Dancing in the Pool of Technology

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Each year at this time, there are a ritual of things I enjoy doing to get me in the Christmas spirit.  One of my favorites is watching "It's a Wonderful Life" by Frank Capra.  One of my favorite scenes (although there are honestly too many to count) is the famous Bedford Falls HS Charleston dance scene where Jimmy Stewart and Donna Reed dance as the floor of the gymnasium begins to open.   

As educators, aren't we in the middle of this same dance?  We are going about our business in our classrooms as the floor of technology is opening.  When we fall into the pool, will we adapt the Charleston to our new environment or complain about getting wet?  As a past HS varsity swimmer, I know how to swim and I have never worried about drowning in a pool of water.  But I know I still have a lot to learn if I plan to dance in a pool.  We are all falling in whether we like it or not-

Will you dance or drown as you fall into the pool of technology? 

. . . this is the question we must ask ourselves as we enter 2010.

In the words of George Bailey (AKA: Jimmy Stewart),
"I'm shakin' the dust of this crummy little town off my feet and I'm gonna see the world. Italy, Greece, the Parthenon, the Coliseum. Then, I'm comin' back here to go to college and see what they know. And then I'm gonna build things. I'm gonna build airfields, I'm gonna build skyscrapers a hundred stories high, I'm gonna build bridges a mile long . . ." 

Image can be found at:  http://www.constellationcenter.org/images1/intro/wonderful_life_dance.jpg

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Reflecting Through Digital Short Stories

Friday, December 11, 2009

Isaac Newton once said: "If I have seen farther than others, it is because I was standing on the shoulders of giants."  My grade 10 students have just completed a unit on Short Stories.  This year the English 10 team incorporated digital storytelling as the final assessment of our Short Story unit.  With the amazing help of my colleagues: Brad, Ronna, Casey and Karen, we created a really fun unit to teach and watch unfold before our very eyes.  We began by reading a multitude of short stories including:

  • "Two Kinds" by Amy Tan
  • "A Family Supper" by Kazuo Ishiguro
  • "A Man With No Eyes" by MacKinlay Kantor
  • "The Ninny" by Anton Chekhov
  • "Two Words" by Isabella Allende
  • "The Stolen Party" by Liliana Heker
  • "Lather and Nothing Else" by Hernando Tellez
  • "A Very Old Man With Enormous Wings" by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
We then examined the authoritative intent and theme for each story and viewed different adaptations of these stories over time.  From there, students were given the assignment, shown a Power Point and given the rubric.  The results were fantastic and one of the students from a different class had immediate validation from teachers at SAS.  They posted comments on the digital short story and plan on using the students' digital story in their class to help teach the short story "The Bet".  Talk about authentic assessment!

Dear Mike and Carl, I am an English teacher at the Singapore American school and we are currently studying short stories, one of the short stories is "The Bet" by A. Chekhov, I truly believe that this movie clearly shows the short story and I will definitely show my class this video, Thanks a lot and great job on the movie and the sound it really matches with the story.

As with everything I teach, there are many changes and lessons to learn from this unit.  First and foremost, I would be clearer on the creativity I would like to see from the students.  Too many of the students recreate the story verbatim and after awhile they were a little redundant to watch.  I would also give them the assignment at the start of the unit.  The students had one week to create their stories, with much of the work done at home.  I would also continue to tweak the rubric.  We had students look at the rubric and revise it, but it still needs some work. 

If you'd like to see some of their digital short stories, they can be found on their ePortfolios on my netvibes account.  They are under the Grade 10 tags, but all of them are not uploaded yet.  In the future, I will post some of them here for viewing and continue to upload them to my teachwatts youtube account, but for now the following take on "Two Words" by Sarah is one of my favorites:


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Sharing Technology Peripherals

In this digital age, we are surrounded by new toys under the Christmas tree.  What should we play with first?  Come Christmas morning, we run downstairs and are amazed at all the glossy paper and bows under the tree.  And as each child has a preference for a certain toy, teachers have preferences for certain peripherals in their classrooms.  As I read the multitude of blogs about this subject, I continue to learn about my colleagues favorite toys.

Here's what I'd like to see implemented at more schools: show and tell.  My daughter does it every Monday in her Kindergarten class.   After each Monday, she spends the next week looking for the next perfect thing to share with her classmates.  How amazing would it be if you had one professional development day or even five minutes of your next department meeting to share your favorite toy under the Christmas tree this year? 

Imagine a room full of educators sharing their favorite ways of incorporating technology and ways they connect the technology to learning in their classroom.  Recently I attended a fantastic student leadership conference run by the JUMP Foundation!  Among the many things I learned that weekend from Justin Bedard and Josh Morris, one saying keeps running through my mind: "All the experts are in the room".  So here's my professional Christmas wish: I would love to see administrators give teachers more time to connect and share.  Let's look at the tools we have, and visualize best practice for these tools before we acquire anything new.  All the experts are in the room, now let's have some time for some good old fashioned show and tell.

