Wednesday 27 February 2013

Presentations- So many things to learn

Ok, I lied a little in my last post about that being our last mandatory one! Ooops sorry. So yesterday in class we did some presentations on research we had done on education and technology related topics, and it was really fun and informative. Our group did a little presentation entitled "The Internet, The Good, The Bad and The Ugly" if you would like to check it out here's the link https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1ErYv_zr4MNtcYhiK5iqU9O64-vkTF1lqO-A3bAtl3W4/edit
It gives you some food for thought about the internet and its uses ETC.

Anyway there were a few other presentations, and they were all very well done, quite engaging and had plenty of useful information. I found one presentation that really stuck out. It was entitled "How not to steal from the Internet." As a University student you think you know how to cite sources and that you'll never plagiarize because you don't want to get that AD on your transcript, but in actuality we do it anyway. When we make presentations we add pictures from Google images and never say where we got them from or "give credit where credit is due." So this got me thinking, how many times have I taken some information from the internet and not cited it? Probably too many to count now. So this presentation gave us helpful resources for ourselves as well as for our students on the proper way to use resources we have gathered from the internet and what many of the "Terms of Use" categories mean. I think I'll keep this presentation and its resources handy.
I would like to give everyone a big high five for a job well done. I feel like we have learned a lot about the internet and technology in this class (Uhhh duh Lindsey this class is called Internet for Educators!) stuff that I never would have thought to talk about. So yay us!

-LB

The End is Near...What does the future hold?

Well folks, the end of the semester is nearing and for many in this class, you will move on to bigger and better things. This is one of the last "mandatory" posts for my internet for educators class and I really hope I can keep up the blog posts as I embark on my second student teaching placement  because I have really come to enjoy it and my cooperating teacher, I found out, is the technology "guru" in her school, so this was really exciting for me to find out.
Education has come a long way, even from when I started school, which really wasn't that long ago. Technology infused classrooms are where education is at right now. Technology is how the 21st century learner is going to learn , we have moved past the textbook phase and into the tablet phase. Technology is the "it" thing and so as educators we must accept this and go with it. Looking at the Horizon Report I was surprised at all the ways technology is being brought into the classroom. All of the tools and techniques that involve learning through technology really lets all learners have the opportunity to use technology.There was a piece of information that stuck out to me from the report and that was, at what point is there too much technology? How do we as teachers know what to use and what not to use. We can't keep using the same types of technology and techniques over and over again because then we aren't growing and changing at all either. I guess as teachers we will have to figure it out ourselves, it will take some mistake making but I think eventually as we find out our own unique teaching styles it will become a simpler task. The future of education has lots of changes ahead of it. But I know one thing, it will be very technology oriented. We won't see the effects of these implementations for a while, as everything takes time, but I am sure the benefits of having the world at our fingertips in the classroom will be great. Taking this class and learning about all the exciting things that education and technology have to offer makes me even more excited to be heading into the classroom in two weeks. Although it will be a challenge, I'm ready to learn. Being a 21st century learner is a great advantage and I can't wait to be a 21st century connected educator.
Next up is a little slideshow that is a presentation and a mashup of everything I learned and taken out of this course!

-LB


Saturday 23 February 2013

Show and Tell, Technology Style

I have three apps that I would like to share with the blogger world (and my class). I was doing a little thinking about some of the struggles or maybe things in class that we used or did that could be enhanced by technology. So the first thing I thought of was writing. Students struggle with ideas about what to write about whether it be in their daily journal or for writers workshop. I found an app that has thousands of writing prompts on it. You click on it, give your phone or Ipad or Ipod a shake (I downloaded it on my iPhone) and BOOM a writing idea that's a little bit out of the ordinary but should spark their imagination.
Another idea that came up when I was looking back on my student teaching experience, and some classes that I took last semester that used the smart board was a lot was surveying or polling of information. Surveying the class is a good activator and its interesting to see the different ideas in the classroom, and since its private there is no peer pressure so you kind of get an honest answer. I know there are some good polling applications on the smart board that involve a "clicker" but a cool one I saw on a fellow Internet for Educators blog was one that was online and the class could use their smart phones and text  in their reply. Very Cool.
The website is: http://www.polleverywhere.com/. Give it a look if you can.
Another interesting tool is called DropBox, anyone heard of it?
Well you send out an invitation to receive a certain folder and you download the program or "Box" to your computer or smartphone and whenever someone adds something to that folder in their box, whether it be an assignment or music or something everyone that got the invite for that folder will also receive the same information. It is also an easy way to share large files. I was introduced to it a couple of months ago, and I use it to share new music with friends!
I am sure you could apply it to a classroom setting as well!
That's all for my show and tell technology style!

