The Techno-human paradox: How “keeping up with the kids” fosters community.

21 08 2008

Presenter

  • Dr. Sarah Glasco – Instructor of French, Foreign Languages, Elon University

Background – everything focuses on collaboration. Not just one way learning, but teachers learning from students and students learning from teachers.

The world is changing, and while it has it’s downfalls, it also the ability to bring us together in new ways. Never use technology for the sake of technology.

Evolve
Collaborate
Inspire
Be Inspired

This is all about creating a community in your classroom!

These are all tools to conjure up conversation… not dominate the discussion. Not passively sitting in front of a screen.

Transform this social and media entertainment into conversation.

Tools that she uses in Foreign Language Classes:

Facebook

  • Discussion Board on Facebook (Better response than on Blackboard… Blackboard is for school… this is for fun, so school becomes naturally more fun)
  • Create a Facebook Profile for your ideal roommate – This is the same as what you would do in any class, but when you throw Facebook it, it get’s to be more fun.

YouTube – You can reserve these type of activities for when you are going to be out of town.

  • Virtual tours of houses and apartments in Paris (Drills and builds vocabulary from an authentic space)
  • Give students an assignment to find authentic material on YouTube
  • Listening Exercises and Movies you can post yourself. (Blackboard has a limited space.. you can put more there. Universal access.) (Some are already on YouTube… just need to find and create questions out of them)
  • They can listen as much as they want.
  • Contextualize Visual Cues

Music and Popular Music

  • Music Video’s on YouTube
  • Stand up Comedy on YouTube
  • Promoting Tolerance and Discussing Cultural Differences
  • Talk Radio

Other Tech Stuff

  • Press – Newspapers and Magazines – Choose a topic you are passionate about to do some research.

Collaborative Projects involving Video Creation

  • Presentations using PowerPoint and iMovie
  • Students write and perform skits on a project with images and music in PowerPoint as a backdrop.
  • An assignment where they research issues, write a narration, gather digital images to create a storyboard, add music and record the voice-over narration of their stories.
  • Collaborative Documentary

She had some really great sum up information about why this is important in foreign language learning and the pedagogical goals and outcomes of using this type of technology. I have emailed her and asked for the power-point. I will post a link when I get it. 🙂

Thoughts Overall and Application at UNC

  • You know… as I watch these projects I realize that this is the type of project that students can really sink their teeth into. This is one of the great things about using this technology in the classroom
  • This was really good for me to see some of the ways we can use this technology in the classroom.
  • Anyone interested in sitting down to see how we can use some of this in your classroom? Need some help getting started… let me know! 🙂




Applied Peda-Blog-y: Using Course Blogs as a Motivational Teaching Tool

21 08 2008


Presenters:

  • Dr. Paula Hudson – Assistant Professor, Doctor of Physical Therapy Program – Elon University
  • Rick Palmer – Instructional Designer, Instructional Design & Development – Elon University

Example Blog They Used in Classroom:

Possible Assignment Candidate’s for Blogging

  • A flat assignment – an assignment that is boring. Something that students hate to learn and teachers hate to teach.
  • Bored?
  • Collaboration is an active model, but you don’t have enough time in the classroom
  • Struggle to stay Relevant

How does Blogging Address these Issues?

  • Extends the time students are actively involved in the class
  • Expands the collaboration between students in the classroom

Other Cool things:

  • This assignment can go outside of the classroom
  • Can tap into the innate competitiveness in the classroom to kick up the energy
  • Small groups can easily work together to create content
  • Comments can be moderated (beneficial posted, others not)

Cons

  • There is some time and labor on the setup
  • There are some things to learn from it.

Response from Students

  • They loved it already
  • They are looking for something that sets them apart from their peers when they graduate. They liked that they could put on their resume that they have a web publication.
  • Anywhere – they can do this assignment at home, in PJ’s, in kitchen.
  • My work matters – people are using it and coming to it.

Response from Teacher

  • Less time in class
  • Achieve goals
  • Final product that is awesome, and can be shared
  • Students were very engaged
  • Liked that students could be competitive and responsive

Game we Played

This was really a cool part of the class. They set up a mystery activity where we all logged in and posted our clues and then read the clues and tried to post a solution. It was great!

Thoughts about Blogging and Us at UNC

I have had the opportunity to help a professor in the past with a cinema course. He had students post video’s online that they found on YouTube and other sites that had to do with the genre they were studying. He also had a course requirement that they post a certain number of posts and comment a certain number of times. It was really productive and when they were done it was a great resource for others.

It would be great to take a look at a syllabus with a faculty member to see what kind of ideas we could generate about boring, but necessary, activities.

