Saturday, October 10, 2015
Thursday, August 13, 2015
My Blogging Plan
Google Images: Free to use or share |
Our blogging professor has asked us to come up with a blogging plan for the next month or two. I have decided to share my blogging plan here, in order to maybe inspire someone else with ideas for blogging.
I carefully considered each week, and what the students and I might be learning before deciding on what our blog content should be.
I am truly motivated right now to set my new students up with blogging, and using my classroom plan to model each week’s blogging activity made perfect sense.
Our professor shared an article that said that once a week is a good amount to keep a blog going, especially for someone who is new to the community. Therefore, my plan includes creating one blog entry per week starting on a Monday, and publishing it no later than Friday.
Monday, August 24th
Create a blog entry titled: “New School Year Thoughts”. I’m not sure that will be the title, but I plan to write my thoughts about the first week of school. Maybe I will include some notes and pictures about what the students are doing.
Monday, August 31st
Create a blog entry titled: “Back to School Night Thoughts”. BTSN will be a few days before this week begins. I plan to write any thoughts that I have as a result of giving my presentation and meeting the families of my new students.
Monday, September 7th is Labor Day so I will begin the entry on Tuesday, September 8th
Create a blog entry titled: “Now that the School Year is Rolling”. At this point, two weeks will have passed and I will have a good handle on who has internet access for online homework. I plan to write an entry for the students (and parents) about how we will be doing online homework this year.
Monday, September 14th
Create a blog entry titled: “The Importance of Being Yourself”. This may or may not tie into my classroom blogging activity that is still developing in my mind. I start the school year with a project that includes writing a poem about ourselves. I plan to reflect on the project during this week.
Monday, September 21st
Create a blog entry titled: “Digital Citizenship: It’s part of your school supplies”. At this point in the school year, I would like my students to begin blogging. I plan to use this blog entry as an introduction, and will ask them to blog about something related to the topic.
Monday, September 28th
Create a blog entry titled: “Sharing your Opinions”. This will be used to model opinion writing on current events. I will use an article from Scholastic News (online) to demonstrate the steps in opinion writing. From there, my students will blog an opinion about an article.
Monday, October 5th
Create a blog entry titled: “Book Review”. I plan to write this entry in order to demonstrate for my students how to blog about a book they have read. I will also demonstrate how to upload images if we haven’t done so by now.
Monday, October 12th
Create a blog entry titled: “Playground Pet Peeves”. This will be used as an example for my students to write about issues that have come up on the school yard since school has started. I plan to use this one because it’s a hot topic that will probably invite several comments from student to student. This will give me another opportunity to model proper etiquette.
Care to share some of your blogging plan ideas here?
Wednesday, August 12, 2015
RIGOR-a key shift in mathematics
I just returned from a three hour training on our new math program. If you’re a multi-tasker like I am, then you have trouble sitting still and listening to someone “lecture” from the front of the room, too. Our district leadership has asked us to be a respectful audience and not work on other things when we are being trained, so there I sat… dutifully taking notes.
Google Images: Free to Use and Share |
Then, I had an “Aha!” moment while I was taking notes and realized I could turn some of today’s training content into a blog post! Of course, I will add some personal and teaching experience to it, so it will hopefully be more enjoyable than my training was today.
Google Images: Free to Use and Share |
What is “rigor”? What does it look like? What comes to mind?
Here are some of the answers our group came up with:
-taking more time on problems
-going deeper into learning
-maybe getting frustrated with a problem, but continuing anyway
-pushing through a problem
Google’s definition is the quality of being extremely thorough, exhaustive, or accurate”. The definition and explanation from corestandards.org states “Rigor refers to deep, authentic command of mathematical concepts, not making math harder or introducing topics at earlier grades. To help students meet the standards, educators will need to pursue, with equal intensity, three aspects of rigor in the major work of each grade: conceptual understanding, procedural skills and fluency, and application.
When I was in elementary school, I was a master at procedural skills and fluency. I was the first one done on the speed tests for facts, and always received 100% on math tests. And, I was bored to death... always. I remember my teachers saying that I didn’t have to do the “word problems” but I actually wanted to learn how! I loved a challenge, and needed one, too. My childhood experience doesn’t differ much from today’s children's experience which is why the common core initiative calls for key shifts in mathematics. As a third grade teacher, I have students every year that tell me “oh, my teacher said not to do those” when faced with a word problem. So, in 42 years, has nothing changed?
