Showing posts with label learning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label learning. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

March 2013

Here are some tools which may help you in your roll as an ICT inquirer…..


With Google Chrome you often end up with lots of tabs open. manage these tabs (and keep your computer running quickly) by using One Tab.

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Good advice for your eLearning publications

image

http://www.atrixware.com/blog/wp/tips-for-adding-the-right-images-to-your-e-learning-content/?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter

 


22 essential skills for the 21st Century teacher. Some links here which might be useful. Various categories.

 

http://www.educatorstechnology.com/2013/02/the-22-digital-skills-every-21st.html?m=1

 


One of the tools mentioned above is Audioboo. A great little podcasting tool which is also available as an app for Apple and Android.

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http://audioboo.fm/about/audioboo

 

Here’s some examples of a teacher making use of Audioboo.

http://blog.audioboo.fm/2012/12/21/michael-faraday-schools-use-of-audioboo-in-learning-is-electrifying/

 


Google Earth street view takes you to the top of Everest and other tall peaks.

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http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2013/03/google-summit-maps/?cid=co6617154

 


Paris doesn’t change…….

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http://www.rue89.com/rue89-culture/2013/03/24/paris-1914-2013-en-photos-grimpez-dans-notre-fabuleuse-machine-remonter-le

 


Thursday, February 25, 2010

February 2010

After a bit of a rest, the ICT Blog is back!  First up a recap of the goals for the year, then some websites you might find useful. Don’t forget to use Interface. It seems to be written for teachers by teachers and has a wealth of ICT related information and links.

I am very interested in personal learning networks and how technology can facilitate learning in this way. Spend 3 minutes watching this video and ask yourself if this isn’t a good way to learn? It throws the old homework question out the door!

Some of the sites mentioned in the video:


http://edu.glogster.com/


http://www.symbaloo.com/us/


http://www.evernote.com/

 

Sites of the Month:

Edutopia article on using video in the classroom.

Video Collections:

Maths at the Movies…….

Video Collection Site – organised into subject areas.

Smartboard videos on the Smart youtube channel:

http://www.youtube.com/user/SMARTClassrooms

 

Online audio editor

Supermarket maths – which queue is the quickest

Powerpoint to Youtube conversion tool – display your class powerpoints on Youtube.

 Train your brain. Set up an account and watch yourself improve! 

 

Goals for the Year (and progress from last year!)

  • Provided upgraded wireless access point management ( Thanks to the parents assn.)
  • Placed more content on KnowledgeNet
  • Rolled out student KnowledgeNet logins and training to Year 4 to Year 6
  • Implemented Parents portal to KnowledgeNet.   166 caregivers now have logins.
  • Implemented online roll marking
  • PAT Data entered in PCschool system
  • Migrated PCSchool to stand alone server
  • PCschool database changed to faster .sql software
  • Provided full broadband solution for 2010
  • Upgraded server software for 2010 ..
  • Mobile netbook trolley for 2010
  • All computer switches 1GB
  • Web and mail filtering in house
  • All school computers to be standardised on Windows 7 for 2010

What’s happening this year …..

  • More assessment data provided to PCSchool
    • Basic facts
    • ICAS Achievements
    • Curric Levels/ national standards inf
  • Use of KnowledgeNet for class planning/teaching/communication
    • Development of Parent Portal
  • Continued use of KnowledgeNet or Blog for communication and publication
  • Wider use of internet as a learning tool – Faster internet connection
  • Extended use of PCSchool Spider as an admin tool
  • Integration of Smartboards as a classroom tool
  • Use of video in classroom programs


Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Some More Useful Links!

Just when you thought I wouldn’t bug you with any more blog emails, here’s another one! If you get a chance, have a look at some of these links – some are good to use with your Smartboard and some provide some thought provoking ICT/Learning stuff. 

I’m also writing this blog using Microsoft Live Writer which is looking to me like a very easy way to post blog entries – ie write them off line, then post them directly when you have them finished. Regular blog writers may want to try this tool.

I think I’ve posted this before but  I like videos and this is a great commercial!

 

cmk09blogheading

The above site is worth a browse……..


1,000-year-old fishing trap found on Google Earth Britain's most ancient fishing trap has been discovered off the coastline of Wales after research carried out on Google Earth.