-LB

Teaching Veterans Keeping Up with the Pace of Technology in the Classroom

An option for last weeks mandatory post was to talk about the stuff we discussed in class, well since I didn't think it was safe to travel back to B-Town (It stormed and the roads were snow packed and icy) I missed this class, so I could post on ideas and topics that popped up after doing tech tasks and reading other blogs. As I read my friend Jenn's Blog (you should give it a read!) I was inspired to talk about technology closer to home but also a topic in the education world. I decided to talk about  technology and education viewed from a very experienced, excellent and inspiring teacher. (She's a great mom too!) The idea also came after I listened to another podcast entitled "Keeping up with the Pace of Education Technology."

My mom who retired last June, taught in the public school system for 35 years. She graduated from Brandon University in 1978, a time where you hand wrote everything, and only had to be in school for 4 years in order to obtain your B.Ed. Mrs.Braun has taught everything from Kindergarten to Grade 8. She spent the last 20 years in a Grade 4 classroom and here saw the evolution of technology. The first computers in the school were ones that used those huge floppy disks and were mostly used to play games (really, really, lame games) very little word processing and of course no internet. Those were then replaced with the white dells with huge monitors that weighed a hundred pounds and here word processing was used more and more in the classroom. Soon there wasn't just a computer lab but a computer in every classroom on a rolly cart. And soon after that all those white heavy, clunky dells were replaced with the coloured apple computers. (click on the link if you don't know which ones I'm talking about) Now there was computer class put into the timetable, and it was mostly spent on "all the right type a typing program to help develop typing skills. Internet access was now available but very limited because not a lot was known how to best utilize it in the classroom. Professional Development sessions were offered to help develop computer skills and resources for teachers. For someone who had not grown up with a computer or used a computer in University, like all the new teachers, she embraced it and tried to learn along side her students. Soon after came apple laptops and the apple monitor which are now used today. The school gave her her own Macbook and she managed to navigate that on her own (with little help from me.) While all of this computer business was going on, the smart board technology was out there and she wanted it in her classroom. She saw the opportunities and potential that it had for her classroom. She asked for one for her classroom and finally one was installed, the first in her building! She began using it daily in her lessons and when she had student teachers in her classroom they showed her all sorts of new stuff that could be done on the smart board. Technology and all it has to offer was fully accepted by a "veteran" teacher. She used the internet and video in her classroom on a daily basis, just to provide a different perspective on different lessons she was teaching.
The point of this post was to show that even though my mom began her teaching career in a time when there was little to no technology available to be used in the classroom, she embraced the changes as technology became more readily available and learned along with her students to make sure she was giving them the best opportunity to stay connected and "on top" of this technology based society. I think there is often a stigma that older more experienced teachers have trouble integrating technology or don't want to integrate technology into their classroom. But it's benefits are so many that they are not only limiting their students but also themselves.
Technology is changing the way we teach, everyone should try and use it to its full potential. The class I am taking is helping me to understand this, and is also helping me get the most out of technology for my classroom. I am excited to try and use some of the things I have learnt in this class in 2 weeks in my Field Experience placement.

