Sunday, July 7, 2013

Technology Tools for the Classroom

This is a flip camera. This camera is very easy to operate and inexpensive, making is great for students to use. They are available at any electronic store. When working on media projects, students can share their findings, thoughts, or perform a written script using these cameras within their groups.







 Click here to get your search started!!
Teacher Tube is a website for teachers where you can upload or find videos on a certain topic your classroom. It is the "YouTube" for teachers! You can feel safe knowing the videos will be appropriate for viewing. All you do to access this tool, is go to the website and search. You may also make your own account if you want to upload your own videos.  Enjoy using these videos to enhance your lessons!!
Click here to get pinning!!
Pinterest is a social media website where you upload and choose different things (anything, really!!) that interest you. Pinterest allows you to "pin" these different items into categories or "boards". Students can collage items on a topic or tell about themselves as a project for the beginning of school! All you do is join the free site and start exploring!!


Search the possibilities here!
With Graphite, you can search and share resources to use in the classroom. These resources include games, apps, and websites. Teachers can use this technology tool to find all the other resources out there that deal with technology that they can in the classroom. This free site allows you to sign up for an account and start searching!

Click here to get your classroom code!
Edmodo is a social media website just for your classroom! It is comparable to Facebook but for students and teachers only. It is a free site for teachers to post announcements and assignments. You can post homework assignments and projects on your classroom page for students to complete and turn in online. You can then turn around and grade them and provide feedback to each student. Any worksheet you need to upload can be done in a few seconds and notifications will be sent to your students. The only students that can enter your classroom page are the ones that have the secret "code". Just go to the website and set up your page now!



For the rest of my collection of technology tools to use in the classroom, visit my Pinterest board labeled ISTE 2013!

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Challenge 15: BEST LEARNING STORY

For the past semester of graduate school, I have been learning to "flatten classrooms and engage minds". Challenge 15 asks me to share my best global collaborate story to all other teachers out there. My story starts with a minimum of three students per homeroom that set up Edmodo accounts in the library. These students work with other students in France under the same group code. Students read and review the same book and share their thoughts. It is like an online book report with the help of other students in another country! The kids are overwhelmed with excitement when it is time to go to the library to talk with their friends in Italy. It is motivated and most of all ENGAGING!! 

-Ms. Edens
4/15/13

Friday, March 29, 2013

Challenge 12: SHARE


CHALLENGE 12

For Challenge 12, I chose to complete a PowerPoint Presentation. I am very familiar with how to construct a PowerPoint, and I know many people know how to access them. My recordings are set up like narrations for each slide. To complete this challenge, I chose to focus on summarizing by taking five things I learned this far that I believe to be most important and beneficial. I put my slides together by using screen shots and graphics.


One flat classroom-style project that I would think would work for my 6th graders would be connecting in a reading group with other students around the world. Students would be interested and would finish book that they check out from the library if they were required to read it with a partner from another country. I would then have them "report" on the book so that I know they read it. It would be a way I could access students without doing a boring book report. 

-Megan Edens 

Sunday, March 10, 2013

Challenge 11

**I have updated Challenge 10 by adding the ISTE standards.**

Project: Explore the characteristics such as plants, animals, landscape, and weather of a biome. The biomes are Tundra, Desert, Rainforest, Deciduous Forest, Savannah, Ocean, and  Grasslands.

Allotted Time: 30 minutes a day for 1 week

Grade: 6th grade

ISTE Standards: 
NETS.S 4. Critical Thinking, Problem Solving, and Decision Making
-Students make decisions as a group such as topic and report as they complete their project. 
NETS.T 1.d Facilitate and Inspire Student Learning and Creativity
-Students are given choices on how they want to complete their project as a group.
NETS.T 4 Promote and Model Digital Citizenship and Responsiblity
-Students are responsible for posting their projects on site. 

Standards:
Science:

6.7) Describe Earth's biomes.

Examples: aquatic biomes, grasslands, deserts, chaparrals, taigas, tundras

•  Identifying geographic factors that cause diversity in flora and fauna, including elevation, location, and climate
Technology 6.5) Use basic features of word processing, spreadsheets, databases, and presentation software.
Technology 6.2) Publish digital products that communicate curriculum concepts.

Project Plan: Students will work in groups of 4. They will choose which biomes the want to research. Students will research their biome using books from the library and the internet. They will research the animals, plants, landscape, and weather of the biome. They will then choose to report their research using PowerPoint presentation, constructing a diorama, or submitting a video to the classroom's Edmodo page.

