Sunday, August 23, 2009

Understanding the Impact of Technology on Education, Work, and Society


While working towards my Master’s degree I have recently completed a course that provided me with a great insight into the ways technology has impacted different facets of our world. Throughout this course I was able to take concepts that I had heard of or dabbled in and fully understand their power and abilities in my classroom. Not only do I now understand the inner workings of Web 2.0 applications such as blogging, wikis and podcasting I have expanded my knowledge of the ways these applications affect the business and education world as well as society.

The first thing that caught my curiosity in this particular course was the posed question of how does technology allow you to do something differently or to do something different? This is an important reflection. There are plenty of teachers who replace an overhead with a PowerPoint and fill out their technology standard. Using PowerPoint instead of writing on the board or lecturing is a way of doing the same thing differently; giving students a new way of taking in information is doing something differently. As technology and education change and evolve so should our role as educators. Students no longer need to rely solely on their teacher or a single textbook to learn information; they have a wealth of information at their fingertips. We as educators must stay current and readjust our role in the classroom. We now need to move into a facilitator role providing students with experiences rather than lessons and tests. Using various technologies and learning experiences allows students to be higher level thinkers and retain information that they themselves take ownership in.

It is unfair to ask a student to walk into a school building and ask them to turn a blind eye to the technologies they have been surrounded with since they were young. As posted in an earlier blog today’s students are digital natives and we need to cater to that so we do not bore them. We cannot expect them to pick up a paper and pencil and take a test and compute in a today’s working world. We also should not limit our students to our own depth of knowledge; it would be egotistical to think that I know everything a student needs to know. If I am teaching about Van Gogh, it would be a shame to only pass on the knowledge and experiences I have. I want to give my students my own experiences and information as well as let them have their own and teach me things as well. I learn something new daily; sometimes useless and sometimes very pertinent. Most importantly I want my students to have the access and the opportunities that are out there in today’s technological world and I too will learn with them as well as better my role as the facilitator and educator.

Two short term goals that I will hold for my classroom in this upcoming year is to become more of a facilitator in my classroom and to uphold the duty of doing different things by making sure I am not just doing the same things in a different way. I want to implement all of the Web 2.0 applications in different facets to expose my students. Another goal is to keep reflecting because as I conquer these new application there will be new ones. Reflecting and keeping my lifelong commitment to learning will allow me to evolve into a better teacher.

Sunday, August 2, 2009

Podcasting 101


I have delved into the wonderful world of postcasting. I have used a free site called podbeam, the free voice recording software of audacity and a conversion program to convert audio to mp3 format. The podcast is an interview with a teacher about the use of technology in the classroom and 21st century learning skills. It was a great experience and I cannot wait to use this web 2.0 application in my classroom. The URL is:

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Digital Natives or Immigrants? Are we dulling our students?


Digital immigrants grew up in a one step at a time process learning enviornment. Digital natives, today's students, grow up surrounded my media stimulus and technology. Today's students are surrounded by multitasking, listening to an iPod, wathcing TV, playing video games, instant messaging, texting, talking and researching...all at the same time! They show up at school and we expect them to focus when asked to put it all away, get out a paper and pencil. They become disingaged and disinterested. We need to stimulate our students while making information memorable and lasting.


Thursday, July 23, 2009

The Partnership for 21st Century Skills


The partnership for 21st century skills is a website that advocates infusing 21st century skills into education. The organization brings together the buisiness world, educational leaders and policy makers all in the name of creating valuble standards to bring to light the need for these higher level skills and incorporation of technology in today's curriculum.
The site is very will organized with tons of valuable information. The highlights listed in the center show the accolades the site has earned as well as news on events and curriculum matters that are new to the table. There are some good links in the tools and resources section that would be great for an interactive staff development. I found information on the state in which I teach, West Virginia. We are one of a few states that have a state implimented plan for initiating 21st century skills to prepare our students for the work world that will await them. It seems like good plans but they would be great plans if they were implimented to thier fullest. With test scores at the focus of every district 21st century skills can fall through the cracks. I would love to say that our state is a leader in 21st century skills but as always there is so much more that could be done. I think that the P21 site is a great resource for teachers it provides a lot of information that may bring teachers around to jump on the 21st century band wagon.

Monday, July 6, 2009

Blogging for curriculum sake!

I teach art in a K-5th grade setting. I have utililzed blogging in various ways to enhance my curriculum. I started with a free website called classchatter.com, if you've never tried it our I highly suggest it. It is very easy and safe for students. I have used this as well as a blogspot for several purposes. It is a communal place where students can work individually and collaborativly and as fast or as slow as needed. The communal place allows me to add links, videos, promts, reading material, auditory stories or anything imaginable. Most recently a group of third graders were learning about artist quotes; what is a quote, how do you correctly write a quote, and what is the significance of an artist statement were thier objectives that were clearly posted at the front end of the blog. Students researched famous quotes and posted them. Then they read eachothers and commented on at least 5. Students them created a set of thier own quotes and helped grammer correct errors in small virtual groups. All the while I could watch all of the interactions and progress through the lesson. I truley feel that blogging offers a strategy that can provide diverse learning oppourtunites to my students.

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

RSS Feed

The feed icon was way harder to add than I had anticipated. Jeff M from group two gave a good site for directions.

http://www.asktheblogger.com/how-do-i-put-a-rss-feed-on-my-blogger-blog/

The confusing part is editing the actual HTML in the layout...