http://www.hunkinsexperiments.com/
ICT Sessions at Wellesley
How tech-obsessed iKids would improve our schools. Marc Prensky
http://www.edutopia.org/ikid-digital-learner-technology-2008
An interesting article. What do you think:
http://www.hunkinsexperiments.com/
How tech-obsessed iKids would improve our schools. Marc Prensky
http://www.edutopia.org/ikid-digital-learner-technology-2008
In some respects, the potential of 21st century learning lies in the
exploration of how digital tools (cameras, presentation software, computing
equipment) and online resources can support and enhance traditional
subjects,skills and teaching practices. The Internet alone provides students
with enormous opportunities to access:
· A trove of primary source documents previously located on library
shelves, but now available online through digital archives.
· Authentic scientific data across a range of fields from current and historical
meteorological forecast data to economic statistics
· Geospatial tools that combine data with dynamic maps
· Global communications media that make distance collaboration, cross-cultural exchanges and rich media experiences possible
This could be useful for the senior school inquiry this term: Time Magazine's best inventions for 2006. Did they do one in 2007? I haven't found it yet.
From Interface mag ( In the staffroom, well worth a browse) These activities are interesting rather than being stupendously educational. They're worth a play, though.
Linerider – try it on the whiteboard – pure wet day fun!
http://linerider.com/play-line-rider-online
Grammar Ninja someone’s independent study!
http://www.kwarp.com/animations/grammarninja.html
Genius Boxing – Pick a fight with Archimedes, Einstein, etc
http://www.mrnussbaum.com/geniusboxing1.htm
Or if you really need a low intensity activity, try this on the Smartboard!! Virtual bubblewrap.....
http://smartboards.typepad.com/smartboard/files/bubblewrap.swf Manic mode seems to work best for me.(especially at the end of the day.)
where would you assess ithe thinking skills involved on the SOLO scale????
Or Have a look at Newsmap on your smartboard:
http://www.marumushi.com/apps/newsmap/index.cfm
Newsmap is an application that visually reflects the constantly changing landscape of the Google News news aggregator. A really interesting way of looking at the news.
And:
Scicity – Hosted by Otago Museum and IBM - SciCity is a rich learning environment that utilises innovative new technology to engage young New Zealanders in ongoing interactive experiences.
SciCity has direct links to the revised New Zealand curriculum. It achieves success by approaching many hard to reach curriculum areas in a fun and creative way.
Scicity is here I’ve used it in ICT sessions last year, so ask if you need help. Meet your class in Scicity!
Teacher resources are here!
Using your Smartboard with maths. Have a look at this video. Persevere, it’s worth watching as he is using the recorder feature of the notebook software. Maybe something to get an able child to try with........ say.....long division??
http://csdsmarties.blogspot.com/2008/03/adding-fractions-flash-student.html
Class tools of a varying nature : http://www.classtools.net/
Youtube Corner:
Classics:
Teenage Affluenza:
The Piano:
Kiwi:
And for a better ending for Kiwi:
Or a simpler vocab game from Roy the Zebra:
Do you think you know the countries of the Middle East?? Try the map game from Rethinking Schools – fantastic for the Smartboard! It's harder than you would think.
Articles worth reading:
When Mum or Dad Asks To Be a Facebook 'Friend' Social networking and parents! A Washington Post article.
And the video selection for this week!
Some Brazilian Football Skills:
In times of rapid change, the learners inherit the earth, while the learned find themselves beautifully equipped to deal with a world that no longer exists.
- Eric Hoffer
Try this cool tool. Great for the Smartboard. Visuwords - an online graphical dictionary and thesaurus. Talk about making links... It's a stunning resource.
Here is the link to the WickED site on TKI which Warren mentioned this morning. Interactives, games and I think the Information Station is a sound template for learners to base their information search on.
Another Web 2.0 site aimed at providing a publishing place for children to share their writing.
Hello, India? I Need Help With My Math - More evidence of a Flat World - get someone in India to take care of your domestic chores and homework support. From the New York Times
You've got an Ipod for your music; when will you get one of these for your books? You can buy books for it from Amazon.
We are moving from:
“do your own work” to “work with others”
“just in case” to “just in time” learning
“hand it in” to “publish it.”
- Will Richardson
Is the following a worry????
According to the National Science Foundation (NSF, www.nsf.gov/statistics), the average U.S.
citizen understands very little science. For example:
On the other hand, according to the NSF, the general public believes in a lot of pseudoscience.
