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Family Geekiness
Cultivating Geeks
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Exploring the Environment
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| AttributionShare Alike Some rights reserved by Jeff McNeill flickr |
Yesterday was a bit frustrating, when I got home I thought about the whole tech world and teaching… I reflected about the conversations I had this week where tech had enhanced student learning.
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One of my biggest finds this week was using OCR-image to text. Some of my students have reading struggles and this app has helped them have access to any book. Often teachers are constrained to digital books, or audio books, but students can use this to capture the text, and then using the accessibility features of the iPad have it read to them. Is it perfect, nope, is it pretty amazing, yeah for sure. It has put huge smiles on the faces of these students.
Nature and exploring the outdoors is a passion of mine, and earlier this week I found this site on twitter. 14 Apps That Will Revolutionize Your Walk in the Woods. Again, I felt that at times our tech could enhance, not just what we do at school, but what we do everyday.
These apps can help us develop our passions.
This week has been three way conferences, and traditionally the parents have not often talked to the tech teachers. This year has been different, and the conversations I’ve had with parents about apps, programs, and hardware that enhance learning has just been incredible.
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| http://www.comediansincarsgettingcoffee.com |
Over the break, I got a little into Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee. I think I saw someone post it on twitter or something, but started with Louis C.K. and just worked my way backwards.
Lots and lots of funny moments with funny people, some good observations on life, with Jerry Seinfeld who knew right? Most of it was just something to enjoy, right up till the Michael Richards episode.
Anyway, he was talking about that one night he verbally abused some guy and walked out. He was reflecting, openly and honestly about a mistake he made. The word he used was selfish, he was being selfish about his act.
This made me think about teaching. How often am I selfish of my lesson, or what I want the take away to be? I don’t think it is that often, but it made me set my resolution this year to be totally focused on student learning, and from their perspective. What is it that they want to take from the lesson. How can I empower them to start directing their own learning, and allowing them to think whatever they want about my teaching. I see this as an opportunity to be a better learning, and technology coach.
When working with the students this week, I’ve been working on developing their voice in their blogs. I adapted some of George Courus’ work on blogging to present to the teachers about why we should be blogging with students. With our migration unit, the grade four and five students are thinking deeply about why and how people migrate. I’ve also been really happy with the sharing of the writing. Blogs have made sharing so much easier for my students, and the immediacy of feedback has really inspired some to write more.
When working with teachers this week I’ve been much more patient. For the last month or so, I’ve been focused on achieving the school goals, while this is really important, I wanted to focus on each teacher’s perspective and ability this week. It’s been great so far, I have the goals we set at the beginning of the year, and while we have been progressing, I took this week to review our goals and make some changes. It’s great to see where they are in applying the SAMR lingo to their lexicon, and even more inspiring to see how redefinition of integration is constantly being modified.
Anyway, a fantastic episode and an inspiring start to the New Year.
This week I’ve been thinking a lot about what it means to be a learning coach. I try to treat students the same way as I work with teachers, showing them ideas, explaining a concept quickly and having people explore. Working with each individual at their exploration process to take them to the next step in their discoveries and then sharing our learning.
I want to encourage this model for teaching with the iPads. Students are all at different levels and have the opportunity to create many different things. This individual focus allows student to achieve their personal best.
Earlier in my blogging I talked about being comfortable being a beginner (thanks Jeff Utecht). For now I think I am, I know I am constantly beginning something, and as I trek forward with tech, I just have to know that I am a beginner, constantly, so embrace it right?
With my tech job I realize it’s not just me who has to be comfortable. Some of my colleagues are getting frustrated with trying to keep up with “all this tech stuff”. I try to remind them that it is all a process, we are only trying to use a couple of apps right now on the iPad and we are working on students creating. I want them to be the coaches I wrote about earlier. But some of them still feel the need to be knowledge givers, not continuous learners.
So I’m wondering how do I help foster this with my team. We talk about it all the time, I model it in my team teaching classes. I am comfortable being a beginner but I know not everyone is… so what do I do?
Loved working with the research tool on google docs, totally opened up so many doors!
Did a fun note taking class today with googledocs. Learned all this from a coworker who learned it from Jeff Utecht. Using googledocs I had students work in threes (I will make only three students in the class do this later, I’m just practicing skills right now). On your googledoc I had them create a table with two columns. One column was for big ideas, and the other column was for facts. One person would be responsible for one column, the another person would be responsible for the other. The third person in the group was responsible for finding images. I found the students way more engaged in the note taking activity when they were responsible for a single task, not trying to see the big picture and the small details. While they were working away, I would add comments to their work to extend their learning. By giving the students options in the future (especially in high school or university, this would’ve made my life way easier) they can choose now between working on their own or working collaboratively. Student choice is important to me and this activity game me an opportunity to really embody that belief.
Today is also Remembrance Day so I got to thinking about my grandparents. One day my grandma asked if I would be working outside, I affirmed this idea and she handed me a thin sponge tied to an elastic band (like we have in pants or shirts). She told me it was a sweatband and it worked really well. I try to go beyond just the three Rs and think about sustainable design. My grandma was great at this, always repurposing things. I try, but it’s almost always easier for me to find something that fits a specific need. With apps for the ipad I try to remind my teachers we are going for actual creativity. By repurposing apps and giving students fewer directions we can use specific apps for different ideas. The apps that are specifically for a function always seem limiting, but Showme, educreations, and most of iWork and iLife seem to work really well for getting students to push boundaries. Although my grandma was never into tech, it is a great way for me to repurpose her ideas.
This week we are starting our tech/teaching group. We’re looking for a name and trying to blog more and tweet more. Hopefully it will help us all integrate tech that leads directly towards student learning. Building my community to keep me focused, thanks for the help with the forming good habits!
Finally I’ve started with students and blogging and reactivated the class twitter account. It’s a totally different experience working as a single subject teacher rather than a classroom teacher. Right now I’m trying to lay down the groundwork to bring the idea of blogging into classes.
The students loved it. Instead of reflecting just for themselves and spurring no action. The students had to think about what they as a class learned and then the one student scribe had to think about specifically what she learned. It was wonderful and easy really.
I feel like it’s a good start, just need to keep it up by forming those good habits.
I’m starting a new job this year, rather have started (which is why some posts have been delayed, and making #enviroedchat much harder to attend).
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| Taken from http://www.world-track.org |
So who is this guy? Usain Bolt’s running coach. Wild huh?