-LB

Web Based Courses

Today in class we had 2 presenters come in and talk to the class about web based courses or WBC. I have never used a web based course before. But they are used a lot here in Manitoba. As Donald and Sophia mentioned there are basically 4 ways to use web based learning,
1. As part of a blended learning environment
2. As a teaching resource
3. With a face to face class
4. With actual distance learners
Web based learning is a great alternative for rural school divisions that don't have the numbers to support upper level courses like pre-calculus, calculus, physics, etc. Web based courses can be used by a few students in a number of high schools and they can all video in and talk to the teacher and learn that way. This is a better option compared to not taking it at all. Another great reason for web based learning that was talked about was credit recovery. This means that if a student failed a course, they can take the units that they struggled with online without having to re-do the whole course. WBC are also a great alternative for someone who is motivated but cannot succeed in a classroom environment.
As with anything there are concerns with this type of learning. As a pre-service teacher that will be looking for a teaching job in the next couple of years, having the web based courses cuts jobs. There is only one teacher needed for 5 different classes instead of 5 teachers, one for each class. All of this technology is great and it has so many benefits especially for those students who cannot be in a classroom for various reasons. Yet the concerns for me and my Bachelor of Education class are many. Now I am just wondering what your thoughts on this are. Should web based learning be promoted more? Are my concerns legitimate?

-LB

Ever used an infographic?....me either!

Infographic, yet another "technology" term that at first had no meaning to me. BUT as I did a little research (and a few classmates showed me some examples) I knew exactly what it was. As I am an avid Pinner (on pinterest) infographics come up all the time, especially in the fitness and health category. An infographic is just a visual representation of data. It's fun to look at and easy to decipher. You can find a web app that helps you put information together in an appealing way. I think infographics would be fun to use in a classroom for projects or even just fun activities. You can use it for many things and most kids would find it entertaining. They could build their own infographic to help people get to know them using information about how long they have been born for example. They could split it into years, months, weeks, days, hours, minutes and seconds.
I decided to build my own infographic. I was reading other blogs and found a neat website that could help me accomplish this task. Since I love twitter I thought this was a perfect idea, I would compare my two twitter accounts! One is my personal one that I made quite some time ago and one is my "professional" one, and I wanted to see how the two compared!
Infographics can be used everywhere and for anything. It really is just an interesting way of showing data, and I think I could really make great use of it in a classroom setting!
 

Wednesday 20 February 2013

Video- VHS to YouTube

When I think of video in the class I think of seeing the teacher wheeling a TV and VHS player down the hall on a clunky cart, trying not to hit kids or the walls along the way. This is not the case anymore when we talk about video in the classroom. Now each class has a computer which connects to the internet, which then in turn is connected to an endless number of useful, short interesting videos that can engage the students more than a VHS from the early 90's ever will. (Although you could probably do some sort of history lesson! HA!) At first YouTube is your initial reaction to video on the internet, but there are an endless number of video resources for educators to use in their classroom. (WHO WOULD HAVE THOUGHT?!) In my search for educational, interesting and engaging videos for some lesson's I'll be planning I came across TED-Ed. You can really search anything in terms of a topic in any subject area. I think video is useful because kids just love videos, it's a known fact and if you can show a short film to help enhance their knowledge on the subject area, or show them something cool (like an experiment) that you can't do in class then do it! The more resources you can have on a subject the better, well I think anyway. And video is such a simple, but often under used resource. Plus it's great for those visual and auditory learners!
The next question is would I have kids make video and would I post it somewhere. Yes I would definitely have them make videos, with the availability of Ipads, or Ipod touches with a camera it's so simple and so fun for the kids! Of course I would get the proper consent from  parents/legal guardians. I would then probably post them on the class website and as a class we might even have a YouTube channel, so I might even post it there! Endless possibilities with podcast's and videos. Teaching with technology is sounding better and better!