Any takers?





Online Reading & Writing with Wikis

21 08 2008

Taught by Edward F. Gehringer from NC State (Associate Professor of Computer Science)

Advantages of Wiki’s

  • Co-editing: Howework done on wiki’s promote collaboration between students
  • Co-assembly: Different people can contribute different parts
  • Write more than a traditional word document
  • Don’t have to worry about location and version (it’s all online and available)

Pitfalls

  • Other’s can “deface” wiki pages (bots) – Precreate accounts and disable login, or don’t put links in public_html space.
  • Some techonlogy-adverse students have trouble learning to use wiki’s
  • Under FERPA, students need to consent for their required work to be posted publicly.
  • Some students are uncomfortable with public writing
  • Wiki’s use their own markup language, wich is not as flexible in HTML

Assessing Wikis

  • Instructor/TA assessment (but there is a lot to go through and it can be time consuming)
  • Student Assessment – Students write up short commentaries on their contributions and collaborations and suggest a grade.
  • Wikis are new, so not everyone assesses …
  • Peer Assessment – Score authors based on a rubric. (This seems to be the best in his opinion)

Advantages to Peer Assessment

  • Adds a new dimension to collaboration
  • Electronic peer review of wiki contribution like real world and real job.

Types of Assignments:

  • Posting Links to other online resources
  • Posting an assignment (using links to online resources and articles)
  • Collaboration on Research Project
  • Post class notes
  • Comments on Articles
  • Vocabulary List
  • Research Report
  • Online Debates
  • Class Discussions
  • Peer Review
  • Really almost anything that can be done online… 🙂

There is a correlation between those that do a type of research assignment and those that responded that the wiki had helped them “think critically.”

How this might be important at UNC-CH and for me:

I support several foreign language departments and I think that the literature courses could really benefit from a classroom space where they can discuss what they are reading and link off to other spaces.

The real beauty of a wiki is that it is a webpage that is being built in real time.

I can also think that departments that need a lot of coordination could use a wiki to get stuff together. It is always updated and always available… at least on our campus. 🙂

Anyone at UNC want to get together and talk more?





Lessons from New Guinea for the Global Village with Michael Wesch

21 08 2008

For those who don’t know Michael Wesch, he is the author of the classic Web 2.0 video’s on YouTube that I wrote about a while ago.

This presentation was really great. A lot of it was taken from his “A Vision of Students Today” video. If you haven’t see it.. start out with that!

Notes:

Starts out with description of annual summer trips to New Guinea – no water, no running water, no electricity, and certainly no internet.

Built a house (240 people that helped build) – installed solar panels for computer – no email, but they give it a pilot once a month or two and will send emails off when he gets to somewhere.

Lessons we can learn from the small village in New Guinea

  • Sustainable – they can continue to live the way they do now for thousands of years
  • Equality – they share everything.

Tragedy of our time and problems with Education

We are clothing ourselves in the global fabric. Everything comes from all around the world… but we don’t realize it.

The most significant problem in higher education is the problem of significance itself.

This means they are just getting by and trying to figure out who they are and what they are doing.

Question – How many students don’t like school – 1/2 of them. How many don’t like learning – No hands. They don’t like the model we’ve set out for them to learn…

So… how do we engage them? 🙂

Solution

THIS is NOT just a TECHNOLOGY GAP… it is a CULTURAL GAP!

Teaching has not changed… but learning has.

8 books read – 3000 webpages read – profile reads – That is what they are reading.
They are writing in emails… not that much in papers.

Students are learning through technology… not as much through traditional methods.

Problems with Current System

He gave a great example about what the traditional lecture hall is teaching the students.

Students are not seeing the significance of the learning beyond the grade.

How things are Changing

There is something in the air… the web. WiFi. They have access to the entire human body of knowledge.

There is a massive amount of knowledge that is going to be created this year.

Digital information is different. This is how it being created.

What he is doing in his classroom and what we can do.

Focus less on content but connections. Content is still important, because that is what is used to make connections, but by focusing on connections, students become voracious learners trying to make connections.

Students become experts on some part of the world.

It should become less of an information dump and more of an interactive learning experience! 🙂

World of total information is that is enveloping us right now – This is what is going on with iPhone and GPS and always on Internet. A meta-level of data for the world. Imagine standing next to a tree and looking it up on wikipedia and seeing other pictures of that tree from others, and maybe even a history.

We need to move from just simply creating students who are knowledgeable, to those that are knowledge able. One’s that are able to use that knowledge to do good and make a difference!

