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Archive for the ‘Tech Tools’


CUEBC Conference – Oct. 2011

I quite enjoyed my CUEBC  ProD Conference, despite the fact that I was coughing, croaking with a frog voice, and burying my face in my elbow in an effort not to spread germs like crazy! David Warlick, our keynote speaker, is a high tech wonder who can still relate to even the most “newbiest” of us.  He is always both entertaining and stimulating. He does like to play on his North Carolina accent, but it definitely adds flavour to his humorous anecdotes.  I was delighted to hear that he recommends “Edublogs” as a first choice, knowing that I would be jotting down my notes here.

Looking around the audience, I noted that almost half the transcribers seemed to be using mobile phones and similar devices, at least a quarter had their laptops clicking away, and a scant few used pens and paper.  Warlick posted four images on the screen and asked us if we knew who they were.  When he suggested that we could check around with our neighbours , the fingers were really flying as people tried to put Google images to the test.     He made an interesting statement (paraphrased):  “We have become a question asking culture with 150 billion questions an hour recorded by Google.  What did we do ‘BG’…  Before Google???  We didn’t ask the questions!!!”

He also asked (paraphrased): “Can we in traditional education make learning more fun? Can we allow some ‘distraction’?  Can we be playful enough to give ourselves permission to get it wrong.  In a world where teachers don’t know what their students will need to know, knowing how to learn and adapt is of the utmost importance. The guiding questions you should ask yourself are: DOES YOUR LESSON… Inspire personal investment, provoke conversation, increase responsiveness, and let the students be guided by safely-made mistakes.”  As teachers we need to focus on “how to find answers to questions” rather than “knowing content”.  He emphasized that the world today has no ceiling to a student’s potential accomplishments.  They can publish to www world, which gives them a sense of hyper connectedness. When we close the doors on peripherals (like cell phones), it is like cutting off the tentacles of an octopus. The student of today is a different being altogether, and we need to embrace that rather than try to confine to the old ways of learning.   

Warlick suggests teachers take a “Gardener’s Approach to Learning.  Learn how to grow your own learning network and knowledge garden by connecting with other professionals, mining the greater global conversation, and mapping out libraries of ideas and content. Topics may include blogs and micro-blogging, social networks, social media networks, RSS, and publishing and data visualization techniques.” source: http://davidwarlick.com/colearners/?p=12

In his “Tech Literacy” article (with Sara Armstrong), Warlick states that the three R’s are now being replaced with the 4 E’s:  EXPOSING KNOWLEDGE – Reading, EMPLOYING INFORMATION – Arithmetic, EXPRESSING IDEAS COMPELLINGLY – Writing, ETHICS – right and wrong on the information highway.  You can read all about the 4 E’s at: http://www.techlearning.com/article/the-new-literacy/42060

Other ‘tidbits’ that I noted were:
Gravatara – gives an avatar you can use other places
Knitterchat is a backchanneling tool designed for engaged learning. The audience can post comments, questions, answers, and concerns and collaborate during a presentation.  (I wasn’t fast enough or clued in enough to figure this out during the conference… maybe another time!)
Doodlebuzz – Draw lines to find news stories that are related!
Youtube – It’s playful, interesting and is now the 2nd largest website!

I got my own example for “BG and AG”…  In my notes I typed: “Cognitive Surplus – Author – sherke? and then later on wondered what this was… so I “googled” what I had and immediately came up with a synopsis of the book Warlick mentioned!  Talk about “just in time” access!  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cognitive_Surplus

My Session 1 – Paul Klintworth
Technology Integration Teacher at Collingwood Private School, West Van. 
http://techspaced.weebly.com/
Paul has much experience at the Primary levels as well.  He gave us an overview and examples of some technology programs that he has used at his school. Be sure to check out his tech site and blog!

Gmail:  Paul suggests setting up free Gmail email accounts for students whenever a student email is required for use in a program.  http://mail.google.com/mail/help/intl/en/about.html

www.weebly.com  Website and blog tool which he uses.  Can be free, but paid accounts are secure

http://www.2simple.com/programs/   These are educational programs that Paul highly recommends.

