Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Twitter Redeemed

Last year some of my classmates gave a presentation on how to use Twitter in the classroom. It sounded like a terrible idea to me. Even after their glowing half-hour presentation. And after months of hearing my friends' phones beep, buzz or ring every two minutes with a new tweet, I swore I'd never get a Twitter. That's where I drew the line. I also swore I'd never start blogging. We can see how well that went. So yes, first I caved and started blogging. Three weeks in, I mentioned it to my best friend who was surprised I hadn't told her that I blog. "It's pathetically mediocre, Sabra." I assured her, just so she'd know she hadn't missed out on anything.

"Leah, nearly all blogs are pathetically mediocre."

Oh. Well that made me feel a little better. It wasn't long then before I caved again and got a Twitter. I still only tweet about once a week. I'm convinced that no one really cares to be updated on my life more often than that. But I still stuck to my guns about Twitter and education. Oil and water. Until today. In an interesting tie back to my last post, it was a Prezi that may have just changed my mind. Here it is.

Brilliant.

And in the meantime, before I have students of my own, I'd like to tweet with other teachers and my fellow students about education. Does anyone know if I can set up a Twitter that I could use solely for that purpose? A professional Twitter? Sadly, I know that most of my friends will quit following me if I start tweeting about Bloom's Taxonomy and Vygotsky. And if it is possible to set up a separate professional Twitter account, is there anyone out there who would like to do the same so we can bounce ideas off one another with tweets? Let me know!

Prezi

If you are bored with powerpoint, your students probably are too. Prezi is an online tool that allows users to make presentations that are incredibly visually appealing in far less time than it would take to create a basic linear powerpoint. And it's even free for teachers and college students.

But of course there are a few downfalls. It does not work as well with Internet Explorer as it does with Chrome and Opera. There are only a good handful of presentation styles to choose from, and within each style, only about two fonts: one for titles and one for content. And it does take some getting used to. The first hour you spend on Prezi will probably be a combination of frustration and wonder. But in that first hour, you can make a prezi that's cooler than any powerpoint you ever dreamed of. Here's the first prezi I ever made. It was for a Spanish class last year when I compared a book I'd read with Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. I guess it doesn't make a whole lot of sense without my Spanish lecture that went with it, but at least you can see what I was able to do in 45 minutes with a program I'd never used before. Pretty impressive, huh? And that's nothing compared with the stuff people do when they really know how to work Prezi. This one is still pretty simple, but it's a great introduction to the program. Explore Prezi and then let me know what you think of it!

Oh, and I forgot to mention that if you don't have time to make a Prezi of your own, there are thousands of public ones that other users have made available, and the majority of those are educational. Nice.

"Hello classroom, meet Podcasting."

Podcasting is a combination of the words “iPod” and “broadcasting.” The word refers to any audio or video media files that are typically released episodically. They can be recorded using expensive equipment, a home computer, or even a touch-tone phone. One of the most common ways I’ve seen podcasts used is by churches. The sermon can be recorded during a worship service and then posted online as a podcast for people to listen to if they weren’t able to make it to church.


I never thought to use podcasting in Education until I went to Ball State. Before I began studying Elementary Education, I majored in Spanish and French Education. It was not long before I saw what a great tool podcasting would be for teachers and students. In foreign languages, it can be used to help students learn vocabulary words. And that’s just the beginning. The possibilities are endless. Here is the link to a list of ten great podcasts for the classroom. I’ve also added it to Del.icio.us. Let me know what you think about podcasting in the classroom!



Monday, December 13, 2010

Some Delicious Teaching Resources

Tonight I learned all about social bookmarking and made a Del.icio.us account. I start to feel digitally claustrophobic when I get too many tabs and bookmarks in my web browser toolbars, so I'm thrilled to have a new dumping-ground for all of my teaching resources. I hope that others find these sites as useful as I have. Please leave a comment and let me know what you liked, disliked, or think I should add to the list!

Saturday, October 2, 2010

My profile says Education is one of my interests. Here's your proof. We're about to get nerdy.

The first article I studied was the one titled “Bloom’s Taxonomy Blooms Digitally,” by Andrew Churches. As a student of Education, I have spent a great deal of time learning about Bloom’s Taxonomy and the importance of teaching in such a way that encourages students to build towards higher order thinking skills. But never before have I thought to apply that way of thinking to technology.

In his article, Churches discusses the verbs commonly associated with each tier of the Taxonomy. While he admits that those words are still useful, he also cautions “they do not address the new objectives presented by the emergence and integration of Information and Communication Technologies into the classroom and the lives of our students.” As a solution, churches suggests the consideration of adding more contemporary words to the list we associate with Bloom’s Taxonomy in order to accommodate the rapid growth of technology in the classroom and the world.
On the bottom rung of Bloom’s ladder is Remembering. Typically associated with the lowest order of thinking are words like listing, identifying, and finding. Churches encourages the addition of bookmarking, googling, and favoriting as well. On the third tier of the Taxonomy is Applying. To typical words like implementing and using, Churches adds running, uploading, editing, and even hacking. Bloom’s very highest order of thinking is Creating. We typically use words like designing, producing and inventing for this order. But with the growth of technology, we can incorporate programming, animating, mixing, filming, podcasting, publishing, and blogging, just to name a few.