It’s important to teach procedures (algorithms) in math, but that is only one part of the whole picture. Understanding the math concept, and knowing when to apply the procedures is another. Word problems, or real-life application problems is a huge part of overall math competency. It is our responsibility as teachers to give our students opportunities to work through difficult problems, to spend time being somewhat frustrated, and to understand that the process is just as important as the final answer.
Please don’t be discouraged if you don’t possess the skills to give to your students. Maybe you weren’t given them as a student, either. Fortunately, there is a plethora of resources out there that can help you get started. You can learn right along with your students!
Thoughts? Comments? Experiences? Fears? Resources? Feel free to share.
Sunday, August 9, 2015
Online Homework Poll
I use online polls and surveys often with my third graders because it’s a quick and easy way to get information, and because they love completing them online. The first time I used one was early last year when a parent offered to bring in complementary food from “The Habit” and I needed to know what the kids wanted to order. Typically I would have them write it up on paper, and I would collect all of the slips. If I didn’t misplace them, I would tally up the items and communicate to the parent. Then, days later when the food arrived, I would try and recall where I put the list. Using an online form streamlined the process, and everything was accessible on Google via any device. After the initial use, I was hooked! Since I did not use one at the beginning of the year, I have been giving thought to what I would poll the students on, and have come up with the idea below.
Saturday, August 8, 2015
Student Centered Learning
Today ended our District’s week long K-12 “Edcamp” which I had the privilege of participating in by facilitating several workshops on topics such as Google Apps on the iPad, Genius Hour, Project Based Learning, Webquests, and others. Some of my 55 minute workshops had over 20 attendees, while others had one or two. I prepared some notes, resources, and examples ahead of time, but did not have a set agenda for the training. When the participants arrived in the room in which I was teaching, I did a quick little informal survey (basically asked) to find out what they knew, and what they wanted to learn. I think some were surprised, and possibly felt uneasy that my workshop wasn’t teacher directed, and traditionally structured. One of the teachers even asked me what I wanted her to do first.
I hope you agree that the message was clear and impactful, and begged the question: does this fit your teaching paradigm?
After my initial “survey”, I showed the following video to get things going...
I hope you agree that the message was clear and impactful, and begged the question: does this fit your teaching paradigm?
After we watched the video, I shared a bit about my own belief system, and explained how I was going to structure our time together. I proceeded to run the workshop as I do my own classroom. Each teacher was working on something that was meaningful to them, and I modeled being the “facilitator” of the learning environment. I circulated around the room, asking meaningful questions to probe my learners to delve deeper into what they were researching... doing… creating. I paused the session, so to speak, at various moments to ask for comments or inspirations that they wanted to share, and always saved time at the end for reflection.
For two of the sessions, I invited four of last year’s students to come and help facilitate, and fortunately their parents were willing to drive them over to the training site. I wasn’t sure how the attending teachers were going to take being “taught” by 9 year olds, but I was willing to take the risk, and they really are WAY more proficient with these topics than I am! The results were beyond my expectations! The feedback was incredibly positive!
One teacher, that’s known me for many years, took a moment to share with me that she was moved by the way I always involve my students in such valuable learning experiences, and has learned so much from watching me over the years. Honestly... it brought tears to my eyes.
What are your thoughts on student-centered learning? Are you having any issues/obstacles to making the shift in your teaching paradigm?
Wednesday, August 5, 2015
Blogging with Third Graders
Blogging with Third Graders
This week in edtech#537, “Blogging in the Classroom”, our professor asked us to write 4 blogs entries:
-Any Blog Entry with an embedded image
-Any Blog Entry with an embedded audio file
-Any Blog Entry with an embedded Video File
-Any Blog Entry with an embedded Poll
The first thing I thought when I saw the audio file was...
… but then, I began to think of uses for it in the classroom, and my list started to GROW!