Art – 2Paint a Picture: (somewhat similar to KidPix) In his example, they scanned real leaves and then reduced the size to make a tree picture with copies of the real leaves falling off it. Another example had a background collage of leaves in one color which looked almost like tessellations

2Create – (somewhat similar to HyperStudio or Inspiration) A non-linear presentation, in his example, a dart frog report.

2Investigate  – Does a data base, Does Venn diagrams

Psykopaint: www.psykopaint.com  This is quite different from the “KidPix approach”.  Use photos to make your own artwork in different styles (impressionism, cubism etc.)

Luapic: www.luapic.com – photo editing

Plasq: www.Plasq.com – A “not free” comic maker

Toondoo: www.toondoo.com  Another “not free” comic maker, but you can have a free trial.

Kerpoof: www.kerpoof.com   You can make a free picture or movie.  Teachers can sign up for a free account.

Microsoft photo story 3: Paul uses this one a lot! (It is like Imovie but for PCs.) He used it for a field trip.  Students picked the pictures and put them on a timeline. Then he had the students narrate the pictures.  A second audio track was used for music background.

Animoto: http://animoto.com/plans/lite – A Free presentation vehicle for pictures or 30 sec. clips.  Animoto has replied to Paul and said kids under 13 should use an account under the teacher’s control. Each student has own email….   Eg. gr4club1@gmail.com will be student #1 in the club.

Storybird: http://storybird.com/ Short art-inspired stories

Photovisi: www.photovisi.com  Free Photo collage maker- place photos in a ‘poster’ and add labels, text etc. but you can’t save it.  Paul suggests taking one session to collect photos and a second to create poster.

Tagxedo: www.tagxedo.com  Takes the words like wordle but puts them into a shape (eg. nice words in a heart shape  for valentine’s day).  It exports as a jpeg so you can save it.

www.wordle.net Good, but you can only print it out, not save it

Capzles: www.capzles.com Puts photos into a timeline. You add text and Teacher/students can comment on the work. It saves it online… so don’t use personal photos

Glogster: www.Edu.glogster.com  Exciting way to present reports with photos, text, video etc.  Free teacher accounts available.

Prezi: www.prezi.com  Like a poster, but it zooms to different spots on the poster… a presentation tool
NOTE:  did you see the Prezi that Brian Kuhn emailed us?

 

 Session 2 – Phil Macoun
IT Teacher from Vancouver Island
Be sure to check out his blog at: http://macoun.edublogs.org/

Phil is an Information Technology Teacher and Facilitator, a Math Teacher & course writer, ThinkQuest & Google Apps Coordinator  and more!  He has put together a great Wiki on Scratch too!
http://scratchstuff.wikispaces.com/

I had already attended a Scratch workshop in the past, but by the time I went to use it at school, had forgotten what to do! I only see my Gr. 5 Computer Club for one 35 minute “club meeting” a week, so it’s not surprising that I never got to do it with them. I know that many of the Gr. 5s are trying Scratch on their own. This was a great opportunity for me to try on MYown again.  To me, Scratch is like a modern version of the old Logo Writer turtle.  I remember putting together a book of activities for my Gr. 2 students starting with learning how to move the turtle to travel in a line, turn corners, make a box, make increasing stairs and so on.  The instructions for moving the turtle had to be precisely done and required focused attention.  Working out your mistakes took a lot of thinking too!  The students were SO excited when they were able to control their turtles!   Scratch is that and SO much more!  The characters are called “Sprites” and allow for many choices, including very personal adaptations like adding a photo of your own face.  Not only do they move, but you can add multiple characters that interact, you can change the backgrounds, add sound, music, and even recorded audio!

It was great to follow through Paul’s lessons and then to have free time to explore and actually work with the program.   With a serious sense of commitment, I managed to finish a little scene with a cat running from a flying bat.  The bat was supposed to swoop down and “echolocate” at the cat so that the cat meowed.  Sadly, when I proudly showed it to Paul, he said, “Wow! You got the bat to poop on the cat!”  Hmmm… back to the drawing board for me!

A few little tips from the session:

 *You don’t want the sprite to go off the side and disappear!
Start your sprite where you want it to be.
Click the sprite again and it will have a spot located.
Click it to the other side and have that as the go-to (Go to a specific coordinate).

