Sunday, April 28, 2013

Project #15


Final Report on: Project #9 PLN






My PLN has grown quite a lot since I started it! I have been exploring how to use Symbaloo more and how to use myHomework. I also added a few resources to my PLN: Quizlet, WolframAlpha, and along with personal likings! I only expect it to continue growing so I can use it to help me in the future with teaching!:)



Sunday, April 21, 2013

Blog Post #13

Mr. Paul Anderson's Blended Learning Cycle video was very interesting to watch and listen too. He talks about how you blend the classroom, mobile online combined with engaging, exploring, explaining, expanding and evaluating with the students. The learning cycle starts off with asking a good question.. Then you go investigate that question. You watch a video and then elaborate. Review it with the teacher and then take a summary quiz to make sure the student understands what you were teaching them. I like the idea of a blended learning classroom. I will definitely try it in my classroom because it seems like an effective tool to make sure the students understand and comprehend the subject you were teaching them. He did this for his AP biology class in high school, while I will be teaching elementary students, so I will most likely have to tweak it for that grade level. Hopefully, it will be effective in my classroom just like it has been in Mr. Anderson's classroom.

Final Project Progress

For our progress report of our final project, the Fantastic Four have decided to do option B. We have agreed on a time to meet with outlines we have each created on topics we want to talk about for future students in EDM 310.

Sunday, April 14, 2013

Blog Post #12

This week we are suppose to make up our own assignment to possibly be used in the future for EDM 310. My major is elementary and special education. I think a great blog post assignment that we didn't do this semester would be to research something that has to do with special education. Whether it be a lesson plan you have to create for the special needs students. Or going to visit with special needs students and then writing about their experiences. Even researching different mental disabilities in depth so people who read your post can better understand special needs.

A lesson plan you can do is talking about the alphabet. You can bring in items that they can see, smell, touch that goes with each letter of the alphabet. There is also this YouTube video called  Jolly Songs A-Z that pronounces each letter and has a little dance and song to go with each letter.

Sunday, April 7, 2013

Post #11

 Watching Ms. Kathy Cassidy's video  Little Kids.....Big Potential was very inspiring. If she is able to use technology throughout her whole classroom then I think teachers everywhere should give it a try. It won't hurt anything. Technology is very useful and I think showing students how to use and to show them they learn things from different cultures or tradition or where they can talk to people from around the world, they will be more excited to learn! We shouldn't solely rely on technology in a classroom because my biggest fear is that I don't want it to disable certain people skills. The students need to know how to hand-write things and not to type everything and also to spell check things on their own. The students in her classroom were learning to blog, Skype and collaborating which I think is very awesome! They are using their technology for educational purposes, like playing learning activities online. Honestly, it shows the students learning can be very fun! I hope one day in my classroom  I can use some of her techniques to teach my students to blog and Skype and using the internet as a resource! 