Educational Uses for Audio Files for Third Grade Students (or any relevant grade level):
1. Record yourself reading a book.
2. Create a weekly podcast series.
3. Write and record your autobiography.
4. Write and record a classmate’s biography.
5. Write and record a famous person’s biography.
6. Create and record a poem about a geometric solid.
7. Create and record a song that your favorite book character might sing.
8. Record your answers to assignments/tests.
9. Show what you know about any subject by recording it.
10. Record “what I did in school today” and send it to your family.
11. Record a commentary on what a classmate is doing. (Andrew's idea)
12. Narrate a piece of your artwork. (Andrew's idea)
13. Summarize a chapter in your book. (Emily's idea)
14. Discuss plot, character, setting, and other story elements from your book. (Emily's idea)
11. Record a commentary on what a classmate is doing. (Andrew's idea)
12. Narrate a piece of your artwork. (Andrew's idea)
13. Summarize a chapter in your book. (Emily's idea)
14. Discuss plot, character, setting, and other story elements from your book. (Emily's idea)
Still Learning
There’s a lot of things that I said I would never do,
or that would never be “me”
such as living in the suburbs
(I’m more of a diversity kind of girl),
for obvious reasons,
(I made it to almost 50 years old),
and steering the wheel of a twin-engine plane (I’m DEATHLY afraid of heights),
but as John Lennon said…
“Life is what happens when you are making other plans.”
So, now we have yet one more item to add to the list of “Who? Me? Never!”.
I think my initial resistance to being a “Tweeter” was that I was happy with Facebook, and I figured, like everything else, once word caught on, there would be a plethora of social media platforms, and I didn’t have the time to participate in them all. Well, as a result of one of my graduate school classes, “Blogging in the Classroom”, I was required to create a Twitter account.
It’s been just about 6 weeks now that I have been tweeting… well, learning to tweet would be more precise. There is definitely a learning curve with learning a new language! Grammar and punctuation appear to not matter. Nor does knowing whether or not people “like” what you say or post, but my classmates and professor have been kind in guiding me through it all.
I really chose to blog about my Twitter experience because I can honestly say that I did not know what I was missing! I have had the best time gathering (“Favoriting” if you will) teaching resources that have me inspired to start this next school year! I have been following some experts in the field of iPad use, and Google Apps for Education. One in particular, Alice Keeler, does not sleep! Either that, or she has a crew of folks who tweet while she is sleeping because she is on there ‘round the clock! I am a huge fan of GAFE, and am always on the lookout for like-minded people who are willing to freely share their successes. Twitter gives me an instant way to easily locate ideas for my class, and even share them with others who might be actually following ME.
Once again, I am forced to humbly admit that I don’t always know what’s good for me.
Image Credits: (Unless otherwise noted-Cambria Tooley)
Image Credits: (Unless otherwise noted-Cambria Tooley)
Tuesday, July 28, 2015
Generational Differences Readings Entry
For one of our assignments this week, our professor had us read three articles related to whether or not there are generational differences among learners that grew up with technology and learners that did not, and if they are significant enough to consider in our instructional practices. In reading Prensky’s 2001 article, Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants, I was immediately struck by this statement: “Our students have changed radically. Today’s students are no longer the people our educational system was designed to teach.” Who are the people our educational system was designed to teach? It’s been a long time since the design of our current educational system, and I think one could argue that those it was designed to teach have long since expired!
The second thing that struck me in this article by Prensky is that there wasn’t any research mentioned to support his position. My current university experience has trained me to be on the lookout for research-based evidence, and I didn’t find any. Prensky’s perspective was developed as a result of his experiences with his employees and his customers, and his sampling is not indicative of the population at large. It’s no wonder that, although he does make some valid points, Pensky’s article was thoroughly dissected 6 years later by a known expert in the field of educational technology, Mackenzie (2007), for being solely based on his own experiences.
One of the best points McKenzie made in his article, Digital nativism: Digital delusions and digital deprivation is that learners all differ from each other. His words, “Real fifteen year old humans are quite different from each other, a fact that Prensky did not take the time to study or notice. Some love things digital. Some are more interested in a horse or a dog or a walk along the shore” never rang so true. I recently blogged about a third grade student of mine who, although was given an iPad for her own daily use, and access to other digital technologies, consistently chose to use traditional tools for learning. She didn’t feel pressured by her peers, or by me. I also noted that when she arrived home each day, she went straight to her personal electronic devices! Yes, they all differ, and it’s our job as educational technologists to not assume that every student learns the same.