 *Move 10 steps versus glide
Glide is handy but it is not the best choice as you can’t add other details later on.

 *To get them to look like they are walking 
Use “costume”.  Costume 1 is a pose, and Costume 2 is a second pose.
Costume 1 & 2: Do copy…. On your sprite…. Edit…. Change one of the legs
In the color box, the bottom right (looks like white) is virtually nothing so you can import a picture and get rid of the white square around your sprite by “erasing” the white around it.
Move 10 steps, move to costume 1
Add a pause NOTE: the transition can be as little as only .1 seconds!
Move 10 steps, move to costume 2

Show and hide buttons. 
When making a Digital Story, you may hide a character at the beginning and have it show later
When making one sprite do something then another sprite do something
Bad way:  e.g. Cat crosses screen for 5 sec, then dragon blows fires at 10 sec
Good way: e.g. Cat does set of motions and you choose broadcast…fire
                               Dragon now breathes fire when cat is finished

 

CONTROL BLOCKS: Check out your “Forever block” and  “Repeat block”

Repeat forever if….   Eg one character touches another

 Sound: 
You can choose “Play note”… has a drop down piano!
Record sound….   Wow!  You could record in French!  e.g. on audacity…. Record as sound files

My sincerest apologies to Paul if I have misconstrued some of the directions!  He was an excellent teacher, but in the short time allotted, some of we “challenged students” need a little extra time to follow the instructions properly!  Kudos to Paul, however, for having encouraged me to “keep on trying”!

 

September perk… a teacher laptop!

September is here and once again the adage “too much to do and too little time” applies! I’m sooo excited about sooo many things… hmmm… that tells me it’s going to be a GREAT year! (If I can just organize myself and focus on what is a “must do” instead of what is a “want to do”!)  I do “want”, however, to get back to updating this blog and I have the perfect reason… 6 of our teachers received a Dell laptop and we are attending our first workshop at the upcoming ProD day!

I have my own laptop at home, so I am familiar with using one, but the school has only recently added a wireless hub so I have stuck to using my (personal) desktop computer at school.  There are so many restrictions and “red tape” to using a district computer, that when I upgraded my home computer, I brought the old one to use at school.  (For example, we are not allowed to add or choose our own software at school.) I originally said that I would let someone else have the 6th laptop, but our principal said that most of our teachers wanted to wait until the next laptops come.  Additionally, he was hoping that I would be the “go to” person for the laptop initiative at our school.  There… doesn’t that sound like a good excuse to get a new laptop???

I have to say that I am absolutely THRILLED with the portability of a laptop in the classroom.  Last year I bought a horribly expensive long cable so that my desktop computer could be attached to a projector which needed to be in a certain spot to fit on the pull-down screen.  In order to use it, I had to squash behind my desktop CPU to undo the monitor and attach the cable, then bring my wireless keyboard and mouse over to the projector because I could only view the picture on the screen (the monitor was now blank).  Afterward, everything had to be put back again.  I was excited to be able to show my students webpages on a large screen, but the setup was a real nuisance .  WELL… on the first day of receiving the laptop, I was able to roll out my projector, attach the laptop and VOILA, we were looking at the classroom webpage!  Just like that!

Something I am looking forward to learning about at the workshop is Smartboard-like applications .  When the laptop is turned on, it immediately tells me that it can’t find a Smartboard… how rude to remind me that we don’t have any at our school!!  However, an interesting little menu bar/toolbox appears on the side of my laptop screen and that indicates  that there may still be some applications I can use.

After the workshop, I will blog about the successes we achieve and the impediments we run into. The six of us are at various levels of tech. comfort and range from Gr 3 to Gr. 5 teachers.  I had to laugh when a teacher from another school said how fast her new laptop is, after hearing from one of our “Mac users” say how slow the new laptop is!  It’s all a matter of perspective.  (I plan on finding out what “cool things” my friend’s Mac does and then trying to reproduce them on a Dell!)  Hopefully some of our 6 teachers in this first initiative will add their own comments to this blog!

 Let’s see whether other readers have laptops in their classroom.