How I can apply this at UNC-CH and my organization

You know… I’m not totally sure. This is all good information. I think we just need to really take a critical look at the way we are teaching our courses. Is there anything else we can do to engage the students? How can we use the tools here? Not just to incorporate them, but to use them if they are useful.

Anyone want to talk more about this?





Elon University “Innovation in Instruction” Conference

21 08 2008

So today I am attending a conference at Elon University. It is their 5th annual summer “Innovation in Instruction” conference.

You can see the the schedule here. I will post updates throughout the day. This is my schedule.

Oh, and of course there will be a poster session. I will see what I can find out there too.. 🙂





Google Teacher Academy: Chicago

8 08 2008
I just wish they would do one near me… maybe some day… 🙂 Perhaps I can create my own curriculum…


Google Teacher Academy – Chicago
Chicago, IL
September 24, 2008
——————————————————–
Applications Due: August 24, 2008
http://www.google.com/educators/gta.html
——————————————————–

We are pleased to announce that another round of Google’s FREE training program for K-12 educators is coming to the windy city! Outstanding educators from around the world are encouraged to apply for the Google Teacher Academy taking place on Wednesday, September 24, 2008.

The GTA is an intensive, one-day event (8:30am-7:30pm) where participants get hands-on experience with Google’s free products and other technologies, learn about innovative instructional strategies, collaborate with exceptional educators, and immerse themselves in an innovative corporate environment. Upon completion, GTA participants become Google Certified Teachers who share what they learn with other K-12 educators in their local region.

50 outstanding educators from around the world will be selected to attend the GTA based on their passion for teaching, their experience as leaders, and their use of technology in K-12 settings. Each applicant is REQUIRED to produce and submit an original one-minute video on either of the following topics: “Motivation and Learning” or “Classroom Innovation.” Applications for the event in Chicago are due on August 24, 2008. If possible, please use Google Video or YouTube to post these original videos. Participants must provide their own travel, and if necessary, their own lodging. Though we will give preference to K-12 educators within a 90-minute local commute of an Academy event, anyone may apply.

Learn more about the program and the application at http://www.google.com/educators/gta.html

The GTAs have been a wonderful experience for everyone involved, with 97% of all attendees rating the GTA as “outstanding.”

Here are a few quotes from GTA participants:
—————————————-

“The academy was everything I hoped for and more! I can’t wait to plan out ways to use the tools we learned about, to share my experiences with my colleagues and to re-connect with the other academy participants!”
—————————————-
“The focus on innovation in education, and not just about the tools, was right on target.”
—————————————-
“I appreciate the opportunity to be connected to a group of educators that are passionate about preparing students for the 21st century. I feel inspired and able to meet the challenges that lie ahead!”
—————————————-
“Until now, I had never attended a conference where I was so engaged and loving every minute of it.”
—————————————-
“This was easily the most important professional development experience I have ever had as an educator. World-class tools demonstrated by world-class people at a world-class facility. THANK YOU!”
—————————————-
“I love [the Google Certified Teacher community] for the ideas and inspiration that comes flowing to and from it…folks share professional development strategies (technology or otherwise) that have worked. It’s nice to have a variety of ways to assist others and having that variety also provides spice for those of us responsible for doing the providing.”
—————————————-

Feel free to send any questions to “gteachers@gmail.com”, and please spread the word to anyone who may be interested in joining us.

We’re looking forward to another great event!

– The GTA Team





Google Translate for the iPhone/iTouch

8 08 2008

Google has been great at coming out with new applications for the iPhone/iTouch. Last night they announced a new service that I think is really useful: a specialized interface for the iPhone/iTouch for Google Translate.

With the ubiquitous ability of the iPhone, and high speed 3G connection, this is a great find for any student traveling abroad, or anyone for that matter.

Google translate has really come a long way. I highly recommend it!!





Back at it with Conference Proposals

8 08 2008

Okay… It has been a couple of months, and it is just killing me. Almost every day I see something that I want to pass along, so I am going to end m Hiatus and write a couple of blog posts now and again.

I have been working on two conference proposals, so hopefully I can write some of what I am proposing here as a sounding board… because, really, what is a blog anyway… 🙂

Here are my two topics I am thinking of proposing:

  • “iPhone/iTouch in Education – How Location Aware, Ubiquitous Computing, Multi-Touch and Accelerometer will impact computing and Education.” – This proposal will focus on first on the capabilities of iPhones/iTouch’s and then on some of the applications that are available.
  • “Using Web 2.0 to Help Those with Learning Disabilities.” – This proposal is growing out of some workshops I have been doing for our learning disabilities group here on campus. I realized that this is a place where technology can really help students, but not much has been written about it.

What do you think?