Webquest: more reflections and changes.... 02/01/2012
This is the second year that Garth and I have used the Middle Ages WebQuest we designed last winter. As students were completing the WebQuest last year, Garth and I kept seeing things we could change. Over the last two weeks Garth and I made some major revisions to the project. Although this is only the second year we have used this WebQuest, it is practically the fourth time we have changed virtually every aspect of it. This standards-based Webquest covers the Middle Ages and includes: the Fall of Rome, Feudalism, socioeconomic systems, The Holy Crusades, the Black Death, 100 Years War, Magna Carta and The rise of the Roman Catholic Church. Infused in each Quest are several elements. Garth and I have created podcast lectures (flipped teaching) which are attached to a GoogleDoc Form with questions that allow students to reflect on the lecture they listened to, collaborative documents so that students at both schools can share information, a live Diigo stream for our classroom Diigo group, imagery, films, supplemental reading and a few other resources for students to gain depth of understanding and encourage Independence learning. Each student is required to create a blog post on their website with answers to the Quest questions and a historical narrative written in 1st person about their Middle Ages person's life. Below is a quick conversation between Garth and I about the changes we have made for this year's students. -Mike Add Comment Mr. Pennington's Field Trip 12/21/2011
While my school is on winter break, Garth and I thought it would be cool for me to spend the day in his classroom, physically not virtually. The way our school schedules run, Garth will be able to come and visit my students the first week we are back in school. Today my job was to introduce students to the Middle Ages Webquest that both schools will be collaborating on for the next 6-9 weeks. This was the first time Garth's students have ever seen me in person. It was a pretty overwhelming experience being here in person with a group of students I have only collaborated with via Skype. The most surprising part of the day was that the students rather quickly accepted me as their teacher. I was able to talk with Garth, teach the students and carry on as though I was in my classroom. As the day went on even some 8th graders that recognized me came in to say hello. The whole experience of the day really helped to remind me of the great experience Garth and I are providing for these students. It was also a "life coming full-circle" moment for myself since this was the first week I came to Garth's room as a student-teacher 6 years ago. In a few weeks, when Garth visits my classroom, he will post what his day was like. Below you will find some useful links and the presentation slides for this mornings Live presentation. Back Channel: http://todaysmeet.com/BLC11Studentlegacy Twitter: #blc11
Intel, Google and YouTube IdeaJam 05/02/2011
Ashton Kutcher and Alan November live from LA. It Just so happens Mike Pennington, some of our students and I will be joining them via Skype On Monday May 2 at 2:00-2:15 EST where we will discuss the student created online book. You can view it live at this link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h9YULZJwJuI as well as join in on Facebook, Twitter, and more. Intel pays for and hosts this program. Here is how it is described on the IdeaJam Channel of YouTube: IdeaJam is a series of brainstorm sessions that bring together the brightest minds in an array of creative fields, including but not limited to video, music, comedy, animation and education. Each event will be led by a moderator, well-known in their field, and joined by experts together with a group of hand-picked participants who add perspective and vision to the conversation. These sessions will be opened up to the community at large, who can interact with the "mega minds" in their field via a host of social media tools, resulting in a robust dialogue and collaborative end-goal all revolving around the theme of "What Inspires You? For more inspiration, visit YouTube.com/Intel. Alan November sent out this email: April 29, 2011 Dear Colleague, How can we help prepare students for the future and encourage them to dream bigger, think creatively and develop innovative solutions? On May 2nd, educators, experts, parents, teachers and students from a variety of backgrounds and points of view will come together in Los Angeles to flex their creative muscles on teaching and learning solutions. The IdeaJam, moderated by Alan November, sponsored by Intel and Google/YouTube and produced by Katalyst, will ask participants to problem-solve and create new ideas for classroom design that integrate technology and help boost creativity. Many of the ideas that will be discussed directly relate to Alan's article, The Digital Learning Farm. The IdeaJam program is a truly interactive experience. Technology will help elevate the discussion to a higher level, creating a conversation around creativity and education, and will allow for a robust dialogue that happens both in the room and live, online. You can join in the conversation on Twitter @IntelEdge or check out the livestream on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h9YULZJwJuI. The stream will begin at 9:30am PT on May 2nd. What an honor for us to be asked to particapate in this ideajam. Six students will be joining Mike and I and we are all very excited about the chance to talk about what great students we have and the unique learning that goes on between these two schools via skype, google docs, wikis, blogs and more. Our kids are awesome. The following youtube is the newest student created video to be added to the online book. Keep in mind these are 12-13 year old producers. Just finished and posted yesterday to youtube. This is your new blog post. Click here and start typing, or drag in elements from the top bar. INFOhio Webinar 11/23/2010