The third article, Do generational differences matter in instructional design?, by Reeves (2008), reviews research-based evidence, and cites that although generational differences do exist in learners, there isn’t enough evidence in support of changing the current design of instruction, or teaching with different educational technologies based alone on these generational differences.
As teachers, we do need to consider that many of our students are avid users of digital technologies and may be more engaged in the content we are teaching if those devices are used, but, again, one size does not fit all, and our lessons must be determined by content and not by instructional tools. If digital technologies can make our lessons more engaging and/or more effective, than we should offer them as a choice. Generalizing instruction based on the age of today’s students is discriminatory, and can be detrimental to learners like the student I previously mentioned. Although Prensky would consider her a “Digital Native”, she preferred all of her learning be done by traditional methods.
Sources:
McKenzie, J. (2007). Digital nativism: Digital delusions and digital deprivation. From Now On, 17(2). Retrieved from http://fno.org/nov07/nativism.html
Prensky, M. (2001). Digital natives, digital immigrants – Part II: Do they really think differently? On the Horizon, 9(6). Retrieved from http://www.marcprensky.com/writing/Prensky%20-%20Digital%20Natives,%20Digital%20Immigrants%20-%20Part1.pdf
Reeves, T.C. (2008). Do generational differences matter in instructional design? Online discussion presentation to Instructional Technology Forum from January 22-25, 2008 at http://it.coe.uga.edu/itforum/Paper104/ReevesITForumJan08.pdf
Sunday, July 26, 2015
Guest Blog Entry
I am happy to introduce you all to my guest blogger. Melinda Hagenson. She took her degree from USC in English with emphases in composition pedagogy and 19th century American literature. She’s currently a senior lecturer in the English department at UW Stout ("Wisconsin's Polytechnic University"), and this fall (2015) marks the beginning of her ninth year there and her twentieth as an instructor of college writing. I asked her to write about anything she desired to say to K-12 teachers. Thank you, Melinda.
Three Things You Can Do Now to Help Prepare Your Students for College
Google Images: Free to Use and Share |
Statistics show that in spite of rising tuition rates, a college education is becoming more and more necessary. Yet fewer and fewer of the incoming students I meet every fall are adequately prepared for the rigors of college-level thinking and writing. I hope these few tips will help K-12 teachers as they work to prepare their students for a successful college experience.
- Encourage Creativity, Confidence, Individuality, and Courage. Almost all of my incoming first-year students are good at memorizing and parroting back what they’ve read and been told, but most of them are severely deficient in their ability to form and defend their own positions or opinions. That is, most of them don’t know how to come up with original ideas, and the few who can are often fearful of expressing them. Too many have been told that “Nobody cares what you think.”
In college, we do care what they think. What they think, in fact, should be the whole point. I know it’s cliché to say this, but today’s children really are tomorrow’s leaders. They need to believe their ideas matter. They need to have confidence, at an early age, that they can change the world. Not the whole world, of course, but a little piece that they care about.
Questions that disrupt your lesson plan can be frustrating, but the paths these detours can take may wind up providing the most valuable “teachable moments” of your day—and theirs. If a student brings up a topic that you know is going to derail your whole day, tell her you find her idea very interesting and that you’ll make a note to come back to it later. Keep that promise.
- Grammar matters. Every year I get at least one student who tells me he got A’s all the way through school and nobody ever cared about his grammar. But in college, we do care. My students are often dismayed to learn that I will not give an A to a paper riddled with grammatical errors. A paper with extreme grammatical weakness will receive an F.
(An aside: My students are frequently astounded to find that it is possible to receive an F on something they worked hard on. I don’t grade a paper based on the amount of effort that went into it. I grade it based on its success as a focused, well-supported argument.)
If your own grammar is sketchy, work to improve it. This is something you and your students can do together. You already know that the best way to learn something is to teach it!
