these two articles about the digital divide in public schools, I imagined the "divide" meant that low-income schools in urban areas had little to no access to technology, so their students performed poorly, compared to high-income schools with lots of technology.  Parts of my initial understanding were true; low-income schools do not have access to as much technology as high income schools.  And low-income students are often identified as needing remedial help on state/national exams.

However, the most important thing I learned about the digitial divide is that the "divide" has nothing to do with how much technology students are exposed to.  Minority students in low-income schools have laptops and cellphones, and use them often.  No, the "divide" has to do with the type of technology these low-income schools are given.  Furthermore, just because kids are given remedial computer programs to raise test scores doesn't mean those programs will work!  Computers do not euqal amazing performance. 

They can, if computer programs are used in tandem with excellent instruction from a competent teacher.

As Alec MacGillis writes in his article Law, Softward Fuel 'Digital Divid', "When students are drilled over and over on the same standards that they're going to be tested on, skeptics say, one would expect that their scores would go up somewhat. What is more important is whether the software is benefiting students in ways that will stick after the tests are done" (Macgillis).

If a bad teacher is drilling students on testing materials, it doesn't mean the students will score higher because they were drilled over and over again.  Students will score higher if an exceptional teacher is drilling them, and hopefully, teaching them some useful reading, writing, and math skills along the way they can use after the test is over.  The same rule applies to technology.  It's not enough to give a school millions of dollars to use a computer program if that program is ineffective and not backed by research.     

In her article Understanding the New Digital Divide, Mary Beth Hertz explains the Divide can be understood if we consider the kind of access students have to technology, not whether they have access at all.  So as teachers, we need to be wary of any remedial programs that come our way.  Just because it's been funded by millions of dollars and promoted around the district does not mean it will help our students.  Schools and teachers should not be so "desperate," as MacGillis describes, to get our kids in front of computers because we want to raise test scores.  There is no substitute for excellent, hands-on teaching.  One excerpt from MacGillis' article really struck me:

"At one station, a student from an eighth-grade special-needs class was doing an exercise on identifying the roots of words, a skill included in New Jersey's state content standards. The exercise was dressed up as a baseball game: a word appeared on a base on a diamond, and the boy, the "batter," had to choose one of four words that described the meaning of the word's root. The word "missile" appeared on first base. Confused, the boy clicked on the "help" icon, and was told by the computer that the root of "missile" means "send." But he didn't understand that he was being given the answer, and instead clicked on a wrong choice, "miss." The program proceeded to the next example anyway: "dictation" appeared on second base. Again, the boy clicked for help, which told him the nswer was "say." This time he realized he was being given the answer, and he dutifully picked that choice. The program congratulated him: He had hit a double! Despite the boy's troubles, he wasn't about to get any help from his teacher, Sharae Huff. She was watching the class from a distance, holding back from approaching those who were stuck. For Huff, the Compass period was a time to let someone else - the computer - do the teaching."

We can't allow computer programs to do the teaching for us!  Technology should be used to enhance teaching, not take the place of it. 

Don't even get me started on standardized testing and the pressure it puts on school systems.  Or on its ability to waste months of meaningful teaching time.  If this country weren't so focused on getting those "great" scores, the digitial divide would be easier to bridge.   

Girls Can be Computer Geeks Too

This article by associate professor Diane McGrath entitled "Closing the Gender Gap," addresses the question of why boys often dominate the field of technology.  Why is Best Buy's "Geek Squad" usually made up of tech savvy boys?  McGrath argues its not because girls are less engaged with or adept at using media resources.  She argues its because of the way math and technology is taught to students in primary and secondary school.

She compares technology to the dilemma girls have with math.  Studies show that girls can struggle with and have less proficiency in math than their male classmates, and are less likely to choose a career in the math or science fields.  Female astrophysicists, for example, are an anomoly, an exception to the rule.  McGrath says the best way to teach math, science, and technology so this gender gap doesn't happen is to use a project based learning (PBL) approach.  In contrast to traditional teaching methods, PBL allows students to "become more deeply involved with technology to enhance their understanding of what they are learning."  With PBL, students are using technology and science to complete projects that can be used in the real world, like an astronomy project made on MicroWorlds that can teach kids astronomy. 

It seems like a no-brainer that such projects would promote literacy and confidence in using technology.  It harkens back to that question we always asked in math class: "Why am I learning this?  Why do I need this?"  With PBL, students don't have to ask that question.  They're not just learning concepts, they're applying those concepts.  Raife Esquith, who's won national awards and recongnitions for his work at Hobart Elementary in LA, says he takes students to baseball games so they can practice math.  They think about and compare player statistics to determine the lineup!  Cool, right?  Math has meaning.  PBL makes technology have meaning too.