C4T #4


Blogs from the Mouths of Babes

2013 FEBRUARY 21
by Jabiz
As we continue to explore the rich world of authentic student blogging, it is important to stop and listen to feedback and criticism from time to time. It is important to understand the apprehension that some stakeholders may have when it comes to open online publishing.
You can read more about how we have been blogging with our middle school students by reading some of these post, but let me give a very brief synopsis of what our program looks like up to know. (Before I start, let me clarify that when I say we, I am referring to myself and Paula Guinto who is my teaching partner in grade 7 & 8. We both teach English; I blog here with my students and Paula writes at Meta.)
The basic manifesto as it stands, looks something like this:
I want my students to feel confident about who they are through critical and artistic exploration of their identity. I want them to learn how to clearly articulate this voice in a variety of media in order to find a network of like-minded people in order to create a community of learners that will help them learn during and beyond school.
We hope that blogging will help our students achieve this goal. The system we have set up is pretty simple: We coached every student in our class to set up a blog through blogger, explained basic etiquette and gave them freedom to own the space. We are not formally assessing anything that goes on the blog, and there is no obligation to blog at all. We are hoping to see what kids write when they are given a space and freedom to write.
Like any process at a school, there have been mixed feelings from students, teachers and parents. There have been some accurate criticism and others based on misunderstandings. As a community, we are in the process of figuring out what blogging looks like for us. We are looking to make sure that there is a clear understanding of the what and the why and the how by all the stakeholders involved.
As part of this process, I asked my students to write a short paragraph agreeing or disagreeing with this statement:
Blogging is an important part of an English classroom.
I was floored by the results. You can read all of the answers here, but let me give you some highlights:
The freedom to express ourselves is important; providing a medium and nurturing the usage of that medium improves our skills as writers and removes some of our inhibitions of writing.
Blogging is a fun way to write. It can be used for educational purposes and it also helps the student to think when they are writing “who is my audience.” Sometimes having students writing on a blog will increase a students motivation to write.
Blogging is useful. No scratch that out, Blogging is necessary. With teenagers [us] being young minds full of innovative ideas, thoughts and views, our generation needs to share them to audience and blogging enables us to do that.
It wasn’t all positive, many students had valid concerns:
Some people don’t like having their personal thoughts online because it is a public space.
The notion of writing online to a worldwide audience was not quite thrilling.
Expecting a bunch of insecure teenagers who aren’t quite sure who they can trust in the constantly moving sands of social media to write about whatever comes to their mind is asking for a lot.
Sometimes people are not able to get the time to read the blog posts with all the homework we are currently getting.
I hope you get a chance to read all of the response and maybe add some thoughts in the comments on our class page. But what does this all mean? What did I learn?
The fact that we have chosen not to force students to blog has been invaluable, however, there is still a pressure to share and this is making some kids uncomfortable. There is a lot involved in this process:  from self-esteem, to trust, to community. The notion of sharing publicly is still a major hurdle for many students and their parents. What is the point? What are the benefits?  What are the problems and the issues? I am not sure if this post is designed to answer questions. I was hoping to ask some and have you, dear reader, answer a them. What are the benefits of public sharing for students? Why go global?
I also noticed that many of the students might be blogging more if there was more structure. The total freedom, seems to have frozen some kids into inaction. They simply don’t know what to write, when they are told they can write about anything. This has me thinking of designing lessons or activities that guide students to come up with ideas. Which is interesting, because one of the questions that comes up repeatedly during reading conferences is, “How does the writer come up with ideas for his/her stories.” It is clear that middle school kids need a pool of ideas and/or prompts to get them started. Sites like this and this are great, but perhaps kids need more of a push toward them. How do you help students find things to write about? How can we foster creativity and imagination?
Ironically, many of the students who are not blogging, said they are not writing because it is not graded or part of school, so they don’t have time to waste on it. Which makes me wonder if they would write more if I forced them and graded it, which leads us back to square one that school writing is not always authentic. Or is it? How do we find this balance of what is expected and graded and what is free of choice? Still struggling with that one. How much of this is explicitly for school and how much is bigger than school? Hoping to have a good conversation about this idea of academic relevance in the comments. It is a major talking point at our school at the moment? How do we assess this stuff? Should we?
It was great to see so many students make the connections between Voice, Trust, Writing and Community, because these themes are at the heart of what we do. This is the culture we are trying to create; one where students feel comfortable and safe enough with their peers to be able to share their ideas regardless of their writing “level.” 
We have a long way to go, but I feel pretty good about where we are after only six months. Cultures take time to build, and we  need to be cognizant of the people they affect. We have to stop and ask stakeholders what they are thinking, how they are feeling.
Next step for us, is to ask parents to articulate what they know about blogging. Ask them what they value and what they fear. It is an intimidating conversation to have, but an important one. Perhaps, showing them what their kids are saying would be a good first  step.