-LB




podcast's- more technology for your classroom

I have never really thought about podcast's being used for education purposes. I usually thought sports when I thought podcast's, maybe because that's what I see on TV, and because I am not really acquainted with the use of podcast's and don't know there full potential. I thought it was kind of neat that I was about to do a blog post on podcast's and I actually found a science lesson plan that used a podcast. Interesting how things work.
So to begin I went to my iTunes to check out what was available for my education podcast search, and what do you know, there are thousands and thousands of podcast's on exactly the topic I want, education. I found an interesting one call Teacher's Aid. There was 27 podcast's on a variety of topics. I chose to listen to one entitled "Keeping up with the pace of Technology." They discussed how technology is always changing and its hard for "older" or maybe perhaps "wiser" teachers to adapt to all this change. They start by discussing the challenges, then the variety of guests shared successes they have had with technology, which were many. After, it was discussed where to begin with the use of technology and how to find resources to help you along the way. The first two things that were suggested for helping those of us who are more technologically challenged was to create your own blog of your experiences and to go on twitter and find a hashtag in your field of study and build from there!
I really like the idea of a podcast. I enjoy talk radio in the morning so maybe instead I'll listen to some podcast's on issues or ideas in education, and become more educated?!? Who knows!? I like the fact that some of them are short, they share a snippet of information, some are longer but don't over work the issue. As I mentioned before I was planning a science lesson and as I was researching some ideas for my weather unit and I came across one that was really interesting. The class would record the weather for the week and the different variables and at the end of the week they would do a daily news/weather report and create a podcast. This hit on two of the outcomes for the unit, it included technology and it was something different that I thought was kind of neat. I am sure there are plenty of other ideas out there, and I would really like to explore them, I feel like podcast's could become very incorporated into my classroom. Another idea that just popped into my head was just a daily report about the class, what we have learned etc and post the podcast on a class blog for parents to listen too.....hmmmmm ideas are swirling in my brain right now. Cool. So if you get a chance, check out podcast's (and they don't have to be education related) search something you're interested in, give it a listen and learn more. (So maybe it is education related because you're learning....!)

-LB

Sunday 17 February 2013

Is Your Digital Footprint Squishing You?

If you take a moment and think about how much time you spent surfing the web, checking emails, Facebook and twitter. Long after you've shut off your computer, and left the digital world behind the information you've accessed lingers in the magical world of "the internet." Like stepping in wet concrete our digital footprint is often really tough to get rid of.
As educators we should be aware of our digital footprint. It is so easy for future employers or our students to access the information we posted and may not realize is still available for everyone to see. This would be a negative way to look at our digital footprint.
But a digital footprint can be a good thing. When people, whether they be your future employer, students in your class or even the parents of those students, search your name it can have a positive impact on your career. Things such as a blog, or an information page or twitter can show up but if they hold interesting and resourceful information then its not such a bad thing for people to search you. A digital footprint is what you make it. You should always be careful of what you post, comment and search but it shouldn't stop you from exploring and enjoying the magic of the World Wide Web. To protect yourself look at security settings and don't be naive to the issues and threats that are out there and maybe think twice before doing anything that could put you at risk for losing a job or not gaining employment elsewhere.
So talking about a digital footprint, I decided to do a little Google search on me! And I didn't find much, although there are a lot of people out there with my name it took me a couple of pages to find information on myself. My twitter account came up, my Google+ account came up, and that was really it. I hope maybe in the future my blog will come up or other online resources that I plan to use for my career. And now its your turn to do a little research on yourself and see what your digital footprint may look like. 
Have fun, and hopefully the information you find doesn't alarm you to much :)

-LB 



Monday 11 February 2013

Grading Girl- An EduBlogger

As part of the course I am taking, the one that I had to make this blog for, we had to follow an Edublogger. We were required to find and follow an Edublogger for a couple of weeks. So my hunt began, our instructor gave us a list to start with or we could go venture out on our own. I started with his list, as he had many, and I went through it and picked a couple and added them to my RSS feed (a place where you add the blogs URL and when they post something new it shows you!) So the one I am going to blog about is entitled Grading Girl, she has a website and it is great, I also follow her on twitter and on pinterest (I love her pins!) I chose Grading Girl because she loves reading and writing. And after my first placement I have become very intrigued with this process as a teacher (Assessment, getting kids up to their reading level etc.) We also share some similar interests, I have really become intrigued with fitness and eating healthy etc and she too shares this interest. This on a side note from teaching.