 




 

 

I will be interested to see the results!

21st Century Teacher (Tech) Tools

This blog will actually showcase someone else’s work…
because
Michael Zimmer has done a great job of putting together a publication that explains some useful, current tech tools.  I am familiar with many of the tools, but others are  new to me.  I’m REALLY excited about one of them (Dropbox) because I think it may solve a file transfer issue I have.  Hopefully YOU will find a tech tool that will excite you too!

21st Century Teacher Tools

21st Century Teacher Tools

BTW, the purpose behind this post is to ENTICE YOU to go to Mr. Zimmer’s publication to find out more!  I have gone to the trouble of listing all the tools he discusses so that you might come across one that has intrigued or puzzled you, or perhaps one that you think might enrich your own technology!

Here is a brief synopsis of this information you can explore in depth
at “Tools for the 21st Century“.

TWITTER
Twitter is a social networking tool which has allows educators to quickly share very short comments, valuable links, questions, and helpful answers.  It’s how I found THIS useful resource!

BLOGGING
Blogging is a great way to share your interests online (eg. Edublogs, Blogger, WordPress).  Classroom Blogs provide an interactive way of communicating between school and home, as well as providing a wider audience for student work.

GOOGLE READER
Once you become interested in reading, or hopefully creating, blogs you need a way to organize your favourite blogs and a way to find out when new information becomes available.  RSS feeds bring the updates to you, instead of you having to go searching yourself.

DIIGO
As I mentioned in my last post, social bookmarking is an important tool to organize and share your favourite links.  “Delicious” was one of the leaders, but “Diigo” offers extra features.

GLOGSTER
Glogster
is a “digital poster board”, so you can add images, audio, and video to your creations.  I was inspired when I saw it used  in a teacher website, and my computer club has been trying it out at school, via a “Glogster Education account“.

PREZI
I’ve heard about Prezi from several different sources, but I really need to do more exploring here!  Mr. Zimmer says it is one of his favourite new tools, so it must be good!  He describes it this way: “The best way to describe Prezi is to think of it as 3D Infinite Canvas for creating a presentation.”

DROPBOX
Dropbox offers free online storage for 2GB (think of your flashdrive size).  This is the one I’m going to sign up for right after I finish this blog!!!

EVERNOTE
Evernote is another way of organizing your information.  It can be information that you find on the internet, but it could also be notes you are taking at a conference or something you would jot down on a post-it, a napkin, or the palm of your hand.  There is a free app for using it with your phone too.   Hmmmm…..  this sounds interesting!!!

QUIZLET
Quizlet allows you or your students to create online flash cards.  I just took a peek at it… it looks worth a longer look!!!

WALLWISHER
Wallwisher is like a virtual bulletin board where you can stick your post-it notes, photos, videos etc.  I had heard of this before, but thought “why would I want to do that?”  Mr. Zimmer provides some good reasons!

TITANPAD
TitanPad allows you to collaborate with others in real-time.  Evidently there are several such programs out there, but this is one of the more popular ones.  Each person gets a different colour of type, so you can easily see who is adding information to a document or conversation.

SKYPE
Skype is a hugely popular and  free video conferencing web-based software.  Basically, it allows you to talk to others in real time, just like on the phone, but free!  Lots of people just use it for personal reasons, ie. talking with relatives.

WORDLE
Wordle is a very popular program that allows you to make “word clouds”.  The title page of Mr. Zimmer’s publication is a Wordle.  Basically, it ranks the number of times you use a word in your article (the, and, etc are removed) and then highlights these in larger font.  It’s fun and attractive too!

WEBSITES
There are many ways to create your own (free!) website.  Mr. Zimmer lists his favourites:  Google Sites, Weebly, Wix.

WIKISPACES
Wikispaces is a place to store as well as share information, links, videos, photos, and files.  I have tried out Wikispaces with my grade 5 computer club and want to do more with it.  Mr. Zimmer has created a “Wiki Wednesdays” post to highlight useful wikis he finds.

THANK YOU SO MUCH, MR. ZIMMER!

I have thoroughly enjoyed reading your publication and plan to follow up on several suggested programs.

I hope that this blog will inspire others to do the same!