MY COMMENT:
Brittany Haub
Twitter: 
PERMALINK
March 10, 2013
Blogging should be started early so that way they get a better sense of what to do and how to express themselves. I am a Junior at South Alabama for elementary and special education and this is the first time I have ever had to do a blog or even considered doing one. I realized how beneficially it is for myself personally. He gives us blog posts, projects, comments and activities we have to do each week. It honestly makes me really think because everything we have to do is related to teaching and what I will be doing in my future classes. No one is telling their students that they have to put private information on there. But it is a way for them the express themselves and get excited about how anyone around the world can read what they have to say and that those people are actually interested in what they have to say. They can share ideas with one another and gain insight on other’s opinions. I mean isn’t that what we want our students or children to do? To grow and develop and become their own person. I think it is a great thing to do and I will most likely be using blogging in my future classroom.




What does collaboration look like?

APRIL 14, 2013
I recently co-presented a workshop with an educator who is very different from me. She is both experienced and knowledgeable, but our beliefs about teaching and learning don’t coincide, so the planning process involved much disagreement and compromise.
According to the dictionary:
Screen Shot 2013-04-13 at 9.27.51 AM
Collaboration is ‘working together’, but is ‘working together’ necessarily collaboration? Or does true collaboration require specific conditions?
Collaboration
As I prepare for a coming PYP workshop, I find myself content to be presenting alone. Using Simon Sinek’s golden circle principle, I start from the ‘why’, rather than the ‘what’. My approach is based on my beliefs about learning and my presentation has the stamp of my personal style.
And…
I’m still collaborating.
Input from my global learning network adds another dimension via blogs, Skype and Twitter. I have invited other experienced educators to share their perspectives, requested permission to include others’ examples, sought opinions, discussed ideas with and gathered resources from my global community of educators.
As recently stated so beautifully by a group of 8 year olds inquiring into community:
Screen Shot 2013-04-13 at 9.54.54 AM
Year 3 GBH
 
Thanks to my PLN for contributions to the cartoon. What else do you think should be added?


Brittany Haub PERMALINK
April 15, 2013 5:05 am
Please Note: Your comment is awaiting moderation.
Hi my name is Brittany Haub and I am a student at the University of South Alabama. I enjoyed reading your post and your cartoon. I had to sit back a minute and think about collaboration and I agree with @janelueders on how she explained cooperation and working together. I look forward to reading your blog in the future! My blog is haubbrittanyedm310.blogspot.com.




Planning for inquiry…

APRIL 28, 2013
Language is a vehicle for communication and self expression.
It’s a starting point for a central idea for a new inquiry unit in How We Express Ourselves and no-one in the room is excited. The draft central idea seems like a statement of the obvious and teachers are concerned that it might not have the potential to invite student inquiry. We can see opportunities for the development of skills and outcomes in our English scope and sequence, exposure to Aboriginal culture, obvious links with second language learning and wonderful ways to incorporate the arts. If we can come up with possible directions and some great provocations, we’ll be happy to let the learners lead the way…
… Inquiry teachers are not afraid to let go.
It’s the pre-thinking stage and we have yet to explore the potential by investing some time in our own inquiries. An interesting way to provoke initial thinking is via google images. A quick search for ‘language’ generates pictures of different kinds of scripts, people communicating, sign language charts, ancient writing, translations, symbols and signs. We’re off on our own tangents, considering different perspectives, exploring in different directions. My personal inquiry has already taken me to Steven PinkerMark Pagel and the National Geographic Enduring Voices project…
… Inquiry teachers are inquirers themselves.
The range of questions teachers generate themselves is an indication of what’s possible… What is language? How can we communicate without language? How do writers use language effectively? How is spoken language different from written language? How would the world be different if everyone spoke the same language? How has language evolved over time? How does slang develop and evolve? How does body language impact on communication? How do gestures communicate meaning in different cultures? Why do some languages not have words for concepts we have in English? How does language shape culture? How does culture shape language? Why are many languages becoming extinct?
… Inquiry teachers are more interested in questions than answers.
We consider the conceptual focus. We might explore language through the lenses of function, connection and change. The big ideas (related concepts) might include communication, expression, culture, systems, relationships, adaptation, literature…
A tentative articulation of the desired conceptual understandings looks like this:
  • We use language to communicate and express thoughts, ideas and feelings. (function)
  • Language is a dynamic system that evolves over time. (change)
  • Language and culture are interdependent. (connection)
… Inquiry teachers focus on conceptual understandings, not just facts.
A range of provocations that involve slang and text speak should pique students’ interest, before taking the learning further…
… Inquiry teachers help learners make personal connections, so that learning is relevant and engaging.
Not everyone is excited (yet). We’re on the lookout for some inspiration relating to the big ideas so let me know if you have anything to share!