Teacher will:
-review the different biomes using pictures on PowerPoint before beginning assignment.
-show examples of finished examples.
-supply rubric while reviewing rubric with students before starting project.
-progress monitor.
-ask students if they need anything.

Students will:
-decide on a biome after discussing with group members and decide which project they want to complete.
-research biome.
-begin working on their project report.
-display/present project.

Assessment: Students will be assessed by the rubric of the project report that they chose.
-Powerpoint: Includes information requirements. All group members participated. Post on Edmodo.
-Diorama: Correct information requirements are seen in model. All group members participated. Picture posted on Edmodo.
-Video: Includes information requirements (animals, plants, landscape, weather). All group members participated. Post on Edmodo.

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Project Plan

Project: Explore the characteristics such as plants, animals, landscape, and weather of a biome. The biomes are Tundra, Desert, Rainforest, Deciduous Forest, Savannah, Ocean, and  Grasslands.

Allotted Time: 30 minutes a day for 1 week

Grade: 6th grade

Standards:
Science:

6.7) Describe Earth's biomes.

Examples: aquatic biomes, grasslands, deserts, chaparrals, taigas, tundras

•  Identifying geographic factors that cause diversity in flora and fauna, including elevation, location, and climate
Technology 6.5) Use basic features of word processing, spreadsheets, databases, and presentation software.
Technology 6.2) Publish digital products that communicate curriculum concepts.

Project Plan: Students will work in groups of 4. They will choose which biomes the want to research. Students will research their biome using books from the library and the internet. They will research the animals, plants, landscape, and weather of the biome. They will then choose to report their research using PowerPoint presentation, constructing a diorama, or submitting a video to the classroom's Edmodo page.

Teacher will:
-review the different biomes using pictures on PowerPoint before beginning assignment.
-show examples of finished examples.
-supply rubric while reviewing rubric with students before starting project.
-progress monitor.
-ask students if they need anything.

Students will:
-decide on a biome after discussing with group members and decide which project they want to complete.
-research biome.
-begin working on their project report.
-display/present project.

Assessment: Students will be assessed by the rubric of the project report that they chose.
-Powerpoint: Includes information requirements. All group members participated. Post on Edmodo.
-Diorama: Correct information requirements are seen in model. All group members participated. Picture posted on Edmodo.
-Video: Includes information requirements (animals, plants, landscape, weather). All group members participated. Post on Edmodo.




Sunday, February 24, 2013

Challenge 8 and Challenge 9

Challenge 8: SHARE

COMPARE AND CONTRAST A COLLABORATIVE WIKI PROJECT OVER TRADITIONAL IN-CLASS GROUP WORK

Collaborative projects are much more engaging than traditional in-class group work. As a teacher and as a student, I would choose researching biomes using the internet and posting findings on Wikispaces over using the internet in a group in class project. This give students the opportunity to work on research at their convenience and can add to or take away at any point. Other members can check their partners' work and edit at any time. This gives the group a feel of security that the information they found is correct. Students and teachers can also see what students did what and how much work they put into the project. This teaches students another way to collaborate with others. I am so glad I found WIKISPACES!

-Megan Edens

Challenge 9: Share

THOUGHTS ABOUT THE ASSESSMENT PROCESS

I use rubrics in my classroom, a lot. We have used them for projects completed at home, projects completed in the computer lab, and also collaborative projects. Making rubrics is the easy part. There are several to choose from online. Rubristar is a website that I use to make many of my rubrics. Grading the students using the rubrics is the hard part. Actually decided how many points one student deserves depends on the group in a whole. You have to see what a "100" looks like from students participation in the group and go from there. Many times I have used one rubric for the whole group to avoid having to complete an assessment for each child. By adding the names of each student across the top of a rubric, this process is much less time consuming. I like that!

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Challenge 4

Edmodo can be used as a synchronous tool due to the fact that my students communicate as a live chat session when they need help on homework or need help using the technology. They share their homework and comment and discuss back and forth as a live chat session. They like to wait on the Edmodo site to see when their classmates log in. Watching them socialize and communicate back and forth really gets me excited about using technlogy in the classroom. They also talk to each other and schedule a time that they will log on their account so that they can be on at the same time. We LOVE Edmodo!

-Megan Edens