The above image can be found at: http://ippaonline.com/ippa/?m=20060

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"Good Educators" and the Relevance of NETS Standards

Monday, December 7, 2009

Are we fostering the creative spirit in today's classroom? The NETS standards for students, teachers and administrators carefully define five to six standards to make this happen.  The more I read, I find my interest continuously drawn toward the very first standards of each of these documents.  The first standard listed for these are:
  1. Creativity and Innovation (Standard for Students): where students demonstrate creative thinking, construct knowledge, and develop innovative products and processes using technology.
  2. Facilitate and Inspire Student Learning and Creativity (Standard for Teachers): where teachers use their knowledge of subject matter, teaching and learning, and technology to facilitate experiences that advance student learning, creativity, and innovation in both face-to-face and virtual environments.
  3. Visionary Leadership (Standard for Administrators): where Educational Administrators inspire and lead development and implementation of a shared vision for comprehensive integration of technology to promote excellence and support transformation throughout the organization.
These three standards are intrinsically interrelated to developing students into life-long learners that can achieve their fullest potential.  As educators we can do this in the following ways:
  1. Creativity and Innovation for Students: Recently someone told me that it is not important for the students to know how something works, just that it exists for them to use when needed.  If we continue to follow that wave in education, we will produce a society full of consumers instead of a society full of creators.  There needs to be a balance between product and creation to allow students to be truly innovative in multiple field of study.
  2. Facilitate and Inspire Student Learning and Creativity: if an assessment is truly authentic, the learning becomes more meaningful to the student. The key here is to allow students a chance to fail. History proves that creativity and innovation go hand in hand with failure. We need to build more opportunities into our curriculum to provide students the opportunity to take a chance on something and learn from their mistakes. Our society has become so grade conscious, that we are subtly teaching our students that grades are more important than learning. This must structure be revised in our assessments for learning to truly happen.
  3. Visionary Leadership: administrators need to advocate for policies that allows students and teachers the opportunity and ability to reach their potential in these environments where success does not always perfection.  
At the end of the day, the student learning is what matters.  When you think back on your own life, when did you learn the most?  When you succeeded or failed?  It is what we do when we come face-to-face with that failure that true learning happens and as educators, we need to provide more opportunities for this to happen.

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The Three R's of Education?

Friday, December 4, 2009

Remember the days when we studied the three R's in school: Reading, (W)riting and (A)rithmetic? Although I know I am dating myself, I have fond memories of the Dick and Jane books of yesteryear.  How has curriculum evolved over the past 20 years?  Are we learning essentially the same information today as we did yesterday?  Do we continuously reinvent a wheel that already exists?  Are we teaching the same thing in new ways?

Up until the past few years, I would have said yes to all of the above questions.  But there is a new "R" of education that needs to addressed and fostered within our school communities. 

Teaching at an International School provides a constant influx of new students at the start of each academic year.  As this semester draws to a close, I know I will lose a few students and gain a few more in January.  So this begs the question: "How do we ensure that students are learning what they need when it comes to Technology and Information Literacy?"  The background of what our students know when they enter our classroom has never been so varied.  Student A may come from a local Thai school, Student B may come from a public school in the US, and Student C may come from an international school in Delhi with a one-to-one program.  These three scenarios are the norm when teaching overseas.  

Most schools have programs set up for Intensive Studies (IS) and English as a Second Language (ESL); whereas, Information Technology (IT) and the use of web 2.0 tools exist in every grade but we have nothing in place to aid our new students a smooth integration into a curriculum which expects a certain level of literacy.  At ISB, our Grade 5 students are blogging.  By Grade 7, students are connecting to students all over the world by looking at global issues.  By Grade 9, students are creating ePortfolios to showcase their learning to future colleges and employers.  Do we need to have an entry level test to access students' needs when they enter our school?  Is there a need for a skills course to pass during the first year? 

Or will students pick up these skills on their own?  If you give a child the latest version of the iPhone, I guarantee they will know all the ins and outs of their phone before you have time to read the manual.  There are two essential elements at play here: TIME and TRIAL AND ERROR.  As adults, we are multitasking not just at work but in life in general.  We are walking the dog, feeding the kids breakfast and writing Christmas cards all before 8 am in the morning.  Not only is our time busy with the minutia of life but if we mess one of these items up, there will be consequences to pay.  Additionally as children, we were taught that to learn something, you read the rules/manual.  I still do this every time I receive a new device of some sort.  Yet as children, we are less afraid to make mistakes and learn through trial and error.   It is the computer game mentality; if they get knocked off on the screen, they will try again.  I don't know if the new "R" of education should have its own class, but time will tell if students will be able to keep up with a field that is moving faster than adults have time to invest in.  I foresee the students winning this round hands down.  What are you doing to ensure your students are learning what they need when it comes to Technology and Information Literacy at your school? 

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Learning from Your Colleagues

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

One of the greatest benefits of my job is the ability to work with professionals that constantly challenge and expand the way you look at the world around you. Kim Cofino's presentation for the K12 Online Conference"Going Global: Culture Shock, Convergence and the Future of Education" does exactly that. Take a minute and watch and see.




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