McGrath closes her argument stating that as teachers, we need to be aware of girls' social and spacial needs when doing PBL.  That's what brings it all together.  She writes:

"Answering to girls' needs for social   able to participate, and they want the social, cognitive, and physical space in which to do so. They want to have their issues listened to and addressed. And when we do these things, when we teach in a connected way and take into account girls’ need to engage deeply with the subject matter, then girls do work-even in math and technology, fìelds we always thought girls didn’t like."

Makes sense to me!

Monday, October 17, 2011

Copyright Scares Me

And based on everything I've learned about copyright laws over the past few weeks, it should scare you too.  As our professor emphasized in class, while none of us are likely to face a lawsuit if we play John Lennon's "Imagine" in a presentation for our students (because no one is going to tell or care), we need to be prepared to face the consequences if we're caught or if a music exec's kid is sitting in our class.  Don't forget about the teacher who showed "Shrek" from a bad DVD and got fired.  That kid's father was such a jerk, by the way.  I'd have given that teacher a nice, stern warning and confiscated the DVD at the next parent-teacher conference.  

Anyway, the biggest implication I see copyright laws having on every day teaching involves websites and computer programs.  Putting random online photos, videos or music clips on a website (a personal or class website) is something I will never do now.  I will also never install another program onto any computer in my classroom unless I read over the copyright laws, thoroughly, and follow them to a T.

Since I'm not crazily dependent on using technology and since most materials can be used if its for an educational purpose, I don't see copyright having huge implications on my future teaching.  But it certainly feels nice knowing what the rules are.  I don't like messing with the government...

Ask questions, ask lots of questions!

Inquiry-based learning has a place in every classroom, and it will certainly be part of my English class.  Some of my best memories from high school English are simply of me and my classmates sitting in a circle in our desks, a poem in front of us, answering questions like, "do you like this poem?" "what's this poem about?" and, "why is it important?"  So many times before, I had taken as gospel what my teachers said was important about a certain text.  Of course, we were asked to discuss the text but usually we were asked specific questions that had only one or two correct answers.  We were expected to discern, for example, that "Lord of the Flies" is about primal human instincts and the degradation of society.  Well sure;  that certainly has a lot to do with it, but what makes learning extra effective, fun and meaningful is allowing kids to make those conclusions themselves, rather than telling them first.  My favorite quote from an article on constructivist or inquiry-based learning is:  


...Schools must change from a focus on "what we know" to an emphasis on "how we come to know."


Students in my English class will not be told why Shakespeare's language is effective.  They will be provided the opportunity to ask why, and then given guidance on how to figure it out through research, discussions, writing and reading activities.  Of course, teachers cannot create lessons that are 100% inquiry-based.  That would be too frustrating for students.  However, my goal as an English teacher is to create learners who constantly ask why and how, rather than create learners who recite what.  


One of the most important reasons for this is in today's world, students are constantly bombarded with information from multiple sources.  How do they know which news article to trust, which politician to vote for, which charity to donate to?  These seem like basic tasks, but not for a student who never learned how to ask his or her own questions and find reliable answers.  That's what I want my kids to learn, above all.  

Loving Technology but Ignoring Content

After reading this article from the Washington Post, I can safely say I agree with the sentiment that filling a school with iPads and laptops will not guarantee an improvement in student performance.  The author asserts that the reason students are doing so poorly in schools is that content, or what we're teaching kids and why, is poor and that giving schools money for technology improves nothing.  Content needs to be addressed first.  The problem, as the writer points out, is that great technology is easy to measure and fund.  Determining great content can be tricky.  This country is full of exceptional teachers who are just as frustrated as this writer is, and while these teachers may share views on the most effective teaching pedagogies (constructivist learning for example), many will disagree with each other on which content should be used to teach reading, writing and literature, and why this content is important.  Each teacher has his or her own unique teaching goals and objectives.  

We can all agree that American kids are flailing like dying fish on a dock in our schools, and we all want them to stop flailing, focus and just do better.  So when departments of education see a school in a better socio-economic neighborhood rife with technological resources produce better student performance, they assume A directly led to B (more technology directly lead to better performance) and the non-sequitur the writer describes is created.      

Yet taking technology out of the equation is not the solution, and that's what this article suggests.  At least, that's what I got from it.  Yes, content needs to change but we cannot blame technology funding on weak pedagogies and content.  And we should not halt this type of funding either.  Kids need technology in schools; it's important, especially when that technology is used to its best advantage by teachers and staff.  Just as more technology does not lead to better performance, more technology does not necessarily lead to worse performance.  Computers, iPads, smartboards, laptops with photoshop and Microsoft Word can improve learning, it absolutely can.  I wish the writer would acknowledge this.  Even if content remains the same, technology can make a book like "Animal Farm" more accessible and fun for students.  Kids can create artwork based on the book on Photoshop, conduct research for essays on computers, or simply have access to the text itself.  As Kelly Gallagher points out in "Readicide" many, many schools lack this basic resource.  So if a school receives funding to give kids books on iPads or Kindles, I say hallelujah.  At least the kids are getting books.