![]() Garth and I were asked to do our first Webinar last week. The one great thing about the 21st century is all the new words that technology seems to create. A Webinar is simply a seminar via the web. The Webinar that Garth and I hosted was for an organization called INFOhio. INFOhio is a state-funded, virtual K-12 library that is available for free to all students and teachers in Ohio. INFOhio connects a myriad of educational resources into a user-friendly format for students and teachers to research, collect and organize information. Our Webinar was part of INFOhio’s project, Learn with INFOhio. INFOhio has sent up a 21st Century Learning Commons page and offers “21 Essential Things for 21st Century Success”. Garth and I spoke about Things 3, 5, 6, 10, 11, 21. We will post future blogs that address each of these topics individually, but until then; click here to listen/watch a recording of our Webinar presentation (about half way down the page). You can also download our PowerPoint from this link. While you can register and receive some professional credit for working with all 21 Things, it is also available as a completely free resources to help teachers reflect and grow professionally. The technology behind the webinar is Adobe® Acrobat® Connect™ Pro Meeting. It is a pretty cool program that worked without a single issue. There are a few basic parts to the software. It runs in its own window and there is the ability to talk or type throughout the Webinar. All people involved can view the main window, but permission can be given to certain individuals to share their desktop, files, or (in our case) a PowerPoint. While everyone could see what Garth and I wanted them to, we also had a useful “green arrow” that we could point at certain things within our PowerPoint slides. People could also raise a digital hand to ask us questions. Garth and I were together for this webinar, so we ran it off of one computer; but we could have been anywhere in the world and still used the program successfully. Being the first webinar that Garth and I have done, we had a good reflection session afterwards. The first thing that struck Garth and I was how strange it was to give a talk to 26 people that we never saw or heard. It was simply Garth and I sitting in a room starring at my MacBook. As teachers, we are used to having a live audience, even with Skype we can see who we are talking to. So it was definitely a new experience. We were very happy to see the Adobe program work without flaws; how often can you say that about a new piece of technology you have used? As is typically the case, both of use felt like we presented way too much information in forty-five minutes. It is so hard to judge what previous knowledge your audience is bringing with them. Usually as we do a presentation, body language and facial expressions tell us if nobody, somebody or everybody is following what we are saying; no such luck in a webinar! We were flying blind, but presenting some great information. We tried to focus our efforts and build upon each topic culminating with a quick explanation of our students’ online textbook. One point that Garth likes to make is that while individual tech tools are great for instruction; it isn’t until you start combing several tools that you realize the true potential of technology in the classroom. Overall the webinar was a great experience and gave us the opportunity to talk to a group of teachers we may have other never reached. It is also great that INFOhio collects all of their Webinar and leaves them online for future viewing. This allows teachers to go back and review information, share presentations with colleagues during professional development days, or simply go back and look for that one great resource they remember someone mentioning. -Mike "Be the change you want to see in the world" 10/19/2010
![]() I was recently problem-solving a technology problem with a teacher in my building and noticed a poster on the wall. The quote was, “Be the change you want to see in the world”. This struck me. We always talk about model behaviors to students, but few talk about modeling behaviors to other teachers. Here I was, trying to fix a stubborn computer; not by myself or after school hours, but right next to the teacher who uses the computer. We were collaborating and problem-solving as a team. We were wrong more than right, but finally came to the solution. Both of us took great satisfaction in coming to the proper resolution to the issue. There is a lot of talk these days about being a teacher/leader or creating learning communities where teachers have an opportunity to scaffold with each other. My advice…don’t wait for your building or coworkers to create communities or groups to start modeling collaboration. Take it upon yourself to just go and do those things you want your students to do. I share a classroom with another teacher and I ask him questions all the time during class. It helps me be a more effective teacher and the students get to witness to teachers, collaborating, problem-solving and having fun at their jobs. Now I know that most teachers are very territorial, don’t like to ask for help, and can’t stand other adults watching them work. I have heard people within education say that, “If you are doing your job right, why be worried about who is watching!” I wish it were that simple of an issue. Politics are an ingrained part of the educational system and it has created teachers