21st Century Skills
 
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Studentsfortomorrow.net
Garth and I have created a Middle Ages webquest which we will both be using, at the same time, to teach this unit of study.  We have posted the entire webquest to our classroom blog; a site which we have shared all year.  Students from both schools will research and learn side-by-side.  Our goal is to allow our students to communicate through GoogleDocs and Skype throughout this webquest.

The most unique thing about this webquest is that Garth and I built an entire 6 week unit of study without ever meeting face-to-face.  All of our work was done via Skype, GoogleDocs and our website.  We live nearly two hours apart and we created a co-taught unit from our home offices.

There are several parts of this webquest.  The traditional elements of a webquest exist; introduction, resources, tasks, etc, but we have also incorporated other elements.  Garth and I recorded a series of "computer-side chats" for the introduction and most of the tasks.  These podcasts are simply Garth and I talking about what the students will be researching in each task.  It is a chance for our students to hear two teachers debate, discuss and analyze the information that they are researching.  They also serve as mini-lectures.  These podcasts are a way for Garth and I to engage students in lecture material in a digital format.  We hint at answers, provide guidance, encouragement and enough foreshadowing of future tasks to help keep students interested.  We also added imagery and music along the way to keep students engaged in the content.  Images of castles and cathedrals, and the sound of chanting monks help create an environment that encourages empathy and inquiry in students.

Too often, teachers ask us how we assess what we do.  Everybody is concerned with data.  Along the way, throughout the webquest, we will use exit/entrance passes, rubrics for journal entries and weekly quizzes concerning the tasks students are completing.  While these assessments will help us gauge student learning; it is important to say that they are not the main thrust for this webquest.  We do not want students researching, learning and building connections just to pass a test and give us data.  We want to provide an enriching learning experience that engages students and helps them develop skills that are useful in life.  Our students can find information, analyze it, synthesis it, collaborate with it and construct meaningful conclusions about feudalism and the Middle Ages.

Right below this post is a short conversation between Garth and myself about how we constructed this project, some of the elements we created and our general thoughts concerning this unit of study.

-Mike

 
 
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My building technology teacher, Craig Corfman, introduced me to a great piece of FREE software.  The software is called xtranormal.  It allows you to animate your writing.  If you have seen the new Geico Insurance commercial featuring Albert Einstein; then you have seen xtranormal in use.  It is a very simple program to use; I set some of my students to work with it and gave them no instructions or guidance.  Within two class periods, my students had created some great short films based on inventions from ancient civilizations.  Below I have included a film I created to introduce the concept of feudalism.  The program is free and all your work is stored online.  There are small fees to publish your movies. 

Here is the process: (1) choose your setting, characters, background noise; (2) write your script; (3) choose your camera angles, facial movements and body animations.  It’s that simple!  The film below I made in thirty minutes.  Talking to my intervention specialist, Jenna Daugherty, she had the idea of using it during creative writing assignments with the students.  The students that I allowed to explore this program became very engaged in writing and animating.  I saw students that have not written more than a few sentences for me all year, writing scripts that created entire short stories.  Great free resource to help engage your students in the writing process.   

-Mike


 
 
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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