This highest order of thinking is what really got me excited about the relationship between technology and Bloom’s Taxonomy. Obviously, Creating, on the top tier, is what we should be striving for for our students—what we should be encouraging them towards. And until I read this article, I’d never really considered just how much creativity is put within students’ reach by technology. I have always envisioned Bloom’s Taxonomy like a house: Remembering is the concrete foundation, Understanding is the basement, Applying is the main level, Analyzing is the second story, Evaluating is the attic, and on the very top, Creating is the roof. Now that I have begun to think about what technology does to Creating, it is as if I have climbed up to the roof, thinking it’s the top, only to find that the roof is really a giant trampoline—a springboard for going even higher. Now the possibilities seem endless.

The greatest question stirred in me by Churches’ article is not a pedagogical one, but rather an intense curiosity about just how far I will be able to take technology in my classroom. It isn’t a question with a black and white answer. Instead, it’s a giant brainstorm that will continue as long as I teach and as long as innovation drives technology forward.
* The article “Bloom’s Taxonomy Blooms Digitally,” by Andrew Churches, can be found on the Tech & Learning website at the following address:

http://techlearning.com/article/8670

***

The second article I read was “Ten Ways to Get Beyond Powerpoint with Classroom Projectors.” I began the article braced for the typical shameless advertisement of thousands of dollars worth of highbrow techie equipment that only the most affluent of schools could ever afford. I’m always on the defensive about that sort of thing because my passion is to work in middle to low-income schools. A projector is probably about the fanciest piece of technology I’ll ever dream of having in my classroom. My other pet-peeve is the use of technology just for the sake of using the latest and greatest toy, so I fully expected the article to peddle oodles of elaborate, pointless gadgetry. But much to my surprise, this article was chock full of actually useful ideas and completely free online resources!

I liked a lot of the ideas well enough to give them a shot in my own classroom. I can use the projector to teach math with Utah State University’s National Library of Virtual Manipulatives. Students can enter their findings from science experiments or surveys directly into a projected spreadsheet so that the whole class learns together. One of my favorite classroom tools is a map. I can’t teach History, Science, Literature, or really even talk about where I went hiking last weekend without one! With a projector, I can use Google Earth or online maps to eliminate the limitations imposed by the standard pull-down wall maps (which have always seemed to repeatedly fall off the wall onto the teacher’s head). A timer or countdown clock on the projector allows students to plan their time wisely and take responsibility for the classroom agenda.

Probably my favorite new idea from the article makes having a substitute teacher for a day or two much less of a curricular setback. I can provide the guest teacher with links to online lectures by any number of experts on our topic of study from around the world. Or I can record the lesson myself for students to view and interact with in my absence. This article has gotten me thinking about new ways that I can put my classroom projector to use. The internet really has made the possibilities endless. My greatest question is simply, will I have access to a projector in my classroom if I a teaching in a low-income school? If I don’t, are there grants available to get one for my school? How can I adapt some of these ideas for use with a chalkboard or transparency projector if that’s all I have access to?

*The article “Ten Ways to Get Beyond Powerpoint with Classroom Projectors” is available on the Tech & Learning website at the following address:

http://www.techlearning.com/article/17198

Hello, Blogger. It's me, Rayanne.

After a two-year hiatus, welcome back to my blog! Oh, who am I kidding? No one read my first post in 2008. I'm basically starting from scratch here. Honestly, I'd forgotten that I ever even CREATED this blog. I just went to the blogger website and was confronted with an obnoxiously pink template by leahrayanne@gmail.com. Is that...me? Wow, I definitely don't remember this, but yep, it's me alright.

So rather than creating a new blog, my task was simply to do some serious renovating to the old one. The first order of business was to do away with the blindingly hot pink background and sparkles. As a sort of purging, I went to the opposite end of the spectrum and sought out a warm, mellow brown to allow my eyes to heal from the bubblegum barrage. Excellent, I can actually READ my own blog now. Excellent. I still need to add some nifty little baubles here and there, and tweak a couple of things, but for now I'm pretty content with my progress.

About two months ago, started a blog at wordpress, so if anyone is interested, feel free to check that one out as well. It can be found at leahrayanne.wordpress.com.

Please let me know via the comments section if you have any suggestions for my blog, thoughts about my posts, or if you would like to tell me your favorite color. Basically, comments will make me feel warm and fuzzy inside, so don't hesitate to send one. Also, the video in my sad little first blog post is actually a very worthy one. You all should watch it and let it completely change the next two months of your life.