that are cynical and wary of why people would want to watch them teach. It happens in my building all of the time. When you approach a colleague, don’t be threatening don’t make it sound like it’s your way or nothing. Honestly, it’s like sneaking up on a squirrel. One wrong step and they will run away and never get near you again. The best way to be the change you want to see in the world is to involve other teachers in decisions you are making. Want to try a new lesson or activity? Try emailing your building for advice or opinions about your planned activity. Talk to your department head or approach other teachers for guidance in changing things in your classroom. While it is no guarantee, having others involved in changing your classroom may give them the courage, or trust, to let you help them change their classroom. There are so many ways to teach and inspire students. No teacher is perfect, and no teacher can use every methodology available to them in one year. -Mike ![]() A funny thing happened tonight. I was at an educational committee meeting at my church waiting for the meeting to get started. Everyone was engaged in small talk. Soon the discussion turned to parent teacher conferences (the committee has four teachers--including me). They started to talk about how they were going to student led conferences at two schools this year. I listened, as we started this process last year. They seemed a little scared. The two parents listened as well. After a few minutes, I asked the one parent (non-educator), what she thought about the idea. Her response to me was a question: "What is the point?" I explained that the main idea is "to give students ownership over their learning." She then replied, "I like the idea". I think most parents agreed that last years student led conferences were a positive experience. Student led conferences have the following positives for students: 1. Goal Setting: Students need to learn how to set realistic goals and establish ways to achieve these goals. 2. Empowering: Students are given control over their education. 3. Ownership, Responsibility, and Accountability: Students have to see they are in control of their learning and take ownership for the results. 4. Technology: Students use technology to create an "authentic" presentation to share with a real audience. Plus, with online grades, it is very easy and clear why grades are what they are. 5. Engagement: Parents, teachers and students engage in honest dialogue (many kids will say what I might have had a hard time stating). 6. Attendance: Over 80% of our students and parents found time to head to school for the 25 minute conference. 7. Meta-cognition: Students learned how to self-evaluate and think about their learning. 8. Organizational and oral communication skills: They are prepared, have an agenda to follow, and have to explain their strengths and weaknesses to a "live" audience. I am sure that there are other positives of student led conferences and some drawbacks not mentioned. However, I think that the positives far outweigh the traditional conference. When we moved to student led conferences, our staff had similar concerns about how conferences would work and if it was a good idea to change the format. However, after the conferences were over, the staff agreed it had positive effects for our students. A good link to check out for more on middle school student led conferences: MiddleWeb. You can also see several examples of student led conferences on Youtube.
![]() Here is an article that I wrote, Garth helped edit, for Phonedog.com. Phonedog is one of the leaders for information concerning cell phones and mobile technology. I work in a middle school full of kids in sixth through eighth grades. Just a few years ago cell phones were seen as the newest teenage addiction, a drug that had to be repressed and condemned by schools. It’s not really all that bad, though. I am willing to wager my Android smartphone that parents are paying for students’ cell phones. It stands to reason then, that parents are okay with their kids using these devices. So parents are okay with cell phone use, the students are okay with cell phone use, yet schools have adopted zero tolerance policies. The question of how to provide students with technology plagues the majority of school districts. Rising costs and disappearing school funding makes it difficult to provide necessities like chairs and chalkboards, let alone laptops and smartboards. Challenging obstacles require creative thinking by schools; the same creative thinking that we want from our students. Schools need to realize that many students already have all the technology they need, right in their pockets and lockers. Most statistics agree that upwards of 80% of teenagers have cell phones. These kids are not just making calls, they are texting, checking email, updating FaceBook accounts and Tweeting. They are making social connections, sharing information, collaborating, planning and researching. Schools are becoming more flexible with cell phone usage policies, but it is a slow process. Our school policy is that cell phones must be kept in lockers and turned off during school hours. Yet, kids text during lunch, in bathrooms and even during class. The invention of “skinny jeans” makes it even easier to see students carrying their cell phones through the halls. As a teacher I have a choice: become cell phone Gestapo, scanning pockets and Uggs for phones, ignore the problem entirely, or turn the problem into an opportunity. This year I am inviting students to use their cell phones to leave a positive digital footprint in their wake. I want students to embrace technology and learn skills that will help them throughout their lives. I