And did you know that:
In Shanghai, a new building of 30 stories or more has been completed every 12 days for the last six years.
The computer is the primary instrument for intellectual and creative work in our society.
- Gary Stager
Skype is a great tool for the classroom. Suddenly video conferencing, once a complicated, expensive process is within the reach of any computer user. It's as simple as using a telephone, except that with webcams involved you can see who you're talking to!
If you have friends or family overseas, commiunicate with them via Skype or consider using Skype with your class in Term 4 http://share.skype.com/sites/en/2006/12/using_skype_for_global_telecon.html
This story is worth revisiting - a school using Skype to communicate with a pupil who has leukemia
More Class skype advice: http://coolcatteacher.blogspot.com/2006/10/using-skype-in-classroom-or-just.html
If anyone wants to use Skype to communicate with a class overseas this term, Let me know!!!
VoiceThread is a pretty cool and easy way to produce audio visual photo albums. I think there are a number of ways you could use it in the classroom.
What is a Voicethread?In the classroom?? Mrs Buchanan
Or a PD presentation Jack's monster cards
The ministry of Education is publishing some guidelines on dyslexia. You can find them here: http://www.tki.org.nz/r/literacy_numeracy/lit_dyslexia_e.php
Library Week is next week! This site has links to various activities designed to coincide with library week. http://www.libraryweek.org.nz/index.php
Interface is a New Zealand ICT magazine which you will be able to find in the staffroom. Lots of case studies, information and ideas for expanding the use of ICT in your class.
Interface free lesson plans! http://www.nz-interface.co.nz/lesson_plans.cfm
Make your own online assessment rubrics. These sites have web based rubric makers on them plus some useful templates.
http://rubistar.4teachers.org/index.php
http://myt4l.com/index.php?v=pl&page_ac=view&type=tools&tool=rubricmaker
And lots more stuff on rubrics:
http://school.discoveryeducation.com/schrockguide/assess.html
Comprehensive list of ICT related links from Western Australia. This site covers a wide range of areas with links to further information. Anything you wanted to know could be found here!
http://www.det.wa.edu.au/education/cmis/eval/curriculum/ict/index.htm
News Clips:
Second Life for 6 year olds:
http://www.stuff.co.nz/4225702a28.html
Club Penguin : In August Disney paid $US350 million for Canada-based Club
Penguin, with a promise of $US350 million more if it meets its traffic targets.
Club Penguin says it has 10 million users, of whom 700,000 have managed to
persuade their parents to pay subscriptions of a few dollars a month so they can
use virtual money to buy clothes for their penguins and furniture to decorate
their igloos.
They can go waterskiing, hang out on the beach, play games or
work as waiters in the pizzeria.
Something for the classroom in 5 years? CONTEX Z450 3D printer
Following on from Monday, I really believe that using ICT can help you implement meaningful inquiries in your classroom. It's worth reading the Min of Ed's action plan called Enabling the 21st Century Learner: e-Learning Action Plan
Consider the use of webquests or similar as a way of individualising the inquiry process using ICT. They also can help you with the scaffolding around the process.
This Wiki has links to various Inquiry resources : http://fitzil.wikispaces.com/Inquiry+Learning
Steve has mentioned Kath Murdoch and Tasmania. She has done a lot of work on ICT and Inquiry and is well worth listening to and reading about. There are a couple of her books in our library, notably:
Classroom connections: strategies for integrated learning and Planning curriculum connections: whole-school planning for integrated curriculum
Here are some useful links too:
Animation and poetry. This could be a way of bringing poetry alive. A thoughtful animation of the well known poem:
Could this change the way you teach poetry? Children could create their own examples using Photostory 3 or Powerpoint.
UK English standards for year 5 for this poem (Note that the filename .nbk is for the Smartboard notebook)I thought this one was good too. The Piano Well worth a look and you can see the UK resources for this video here and here.
Another way of creating online slideshows is using Animoto. Here is an example created in just a couple of minutes......
Wellesley Football 2007
Animoto 30 second shorts are free to make - give it a go and consider how you could use it in your classroom.
Other online slideshows:
Not really video as such, but an interesting way of looking at the news through headlines. Click on the headline to read the story - You can play with the config to get just New Zealand stories..
http://www.marumushi.com/apps/newsmap/newsmap.cfm
This photo is amazing! Space station floating above Aotearoa! 12 Dec 2006 ( I can see Wellesley boys jumping off the wharf!) - http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/gallery/images/shuttle/sts-116/html/s116e05983.html
And continuing the space scheme, the latest version of Google Earth lets you look at space (our sky) in the same fashion with high resolution imagery. This has to be a great tool to use with a Smartboard. Download this version of Google Earth from the Wellesley Intranet. Let me kno if you have trouble installing it.