The problem I therefore have with this article is the writer seems to use technology funding as a scapegoat for weak content in our schools.  Is this true?  Maybe, but I would bet a week's paycheck that one of the real culprits for poor performance and weak content is standardized testing.  We need to reconsider how we measure student performance and how tests are holding kids back.  But that's a whole different conversation, a conversation that unfortunately moves in circles amongst teachers, administrators and the big dogs in DC who make the laws (and, of course, have never stepped foot inside a classroom as an educator.)  

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Tech Programs in the Classroom

One of the great things about the programs we've been learning about in this class is that they involve texts, images and sound.  Kids who have trouble reading or don't like reading can still be engaged in class projects that include taking photos, re-designing those photos (in photoshop) or typing in poems to a computer.  Some programs however, like Photoshop, might be too advanced for developmentally challenged kids - and thats what I feel UDEL emphasizes, creating classroom materials that are accessible for kids of various developmental backgrounds.

The Wonders of Photoshop


I've seen a former boss of mine do incredible things with Photoshop.  He could create beautiful and eye-catching posters with just a few photos.  He could twist cherry blossom branches around words on a poster, advertising a poetry reading, and he could make an old face look young again.  I therefore always viewed photoshop as a great tool for people in advertising, marketing and PR as my boss created posters and promotional materials for university events. 

He taught me a few things, but I was still rusty when I tried making the above photo.  It started off as a simple winterscape, and I inserted my golden retriever Riley into the scene.  I did this using the lasso cut and paste technique.  I wanted to master cutting, pasting and moving objects around in a photo, so my third "layer" became the tree on the right hand side.  It's a copy of the tree trunk on the inner left-hand side.  Once that was done, I experimented with the magic wand.  Highlighting the grass on which Riley was sitting on in his original photo, I turned the snow into grass using the magic wand.  To make the grass look more realistic, I tried to vary the color to create a shade effect.  I also used the smudge tool to blend the grass into the snow.  The magic wand was also used to put more fluffy snow around Riley so it looks like he's sitting in a snow bank.  Flowers that were cut, pasted, shrunk then copied and text were the final touches. 

I'm pretty happy with the final result - it's certainly amateur but that's okay.  Photoshop is a great way for kids to create book covers, posters and artistic images for class projects or extracurricular activities, like drama club or student council.  Teachers often like to play with images when reading poems or narratives, so it could be fun to challenge students to create a metaphorical background for a poem through photoshop.  Teachers should reach out to school tech professionals for tutorials, and for extra support when teaching kids how to use photoshop.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

I LOVE PICNIK!




My sister and her friend Ed...I love the 1960's color effect!



My dog was a cute puppy...

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Tweets for Professional Success

In a recent post to her blog, Education Tech Specialist Kathy Schrock discusses the advantages of using Twitter for professional development.  Through her Twitter account, Kathy learned about the Leadership Day Initiative, which gave educational technologist the opportunity to share different ideas, challenges, resources and needs related to classroom technologies with local administrators.  Teachers could, "Write a letter...Post a top ten list. Make a podcast or a video. Highlight a local success or challenge. Recommend some readings. Do an interview of a successful technology leader."  The goal of the Leadership Day Initiative was to help educate administrators on the advantages of using educational technology, and how to implement, research and utilize those tools.  Shrock became an instant fan of the initiative - and why wouldn't she?  I predict only good things can come out of such open communication between educators and administrators. 

The point of Shrock's post, however, was not to applaud the Leadership Day Initiative but how she found out about it.  She "follows" a personal friend named Patrick not only because he's her friend, but because he's a principal and involved in classroom media.  She likes to read his "tweets" so she can learn about events like the Leadership Day Initiative.  Shrock realizes she's only touched the tip of the iceberg on how Twitter can expand and enhance her knowledge of her field.  Since she learns much from Patrick, she decides to "follow" some of his friends as well and expand her network of resources. 

Professionals and students therefore do not need to use Twitter only to catch up on celebrity gossip or mundane, every-day happenings.  This form of social media offers kids and teachers the opportunity for educational growth based on who they "follow," and what those people "tweet" about.  Doing so has real-world implications.  High school and college students should consider the networking possibilities of Twitter when applying for jobs, looking for internships or learning more about a prospective field.  Shrock sums it up perfectly at the end of her post:  

"This same skillset is what we are trying to help students develop as we prepare then for the digital, global workforce and world-- find the experts, participate in the process, and collaborate. With the information explosion, there is no way anyone can know everything. However,  knowing where to turn with a question or when trying to keep up with what is going on in a certain field, is a skill that will lead to our students to become lifelong learners!"