Brittany Haub PERMALINK
April 29, 2013 1:06 pm
Hi my name is Brittany Haub and I am a student at the University of South Alabama and this is for my EDM 310 class. I like what Holli H said. An experiment like that would be awesome to do and to see the results would be very interesting. I think having a mini lesson on multi-cultures would be very beneficial for students to see how other people act around the world and to see how they communicate with their body and how they speak.


C4K March


What do you think you as a student gain from blogging with students and others outside of the school? Is it worth the time? Why/why not?
Categories: Blog02/05/2013 @ 1:31 PM 2 COMMENTS      
We have a lot of class time to blog to other people, it doesn’t take up that much time and I don’t think it wastes my time. I think that it is really cool getting to talk to other people around the world that you have never met or seen before and get to know about them.  You can get different opinions on things that you do or think about

Brittany Haub (Guest)
Your comment is awaiting moderation. 
Hi Kylie! I completely agree with what you said!I love talking to people that I never would have if it wouldn’t have been for blogging. I mean I live in Alabama and you live in Iowa! It is definitely not a waste of time because you can learn about things you never thought possible and learn everyone’s opinions about different things. 
Keep up the good work! 

Brittany





Friday, March 1, 2013


suicide

The reason that i think somebody would commit soiside. Because they might being bullied or being teased about there clothes. There family don't like them, or they are not loved. If there boyfriend or girlfriend breaks up with them for no reason.








**He still hasn't made my comment visible for me to be able to post it.



100 WC Week 8 All If We Share
Filed under: 100 WC —— UKmate @ 1:49 am
If we share, lives can be cared for. Anyone can be open to knowledge and everyone can enjoy the excitements life offer. Minds can be expanded joy can be experienced, but most of all, our planet can be united. There can be more enjoyment, less fights in the world.
Picture a place of smiles, laughter and enjoyment. Where everyone has the same rights. Work can be shared. Care can be shared with everyone. The basics in life will become enjoyment by more than just the standard few. But most of all people can be able to enjoy their life with no threat of fear.
All If We Share

MY RESPONSE:
  Brittany Haub  Says: Your comment is awaiting moderation. 
    
Hey Scott! That was really awesome to read! I hope you practice this each and every day. I love seeing people smile more and laughing more. It brightens up the room that you are in.
Keep up the great work!
Brittany





Larry and Tracy
Tags: Categories: BlogMarch 27, 2013 @ 1:39 PM 1 Comment      
Larry and Tracy are very inspiring people. It amazed me how intelligent they were, even when they were doing some strange behaviors. For example Larry was speaking gibberish out of his mouth but typing very intelligent words at the same time. Just thinking about how frustrating it would be to be so smart, but unable to convey what they were thinking. It makes me feel very happy for them that they now have a means of communicating through typing. I am also very happy for Larry that he got some of his art into a museum. In conclusion I think that Tracy and Larry should continue helping the world.

1 Comment

  1. Brittany Haub (Guest)
    Hey Sam! I really enjoyed reading this post about Larry and Tracy. Is this a book or story you had to read for school? Also, what was wrong with them that they had to communicate through typing? Keep up the good work!

    Brittany