No relevance to videos or ICT but this link has a good diagram of the main coffee types - so that you know what you're asking for (or making). I heard some order a Vienna coffee the other night but I don't know how it's made. Can't see any mention of a Vienna here though. Any ideas??
http://www.lokeshdhakar.com/2007/08/20/an-illustrated-coffee-guide/
There are a number of tools for educators available from Google. Here's a list: http://teachdigital.pbwiki.com/googletools
What you don't want to see when you've just run out of petrol:
And, I love signs which provide clear information:
Try this New Zealand Census at School - register your class to take part: http://www.censusatschool.org.nz/
Marc Prensky's suggestiuons for useing Cell Phones in the classroom: http://www.marcprensky.com/blog/archives/000043.html
This page has links to more of Marc Prensky's work: http://www.marcprensky.com/writing/
This is an interesting world clock with a lot more data besides. Watch the earth gradually warming up and CO2 emissions increasing.
Put it up on a Smartboard and stimulate a discussion. How many bicycles is that now???
Finally, Do you drink green tea? Concentrated chemicals derived from green tea dramatically boosted production of a group of key detoxification enzymes in people with low levels of these beneficial proteins, according to researchers at Arizona Cancer Center. See Biosingularity
Using your Smartboard.
This teacher has used the record feature of the smartboard so that her children can create small videos of maths strategies - then posted them to Youtube. Could be a powerful tool for creating learning animations...... (If you can't see the embedded video, click here.)
What is this? (answer below)
Digital Photos.
Extract from the Infinite Thinking Machine Blog:
http://www.infinitethinking.org/2007/05/youve-got-to-see-it-to-learn-it.html
Marzano's (2001) strategies for increasing student achievement are important in Visalia (and in many other districts), so we discussed ways digital cameras (and Picasa) could be used to support several of these research-based strategies, including the following:
Other ideas for using digital photos in the classroom:
http://its.leesummit.k12.mo.us/digitalmedia.htm
100 ways to use digital cameras in the classroom (Scholastic)
10 Tips for Taking great photos
The Register of Known Spam Operations (ROKSO) database collates information and evidence on known professional spam operations that have been terminated by a minimum of 3 Internet Service Providers for spam offenses.
200 Known Spam Operations responsible for 80% of your spam.
And, sadly, for the conservation club:
10 animals that won't exist in 10 years
Answer:
Digital Photo editing:
http://pixenate.com/
http://pixer.us/
http://www.picnik.com/
How could you make digital photo editing a challenge for your learners? Powerpoint, Photostory 3 and Moviemaker are all tools which can be used for creating a photo story.
Photo stories are really powerful means of persuasion and Moviemaker and Photostory will let you add text, commentary, background music to your digital photos and produce the end result as a video. Have a look at the examples embedded in the 7N Blog and Performing Arts Blog
More on Searching
One of the major issues I have is kids searching for information using a search engine like Google and very general keywords - needle in a haystack stuff - 50 million hits - might as well drop them off outside the National Library on a Saturday evening for all the quality information they will find....
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.
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.
With next term's inquiry coming up, don't forget to use the EPIC resources which can cover anything from Encyclopedia Britannica online to world periodicals like National Geographic and New Scientist. You can't afford to ignore this information source:
EPIC (Login details on Intranet Page)
Speaking of global warming.... there are a couple of interesting houses here. One belongs to George Bush, the other to Al Gore. I wonder which is more eco friendly??http://www.snopes.com/politics/bush/house.asp
I wonder what they do with their pastic bags. Maybe they don't use any:
http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/03/27/environment.baggs.reut/index.html
More Wellesley Global Warming Sites
This New Zealand history site provides history by date. Would be a useful thing to use with your smartboard:
http://www.nzhistory.net.nz/calendar
Youtube for teachers! Worth a look to see what sort of videos are being posted by teachers for teachers.
A Blog aimed at teachers, focussing on the next generation of learners:
http://www.nextgenteachers.com/
A social network for teachers! Classroom 2.0 -
The World in A4 Paper:
http://www.petercallesen.com/index/index2.html How can anyone be so creative with just a plain bit of A4 paper????