want students to communicate with me and with other students. I want students thinking about history (which I teach) when they are at home watching television, eating dinner or walking around the city. Kids need to develop an empathetic view of the world. They need to think critically about why things happen, what influences their choices and how they can positively impact on the future. This year my students will blog, Skype with their peers at another middle school almost forty miles away, create Delicious accounts and learn to tag. This year’s students will work on a digital textbook that my students last year collaborated on with another school. My goal this year is to use the technology that students already possess. I want my students to use their cell phones to learn, collaborate and create knowledge. I will be teaching in tandem with Garth Holman, a colleague and friend in a school district some forty miles down the road from us. Everything I mentioned that I’ll be doing, he’ll also be doing - it will be happening in two schools, between two heterogeneous groups of students. Using cell phones in an educationally appropriate way is difficult. My district is not going change its cell phone policies based on my beliefs alone. This year’s cell phone use will hopefully give me concrete examples of positive cell phone use that I might use to help enact policy changes in the future. For now I will ask my students to use their phones for class participation – homework – beyond the forty minutes I have with them each school day. Students using websites like Wiffitti and Flickr will engage in learning and have active roles in shaping their experience in my class. For those of you unfamiliar with Wiffitti, you may have used it without even knowing. Wiffitti allows you to create a “wall” where people can post messages. Each wall is assigned an SMS number and short code used to post texts; stadiums and television shows have used this technoology for years. Garth and I have a shared page set up where we can post a question and have all 230 of our students respond and engage with each other in a digital environment. Then we can project our virtual wall on our real classroom walls for discussions, or even discussions between our two classrooms via Skype. We are also going to post Twitter feeds on our blog and give our students the opportunity to “follow” experts via their cell phones and computers. This will enable students to see, hear and learn from real historians, archaeologists and scientists who post information and questions in real-time. What’s nice about Twitter is that students without mobile data plans can still use their home computers to engage in the world around them. One last idea to consider concerning the use of cell phones in education: We want students to understand that history and geography are all around them, at all times. Students are going to have the ability to text pictures to our class Flickr account, assemble the more significant photos into a Google Earth layer, and use Mosaickr to turn our collected images into giant mosaic prints. It’s been said a hundred times: Today’s students learn differently than those of just 10 years ago. Technology is not a choice, it’s a reality that has changed the world in which we all live. School needs to be organic, not linear: It is not about testing and standard, but about nurturing creative question-askers, collaborators, and thinkers. We need students who can use cell phones, Twitter accounts, and the rest of today and tomorrow’s tech to collaborate with field experts, classroom teachers and one other. I challenge you to open your classroom to the world this year. Adapt, create, and take a risk or two. ![]() Dublin, Ohio: tonight we spoke with Scott Sibberson, technology specialist at Dublin Jerome High School. Scott's bio is below the podcast. Garth and Scott met via Twitter and Garth was interested in Scott's Tweets and what was going on at Jerome High. Scott talked about how listening to Alan November's BLC 10 conference motivated him to find new ways to use technology to create PLNs (Personal Learning Networks). Scott discussed the plans for rolling out Twitter in his building. We will talk with Scott in a few months to see how it is going as well as talking about some of the technology projects teachers in his building are doing. Scott Sibberson Technology Specialist Dublin Jerome High School Dublin, Ohio sibberson_scott@dublinschools.net (work) ssibberson@mac.com (personal) twitter.com/ssibberson http://scottsibberson.blogspot.com As technology specialist at Jerome High School, I work with teachers and students to implement technology in classrooms. My responsibilities include basic troubleshooting, training, and implementation of new programs. It is my hope to make technology a seamless part of the education process. Instant Blogging with Alan November 08/10/2010
![]() Garth, Steph and I are currently listening to Alan November speak at a technology conference at Bowling Green State University. He started with a question: "what is the most important skill we should be teaching students?". Alan then said that the president of HSBC, West Point University and a college professor all said that it should be EMPATHY. Interesting talk Mr. November is giving about all the ways we, as teachers, should be using technology, but he is very pessimistic about teachers changing, giving students more control and bringing social networking into the classroom. Great talking points, lots to think about. More from the road as it occurs. -Mike | CategoriesAll ArchivesFebruary 2012 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||












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