- A Note on the Five-Paragraph Essay.* On the first day of class, I ask, “How many of you have spent the past four years perfecting your five-paragraph essay skills to prepare for college?” Usually all but one or two hands go up. The students whose hands are not in the air swivel their heads around in panic, thinking they are not prepared and that they don’t belong here.
Nothing could be further from the truth.
Here’s the thing. I spend my life un-teaching the five-paragraph essay. It’s a valuable tool, no doubt—there’s no disputing that the “training wheels” it provides can help younger students learn to recognize and eventually master the basics of essay writing—that is, the importance (and the benefits) of keeping an essay focused on proving a single clearly-stated central idea.
But nobody ever won the Tour de France using training wheels, and college writing is no different. The 5P structure simply doesn’t allow for the complexity most college-level assignments demand.
By the time they leave high school, whether they plan to go to college or not, students should know that there are as many ways to structure an essay as there are topics to write about. An essay should be organic. Content should determine form, not the other way around.
College has become almost universally necessary, and the time to start children on the road to a successful college experience isn’t somewhere in the distant future—it’s now.
Can you think of anything to add to this list? What do you do now to help your students prepare for college?*A five-paragraph essay is one that begins with an intro containing a three-part thesis. The intro is followed by three body paragraphs corresponding to and developing the ideas contained in the three parts of the thesis. The essay then concludes by reiterating the thesis and main points.
Friday, July 24, 2015
Commentary Entry
The Great Divide: Print or Digital?
(Click on the magazine to read the article)
(Click on the magazine to read the article)
Image: Scott Buschman |
Who immediately reads all of the educational publications that they subscribe to when so many other print sources are regularly competing for our attention? Well, it is July, also known as summer vacation for people like us that teach in a traditional classroom. This is the time of year we catch up on ALL of the hot topics that have been discussed throughout the rest of the year. I’m no different than the average procrastinator. First on my hit list as it were, is the dusty stack of California Educator magazines I have been collecting for just this occasion.
One article headline caught my eye back in March when the magazine first appeared in my mailbox. “Print or Digital”? I find it ironic… hold on, let me pause on the irony until after I share my thoughts on the article. It’ll be more impactful.
I am not at all surprised that, given the choice, most students are choosing to read actual books over online books. I have done my own research, albeit with eight-year olds, and found similar results. It started with one very bright little red-haired student who, along with everyone else in my classroom, had access to an iPad all of her own for classroom activities, including reading, writing, and arithmetic (couldn’t help myself). Every day, while the other 27 students were busily clicking and dragging, Laura cast her iPad aside, and on her own, picked up non-digital resources with which to learn.
The moment came where I just had to know why she wasn’t buying into the excitement all around her, so I asked her. Laura’s comments were alike the comments I read in the article. She had trouble finding and keeping her place because she liked to scroll back to connect something she had previously read to something she was currently reading. In addition, she just liked having the book (pencil, paper, etc.) in her hand. As she said, “I don’t see what the big deal is with all of these electronics, anyway”. Now, mind you, Laura is a digital native, that is she grew up on tablets, smart phones, computer-based games… the works! In fact, when she arrived home each day after school, she went straight to her electronics! She just preferred to learn with traditional materials. In fact, as the year went on, more of my students traded in the digital books for traditional books. They liked carrying them around, and they enjoyed placing bookmarks in them.
I still believe in individuality, and knowing my students. One size rarely fits all. Never has, never will. With that comes a responsibility on my part as a teacher to ensure that each student is learning in the best way they can. I do expect my students to spend time with digital resources so they are prepared for online standardized testing, and so that they have the necessary skills to advance their education, and eventually land a job. However, offering print and digital activities gives students the choice to select what works for them, and allows students like Laura to feel confident in her learning. I realize that in some cases both types of materials cannot be offered, especially with our state set on digitizing textbooks for all students, but until that time comes…
Now, for my irony… While I was typing this blog commentary, I had both the paper version and the online version of the article open, and giggled out loud when I found myself reading from them both.
Sunday, July 19, 2015
Discussion Question Entry
Discussion Question: Why blog in a third grade classroom?