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

My Standard for Education Technology

The Standard I've chosen to base my MD 400 projects around comes from the ISTE website and is as follows:


2.
Communication and Collaboration
Students use digital media and environments to communicate and work collaboratively, including at a distance, to support individual learning and contribute to the learning of others. Students:
a.interact, collaborate, and publish with peers, experts, or others employing a variety of digital environments and media.
b.communicate information and ideas effectively to multiple audiences using a variety of media and formats.
c.develop cultural understanding and global awareness by engaging with learners of other cultures.
d.contribute to project teams to produce original works or solve problems.

I'm currently studying to become a secondary English teacher.  In my methods course, my class and I outlined what we believed the purpose of English education should be.  Several of our ideas show up in the above standard, namely that English students should be able to communicate effectively, in oral and written forms, to a variety of audiences, and they should gain global perspective on different issues.  I'm therefore hoping to align this standard, technology, and my visions on English learning together.

Blogging For Kids

With the right amount of creativity, vision and purpose, blogging can be an excellent way to engage students in writing and make it - if you can believe it - fun.

The article Teddy Bears Go Blogging details an excellent example of a teacher using technology to get her kids excited about writing and sharing their thoughts.  The practice of journaling events in our lives, whether its the adventures of a teddy bear or celebrating holidays, has never been uncommon in schools.  I remember writing in a class journal as a second-grader.  I wrote about family vacations, my favorite foods, and every day activities.  The Teddy Bears Go Blogging project is built around the same idea, but the format is different.

Today, children may feel that writing with a pen or pencil is a job or something that you do for homework.  The subsequent reaction?  "UGH!  I don't wanna do it!"  Typing, however, feels more natural and fun for kids today, for better or worse.  There are many advantages to having kids write manually, but I won't get into those now.  Suffice it to say that writing in a blog can get kids over that initial hurdle of feeling like writing is a chore.  It's not.  It's relevant, fun and an essential part of communicating with those around us.

The blog holds several advantages over manual writing - it allows for mass communication amongst different groups of people, i.e. a class in Canada and Australia.  The teachers and students could post their thoughts and stories from anywhere at anytime.  It's instant gratification - there's no need to wait for hand-written responses in your mailbox.  The result?  A constant dialogue through words, pictures, music etc.  The kids are learning how to combine writing and visual stimuli in meaningful ways.  These are elementary school students practicing how to express themselves in a relevant and modern format.  What more could a teacher ask for?  Furthermore, posting feedback and comments on a blog is basically peer editing/reviewing dressed in different clothes.

I wish the article gave more details on the academic goals surrounding this blog.  Why did the teacher set it up?  Was it just to give kids more writing practice, or was it simply a branch-off of a pen-pal project?  Elementary, middle and high school students can use blogs for a variety of school projects, but for me, the most important thing is to have a purpose in mind, as with any lesson plan or project.

I'm going to read about Australian teddy bears now...

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Moby Dick: On my iPod?

In response to this article by USAtoday...

http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/2007-02-06-mp3-homework_x.htm

The fact that more and more students are listening to MP3 versions of books, learning new languages on iPods while shopping, and listening to lectures online is a testament to how students have become expert multi-taskers.

Students do homework while watching TV, riding on buses and surfing the web. I'm living proof of this - I visited 5 websites and sent two e-mails while reading this article. The ability to multi-task isn't a bad thing; students are asked to do a lot in a 24 hour period, especially when they're in high school, so why not let them catch up on a night's reading while driving home, or doing their chores?

I do have one concern regarding MP3 books. This technology has the potential to make students less capable of staying focused for an extended period of time. There's already research out there that suggests young peoples' ability to stay focused on one task (i.e. reading a book, or in my case reading one article) has diminished, because they are constantly bombarded with technological stimuli. MP3 books would only add to that technological overload.

We all know that kids like to use technology, and use it often, but what interested me the most in this article was the quote from the school librarian. She claims listening to audio books encourages reading, and I wonder if this is actually true. I'm sure as audio books become more popular more studies and surveys will be done to corroborate her claim. If it is true, then I feel teachers have a responsibility to look into audio books. As long as kids are reading and absorbing material, who cares how its done?

Audio books have already been proven to help ESL students. I recorded grade school books on MP3 for a colleague last year; she said it was helpful for her students to hear and read the language at the same time.

Teachers are responsible for finding ways to work with their students. As aforementioned, kids are multi-tasking and using technology everyday. Why not make that work within (and outside) the walls of a classroom? If using MP3 materials (along with regular books of course) makes school feel more accessible and relevant to the students, that's something to be celebrated.