Saturday, August 17, 2013

EDLD 5352 Course Reflection Assignment 5.2

Technology skills learned in this course: I have gained a lot of new knowledge regarding my use of technology as a student and an educator.  I really enjoyed learning about the variety of Web 2.0 tools and am very excited about using them in my classroom and as an administrator in the future.  I learned that technology is becoming the primary and best way to reach the very technologically savvy students that are in our schools today.  I also enjoyed learning about the use of Google Sites and Docs and love how easy it will be to integrate into the classroom.  Overall, this course opened my eyes to the endless opportunities that technology provides for everyone involved in education today, including parents.  I cannot wait to see how my students will react to the “fun” new way of learning that will occur in my classes.  This was a great class and I am glad that I took the course.

Campus-Supervised Internship Activities – At this point, I am not as far along as I wish I was.  I had planned on doing a lot of the interviewing during the summer but found that the employees were great but preferred to do the interviews during the school year.  I will have to fit these interviews in after school or during my conference period.  This will not be a problem because I look forward to the knowledge that I will gain through these interviews.  I have currently completed only 23 of my activities so I am a little more than half way to completion.  It is time I started to kick into gear and get them done this semester.

Action Research Report – I have completed my Action Research Project.  I have submitted my report to my supervisor and he is reviewing it at this time.  When school starts, I will sit down with my supervisor and discuss my project.  From the conversations I have had with him so far, some of my recommendations regarding the discipline procedures used at my school may be implemented.  I will find out more once school gets started.  I plan on introducing some of my discipline findings to my department during our beginning of school meetings next week.  Some of the data I collected could be used as the teachers begin to plan classroom management procedures.    At this point, all I have to do is to actually compile the information into the formal report that will be due in the 5398. 

EDLD 5352 Web Conference Reflection

As part of the requirements for this technology course, I was required to attend or watch at least one web conference and reflect on it.  In the past, I have not enjoyed or learned much from attending these web conferences mainly because of technology issues and all of the side conversations going on.   But in the case of this class, I really enjoyed it. I went in with the idea that I would just watch the one conference, watch a lot of people chatting about other things, and then write my reflection.  However, I had a much better experience this time.  The assignments and the expectations for us did not seem to be very clear when I started this particular class. The web conferences allowed me, as a student, to use technology to improve my understanding of classroom expectations. This is exactly what I and my classmates need to be doing as teachers with our students; use technology to improve understanding. The web conferences allowed us to ask any questions we might have about our assignments and our graduation requirements. The professor was so enthusiastic about the material that it was infectious. I became excited about using new technology in my classroom and found that it was not really as hard as I thought it was going to be. Dr. Jenkins was always patient and took the time to answer all questions that anyone might have. Web conferences are a great tool and could be used by any classroom teacher for various things.

Friday, August 2, 2013

Web 2.0 Tools

EDLD 5352
Web 2.0 Tools Collaboration
Noteapp.com
Noteapp.com is a website that is dedicated to collaboration by allowing teachers and students to create board templates for live communication from anywhere.   You can use it to conduct meetings with others directly from your workspace.   It is a great tool to use when you need to share quick information but can’t get everyone together.  This website even works with your smartphone because all you need is the url address.  Educators could utilize this tool to share ideas, etc.  It also is good for groups that have a hard time meeting in person since it is all online.  As a teacher, this would be something that I would use in my classroom to increase participation by giving students a platform for communication to share ideas, brainstorm, and answer my questions.   They may even remain anonymous if you allow it.  This is a good tool to use to help reluctant and/or struggling students get more involved in your classes.  It works similar to our Google doc except that the background is a cork board and everyone types on a virtual post-it note.    You can color-code your post-it note to identify yourself if desired.
Key attributes of Noteapp.com:
  • Put all your information in one place
  • Visually access your notes for quick editing and recall
  • Share thoughts and brainstorm with others, directly from your workspace
  • Create a shared space for educational information such as current issues, lesson plan ideas, and teacher/student/parent feedback
  • Hold meetings from across the world and encourage all members' thoughts and ideas
  • Collaborate from anywhere
  • Create board templates to use for recurring and ongoing courses
  • Elicit compelling feedback both during and after the course has finished
Increase class participation by giving students a platform for shared communication
Socrative.com
Socrative.com is a Web 2.0 tool that educators can use to create assessments online and then share them with other educators and/or students.  An important use of Socrative.com is that the other educators you share your documents with can collaborate with you to create and/or edit what you or they have shared.  For students, educators can create multiple-choice, true/false, or short answer assessments.   They can construct the assessment to be a formal test, quiz, pulse-check, or a game.  Newly created assessments are located under a “class room number” in the program.  That room number is what students use to check in to the teacher’s assessment.  Students will login under Socrates.com/student and teachers create their assessments under Socrates.com/lecturer.  Virtually any educator can implement this into their normal class routine which will integrate technology in a way more relevant to today’s technologically oriented learners.  It is also an easy way to assess students quickly because the results are calculated automatically.  Additionally, test results may be posted publicly for students, parents or any relevant stakeholder without identifying individual students.