For The Smartboard:

Try this timezone map - Good smartboard tool??

timez


Interactive science and engineering for 9 to 12 year olds. For interactive, read game!

Or try these byte sized activities from the BBC for Year 1 / 2. ps I think the narrator eats pork pies and drinks scrumpy!

scrump

Interesting:

Wow Science investigation! Teenagers armed with only a £56 camera and latex balloon have managed to take stunning pictures of space from 20-miles above Earth.

Are our kids Narcissistic??? The growing expectation placed on schools and parents to boost pupils' self-esteem is breeding a generation of narcissists, an expert has warned. A BBC article

Or try Don Trapscott’s view:

Video of the Week:

More next week!

Tuesday, May 08, 2007

When a Question becomes a Challenge

I like the idea of learning challenges. We used to do technology challenges - things like create a sequence of events which will result in a mouse trap being triggered and a balloon bursting or firing table tennis ball as below. I remember that small groups of children spent lots of time discussing, planning and executing their process.












I guess we don't tend to do this stuff any more because of "curriculum pressure" but I have been thinking about challenges and learning lately. Children often respond well to challenges. Often when I do some work with a class on Logo - a simple maths programming program - I find them in the ICT room at lunch time trying things out ....playing ...experimenting. This is in preference to more sophisticated bells and whistles type games which they could be using at lunch time. What is it about Logo which captures them?
I once set a challenge to design one click Logo bicycle using simple logo commands. Here is one boy's response:
















How much time would this code have taken to think about, experiment with and check? Believe me, a lot of time!
Here's the result:












It's the same with something like Google SketchUp. Show children the basics and they will always take it further. Go into the ICT room at lunchtime at the moment end you will find half a dozen children experimenting with SketchUp.

Perhaps we need to include more challenges in everyday learning. Jamie McKenzie encourages questions which set up a challenge with the very nature of the question.

  • What did James Cook get wrong?
  • Was James Cook a good leader?
  • Which is the better city - Wellington or San Francisco?
  • What is the best thing about living in Wellington?
  • How will Helen Clarke be remembered?
  • What makes a good leader?
  • Why do people live at Castlepoint?
  • Should all endangered species be preserved?
  • What is the price of progress?
  • How is a hero different from a celebrity?
  • Why does the rain fall?


Or the challenge of "decoding" an image. Look for an image you can use on Flickr:



What is this all about?
How was it created?
Is there a story behind it?
What does it say?


Creative Commons Originally uploaded by ocean.flynn.


Or a riddle:
What is so fragile that when you say its name you break it?

It amounts to persuading children to leap off the scaffolding - both that provided by teacher support and the "scaffolding" of raw information. Any learner can copy and paste but can any learner use the information to answer a challenging question or resolve a challenge?

In the next few weeks I want to reinforce the ways in which ICT especially can help create think inducing challenges.

Wednesday, December 13, 2006

Good video games



Last blog entry for the year. There are a number of links here which are worth a browse when you get a minute. I'll be reviewing some of this on staff day which is just around the corner (heh! heh!). This blog can be accessed via the school website under curriculum....



First, how about this for an early Christmas card?

or





Why clocks and watches in advertisements often read 10:10am????



Or check out MS Dewey - librarian of the future..... If you think Google is boring....

There's been an increasing amount of press recently on the positive use of computer games in learning. Read on!

NZ Listener article on computer games


This is a really well written article on video games and the positive learning principles contained in good games

Some more on using games



The internet is a great means of worldwide collaboration:



Flat World project Perhaps Year 10 - They have a shared assessment rubric Remember a collaboration between a class in Bangladesh and one in Georgia USA. Introductions from the pupils involved in the project



You'll find another collaboration here



Snippets:

How about passion based learning. This is really worth reading and thinking about.

Resize your digital photos online - cool tool: http://quickthumbnail.com/


How to understand your teenager. An introduction to Leet.



D0 j00Z U\D3r$74\D L337? 17'$ b3(0/\/\1\9 7-3 d14L3(7 0Ph 93\3r4710\ \37.

Translation: do you understand leet? it's becoming the dialect of generation net.

It's what your kids are using when texting and messaging......

Wikipedia Information on Leet

An example of a leet translator - impress your teenagers!




Here again is the link to the Time Magazine article on the future for schools