Sunday, November 25, 2012
Saturday, November 10, 2012
Social Bookmarking and Education
Social bookmarking is being able to save your
favorite websites in an organized way. With social bookmarking, one can access
one’s bookmarks from any computer at any place and any time. Social bookmarking
is the ability to also access other people’s bookmarks from around the world
with similar interests as one owns. Social bookmarking is important to
education. It is important for educators to collaborate and exchange ideas. I
have not really used Delicious as much, but I have used Pinterest in the summer
and I always looked at the Education category. I have been able to gather so many
ideas in a matter of seconds. One idea lead to another and another. Aside from
teachers using social bookmarking, I can see students using these tools as
well. When it comes to doing research, students can start compiling a lists of
links that can be shared year after year. Teachers can also have bookmarks for
specific subjects that students can access when they are required to do research
on a specific topic. Social bookmarking is great for students who have
difficulty using the internet to research. Many times students want to access
any site they Google. Social bookmarking is a start for those beginner students
who need that extra help when researching ideas.
Lesson Design: Twitter, Glogster, Video Conferencing
A
lot of the Web 2.0 tools we have discussed in this class so far, I was already familiar
with. Twitter is something I have been using for about two years now. However,
I never thought I could actually incorporate it in the classroom. Learning how
to integrate Twitter in the classroom got me thinking of ways I can use it on
my technology-integration lesson. I have a few ideas on what I would want my
technology-integration lesson to be on.
The Web 2.0 tools I will incorporate in my lesson are:
The Web 2.0 tools I will incorporate in my lesson are:
1.
Twitter,
2.
Video Conferencing,
and
3.
Glogster.
The grade level for this
lesson will be:
3rd grade, social studies, and
focusing on historical figures
The reason I want to focus
on this lesson is that I find it very difficult for me as a teacher to teach social
studies, let alone make it fun. I personally have never really enjoyed social
studies, but I feel that incorporating technology lets social studies take on a
new meaning. I have already incorporated these type of lessons in my classes so
far and I have seen the students very much engaged.
Lesson:
Each student will be
assigned a specific historical figure (Benjamin Franklin, Daniel Boone,
Benjamin Banneker). After we have read facts about these individuals and
students have taken notes they will be required to create a Glogster
for their assigned historical figure. This assignment will be a collaboration
with another 3rd grade class in Texas that is studying the same
content. The students will be connected with the other students from another
school via Twitter. Each student will create a Twitter account for their
historical figure. They will compose tweets that give facts about their individual
to help them gather more information on their figure. This will guide the
students with their online interactive poster, Glog.The students will be given
a rubric of the requirements (include 1 video, 1 audio, 3 content appropriate
graphics, and 4 texts). At the end of their
project the students will connect with each other via Video Conference. They will present their Glog to the other classroom and provide questions and feedback. This is a great opportunity to collaborate with others across the country!
Saturday, November 3, 2012
Twitter in the Classroom!
One of the things I learned from the people I follow is that there are many resources out there at our fingertips. On Scholastic Teachers (@ScholasticTeach) it gave a lesson plan idea on what is happening with Sandy and it's effects of it. These tweets are current and help us teachers provide current events to students, so that they know about what is going on in the world around them. I have been following tweets from local media, educational organizations, and educators. Personally, twitter for me is a great QUICK resource to use to be up to date on what is going on in the world around us. One can easily attach a link to their twitter and it includes only 140 characters so reading the tweets is not overwhelming as other social networking might be to some.
At first I have never thought of using twitter in the classroom, but after reading some of the articles it included many great ideas that I could start using in my classroom as of Monday. I will mention my top 3 favorite ideas I read from Steve Wheeler that seem doable in any classroom.
1. ‘Summing Up’: Ask students to read an article or chapter and then post their brief summary or prĂ©cis of the key point(s).
I would love to use this in my classroom to teach summary. Many times my students have a difficult time with it comes to having to summarize books they have read. They like to include too many details that are irrelevant. But, their task would be to only include information that happened in the beginning, middle, and end.
2. ‘Time Tweet’: Choose a famous person from the past and create a twitter account for them – choose an image which represents the historical figure and over a period of time write regular tweets in the role of that character, in a style and using the vocabulary you think they would have used (e.g. William Shakespeare, Julius Caesar).
3. ‘Twitter Pals’ Encourage students to find a Twitter ‘penpal’ and regularly converse with them over a period of time to find out about their culture, hobbies, friends, family etc. Ideal for learning about people from other cultures.
Wheeler, S. Teaching With Twitter. Retrieved November 3, 2012, from http://steve-wheeler.blogspot.com/2009/01/teaching-with-twitter.html.
At first I have never thought of using twitter in the classroom, but after reading some of the articles it included many great ideas that I could start using in my classroom as of Monday. I will mention my top 3 favorite ideas I read from Steve Wheeler that seem doable in any classroom.
1. ‘Summing Up’: Ask students to read an article or chapter and then post their brief summary or prĂ©cis of the key point(s).
I would love to use this in my classroom to teach summary. Many times my students have a difficult time with it comes to having to summarize books they have read. They like to include too many details that are irrelevant. But, their task would be to only include information that happened in the beginning, middle, and end.
2. ‘Time Tweet’: Choose a famous person from the past and create a twitter account for them – choose an image which represents the historical figure and over a period of time write regular tweets in the role of that character, in a style and using the vocabulary you think they would have used (e.g. William Shakespeare, Julius Caesar).
I feel that most teachers in elementary have a hard time incorporating social studies into their curriculum that many times it gets left behind. But, with incorporating Twitter and Social Studies the students will have a lot of fun and more of it can be done in the classroom. I like the idea of assigning the students to take the role of a historical figure and pretend that they are them and twitting ideas and facts about that individual. This will really allow the teacher to see what the student has learned about that person.
3. ‘Twitter Pals’ Encourage students to find a Twitter ‘penpal’ and regularly converse with them over a period of time to find out about their culture, hobbies, friends, family etc. Ideal for learning about people from other cultures.
Having twitter palls will give the students an opportunity to build a community with other students in the same grade level, school, community, or state. Depending how the teacher wants to do it.
Wheeler, S. Teaching With Twitter. Retrieved November 3, 2012, from http://steve-wheeler.blogspot.com/2009/01/teaching-with-twitter.html.
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