A little about Grading Girl. Grading Girl is crazy about reading and literacy. She is a high school National Board Certified English teacher in Chicago. She has a Masters in Secondary Education and Educational Leadership along with endorsements in speech and reading. She also serves as a coordinator for her schools' Literacy Coach and Mentor Program. She is a well educated woman and someone that I feel I could learn a lot from.
Her blog is full of useful resources, including mini-lessons and ideas about how to get students interested in writing. She has book reviews, and other non education related stuff like recipes and nutritional information. (Which I really enjoy) She also has links to useful resources and other blogs she reads. She just has lots of different things on her website and you can always find something interesting to read about.
I will continue to follow her on her website. On twitter @GradingGirl, and on pinterest!
If you can, check her out!

-LB

21st Century Student

Ok, so this should have been connected with the map I made of my own connections. But alas that did not happen. So here is my thoughts on how the 21st century student is connected. ALSO I thought I would update you on the fact that my network has grown, just like I thought it would!


Clarence Fisher- Small Town Technology

We had the opportunity to have Clarence Fisher skype into our class (in the midst of a snowstorm) from Snow Lake Manitoba. Although he only spoke for 20 minutes he made some really good points, about small town life and the use of technology in the classroom.
Clarence talked about how people often see small town or rural schools as being out of date, or old fashioned when in comes to technology, but in actual fact this is not true. They too have just as much access to the world around them as someone from a big city. The means at which they obtain this information may be slightly different like not actually going to a museum but perhaps taking a virtual tour instead. People from rural areas use social media, text, have iPads etc. so why not incorporate this into the classroom. This is the new way of learning. Clarence talked about how memorization is in the past. Why should students have to memorize when they can just go to Google, type something in and a whole list of information pops up? If this is how students are going to learn we should teach them how to find the "right" information, and how to best utilize the information their research has given them. As a future educator I want to embrace this new way of learning, and if I can get students to know where to find useful information, and also contribute to the wealth of knowledge on the internet then I think I could consider some of my teaching a success.
It was good to hear from someone who lived and taught in a rural school and that all the same types of opportunities are available for there classes as those who live in a city center, in terms of technological resources and connecting with the world around them. As teachers we have to remember this and think of ways we can make exciting opportunities happen for rural students too.

-LB

Wednesday 6 February 2013

Twitter #I4Ed

I signed up for twitter WAY back when no one knew what it was. It was brought up every now and then but I didn't know how to use it. I can look back on my history and it says I signed up in 2009 with my first account. I really only started doing some serious tweeting about a year and half ago. I shared my thoughts, let people know what I was doing, and my favourite part, making up ridiculous hashtags. Now that I have joined the world of Educators I am sort of apprehensive about letting my colleagues and other professionals in on my "undergrad life", not that it is anything awful but maybe just not my best moments. But since joining the world of professionals and educators I created another account to use for resources and general education type things, and I really am learning a whole new side of twitter and tweeting. I see that people (that I have never met) are tweeting interesting articles and can answer questions that I may have just by simply using this one symbol (@) Another great thing about twitter is if you use a hashtag (formally known as the number symbol) you can see what thousands of others are saying on the same issue or topic you have tagged. It is quite neat actually! I think twitter is now my new favourite social media site. I find myself checking twitter more often than I am Facebook. If you don't have a twitter account and are interested I suggest you give it a try, it may not be for all, but I really enjoy it. It's so simple to use, and it doesn't change every 2 months, like some other social media site we all know of!
If you are new to twitter, give me a follow! @mslinzebraun

Another cool fact. I tweeted at one of our guest presentors and he saw that I had done so and asked his network of people to follow me, and new people are following me daily. My PLN is growing rapidly on Twitter and I love it!!!!
-LB