Google: Free to Use or Share |
Although I consider myself to be a technology trendsetter in my school environment, not everyone sees it that way. Each time I implement a new tool, instead of interest, I receive a fair amount of disdain. Mainly, others wonder how I can achieve the state standards when my students are always “playing around”. Like I read on someone’s twitter feed about PBL (and retweeted), it can appear “messy” at times. I have great parent and administrative support, so I practice being grateful for that.
I plan to implement blogging this year with my third graders. I already KNOW there will be negative reactions from people. Of course, I know for this assignment, I’m speaking to a forum of educational technologists, so I’m anticipating positive support from all of you, but for the sake of this discussion, maybe some of you can play “Devil’s Advocate”? This will allow others of us to practice stating our philosophy about blogging in the classroom.
Thursday, July 16, 2015
List Entry
I gave quite a bit of thought to this assignment, in particular I was trying to come up with items to list. I felt ready to write out, in detail I might add, the ol’ “Bucket List”, but thought better of it when I realized that my third grade students might not have one, yet. ;) Since I intend to use this blog as a model for their blogging, I decided to tailor this list entry to them. Here is my list for a beginning of the school year blogging assignment.
10 Interesting Things about Me!
by Ms. Tooley
- I can juggle.
- I am allergic to cats, but I have one (his name is Kitty).
- I was the first girl on a boy’s little league team when they first allowed girls.
- I met my teen idol (when I was an adult).
- I’m as old as a typical grandmother, but I manage and play on an adult softball team.
- After a 26 year break, I am back in college (and it’s all online)!
- I have visited 36 states and 7 countries.
- I have completed 6 triathlons (swimming, biking and running).
- I am afraid of heights, but I fly in airplanes.
- I am a vegetarian (herbivore).
Wednesday, July 15, 2015
Links Entry
I intend to set up blogging with my students at the beginning of the year. My class is a 1:1 iPad blended classroom. This post is meant to be a place where my students can learn about blogging by visiting the links below. I have also included some links on digital citizenship topics because that will need to be addressed prior to the students posting online.
1. http://edtech2.boisestate.edu/cambriatooley/502/netiquette.html
This is a website written for elementary age students that I created in my 502 class. I
included this link because it explains basic digital citizenship concepts that need to be
taught prior to allowing students to publish online.
2. http://cyberbee.com/cb_copyright.swfincluded this link because it explains basic digital citizenship concepts that need to be
taught prior to allowing students to publish online.
This interactive tool provides answers to questions related to copyright issues. Students
need to be fluent in copyright laws so they can avoid issues right from the start.
3. http://kidsblogclub.com/12-different-ways-to-write-a-blog-post/ need to be fluent in copyright laws so they can avoid issues right from the start.
This website is written for kids to jumpstart their blogs by providing 12 different ideas to
write about. Often times, students get writer's block and need some prompting to write.
write about. Often times, students get writer's block and need some prompting to write.
4. http://kidsblogclub.com/52-ideas-for-blog-posts-by-kids/
Similar to the link above, this website provides 52 different ideas for children to blog
about.
5. http://hooverneb.blogspot.com/2011/03/hawaii.html
about.
5. http://hooverneb.blogspot.com/2011/03/hawaii.html
Students need to see examples of other students’ work when first starting to blog. This
link shows an example of a summer trip blog. I plan to start my blogging unit with the
students' summer experiences.
6. http://kidblog.org/SISGrade3-2/8d518933-9ee6-41a5-bd2c-a2c1c7520293/my-favorite-3-activities/
link shows an example of a summer trip blog. I plan to start my blogging unit with the
students' summer experiences.
6. http://kidblog.org/SISGrade3-2/8d518933-9ee6-41a5-bd2c-a2c1c7520293/my-favorite-3-activities/
I included this link because it is another example of a kid created blog entry. I especially
like this one because it includes images which I believe will be highly engaging for my
students to include in their own blogs.
like this one because it includes images which I believe will be highly engaging for my
students to include in their own blogs.
7. http://info.imagineeasy.com/citations-for-beginners-thank-you?submissionGuid=9787b830-5f0d-4524-8fed-0edf352d45b8
I found this link on a classmate's Twitter feed. You may need to sign in, as I did, to
view the video. It's a clear message about how important it is to cite references, even
at an early age.
view the video. It's a clear message about how important it is to cite references, even
at an early age.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)