Sunday, August 22, 2010

Transitioning from Knowledge to Synthesis - A Reflection for EDUC-6712

As a teacher, one of my main priorities is to instruct and guide my students to become more literate. This is especially true as an English/Language Arts teacher. When I first began teaching over twelve years ago, I really felt that meant exposing my students to different types of literature, by different writers from varying backgrounds. That is true; however, I have come to realize that literacy goes far beyond knowledge of the world’s literature. My students must also be able to locate, gather, and compile information from places other than just the literature we read in the classroom. My students need the skills to evaluate and apply the information they find. My students need to be able to communicate to the rest of the world the knowledge they garner from this research. Only then will I have helped my students to become truly literate (Eagleton & Dobler, 2007).

With this realization, I now am evaluating the lessons I teach, studying ways to have my students do some form of research as they proceed. I am modifying some of my plans for teaching units so that I begin the lessons by having my students develop their own questions (Eagleton & Dobler, 2007). I will still be taking my students in the same direction and through some of the same steps, but rather than asking them the questions myself, I know that need to change my teaching practices so that I am instead guiding them to ask the questions. I then will be making assignments in which my students develop their new literacies by leading them to research information to answer their own questions. I will further their skills in these new literacies as I assign my students to produce writings of various forms to communicate to others their findings (Eagleton & Dobler, 2007).

These plans alone are professional development goals I have for myself, but I feel the need to set a couple more goals, more personal goals. As I move forward in teaching my students to become more literate, I first want to find better ways to prepare myself. While I do feel technically literate, I tend to be hesitant to incorporate things into my classroom because of the limitations of the technology in my district, or because of the possibility of students’ lack of technology at home. I have set a goal to go forward with my plans and find alternate strategies and methods to carry out my assignments. Along with this goal, I am also setting a professional development goal to actually do the research to prepare to assign my students to research. I have found in the past when I have ventured out to assign my students to research, there have been blocked sites, poor sites, and confusion with my students on just how to research. My goal is to try to do the research the way my students would go about it, from a classroom computer. This will help me to find the pitfalls my students would otherwise find.

While I will feel the pressures of teaching the English level our state assesses students with the high-stakes test, I have come to realize I can’t let the state test keep me from teaching what my students need to know that won’t just be asked in an exit test. I have to take them to that next level of learning. I need to direct my students to use various resources and expand their literacy beyond the classroom and the textbook. This course has opened my eyes to the fact that I am not completely teaching my students until I take their literacy to these next levels, the digital world.


Reference:
Eagleton, M. B., & Dobler, E. (2007). Reading the Web: Strategies for Internet inquiry.New York: The Guilford Press.

Sunday, February 28, 2010

Relection on the Impact of Technology

The course, Understanding the Impact of Technology on Education, Work, and Society has been quite an experience for me. During this course, I have dealt with the death of a colleague, survived the worst illness I have endured in years, had to defend my teaching practices to administrators who question state test results, and had to go tooth and nail with contractors in a effort to get back into a home of my own some four and a half years after Katrina. However, the real experience for me has been the learning I have done in this course. I thought I knew what blogging was, but quickly learned what I had to learn. The idea of using a podcast for my classroom had never occurred to me. Before this course, a wiki was only something I had heard of and never in relation to the classroom. For all I thought I was doing to make technology an iatrical part of my classroom, I realize now that I need to be doing so much more to truly make my class a 21st century classroom (Cramer, 2007).

During this course, I have learned how to set up an account to blog and develop a wiki space. I have learned how to post a podcast to a hosting site on the internet. I have been keeping a webpage for my class the last two years, but have come to realize now that I’m not really doing much with the site beyond posting my lesson plans for my administrators to check. I have learned several ways to take my website beyond this basic simplistic posting spot. I have also learned that having my students produce a slideshow in PowerPoint does not make my classroom a 21st century class. I have learned that I have to look at what they do and the tools they use to do things and incorporate those things into my class. I have learned to leave the concerns of high school and truly investigate how daily tasks and operations are done in the world for which I say I am preparing my students. I must develop my lessons to have my students do things in the same manner as the world would have them while fulfilling the objectives of my course. I have long said I want my students to take ownership of their learning while I challenge them beyond their comfort zones. Technology-based assignments is a way I can get my students to do so while having them demonstrate their knowledge in an authentic way (Laureate Education, Inc., 2008). All the while, I know I must continue to learn more myself. I have to keep my eyes and ears open to the world going on outside the walls of my high school classroom. I have learned through the experiences of this course that I have to get my hands dirty. In order to stay up on things and keep myself prepared for my students, I must try things out for myself. I have to experiment. I have to read. I have to continue to learn. I have to practice technologies that I learn about and study how to incorporate them into my classroom, into my lessons. As I continue to learn, I have to listen and watch my students. I must remember that I can learn from them as well. I should be looking at what they do to understand what I should be having my students do in my classroom to make my lessons more relevant to them.

I am setting two long-term goals for myself to help transform my classroom to a place where technology is integrated seamlessly to help instruct my students and improve their achievement. My first goal is to make my class website an interactive place for my students rather than just a place to electronically post my lesson plans. I plan to do this by setting up a blogging area on the website. I will have my students blog in response to certain topics in stead of turning in the traditional written essay as I cover the writing lessons of my course. This will allow me to bring the writing I have to teach my students to do into the 21st century and will also allow me to have my students interact with each other and hopefully learn from each other. My second goal is to have my students help develop methods for complete assignments in a technological way. I will give my students the objectives for the lessons and discuss the traditional methods for achieving the objectives. I will then have them brainstorm technologies that we could use in the classroom to accomplish these same goals. We could even have different groups do the assignments in different ways, then evaluate the results at the end of the lesson. Both of these, particularly the second, will take me a couple of years to fulfill. I believe that they will help make me a better teacher, make my classroom more 21st century and more fun, and make my students more successful (Cramer, 2007).

In a way, I am embarrassed to admit it has taken this course to get me thinking the right way about technology in my classroom. I have always though of myself as a technological-minded teacher. Yet, here I am, having to admit that it took this class to get me in the correct direction. Then again, that is what being an educator is all about; learning all the time and seeking new and better ways of educating our students.

References:
Cramer, S. (2007). Update your classroom with learning objects and twenty-first century skills. Clearing House, 80(3), 126–132.
Laureate Education, Inc. (Producer). (2008). Bringing the Fun into Teaching with Technology. The teaching professional [Motion picture]. Understanding the Impact of Technology on Education, Work and Society. Baltimore:MD.

Wesley Rogers teaches high school English II (tenth grade).

Saturday, February 6, 2010

Learning to make a Podcast...

This week, week 5, our application was to interview students and post a podcast from the interview. Each week, it seems, I learn more and more in this class. I was glad to get my feel with the world of blogging and the more I think about blogging and the more I do with it, the more I see ways I can and will use blogging in my teaching. The same goes for the wiki. By the time I got through the week's application, I had several ideas of how I will use wikis with my class. Not only that, I also have gotten brainwaves of how to utilize wikis to make our interdepartmental collaboration much better, more productive. In fact, this past week, I was able to present my ideas to the department during our weekly meeting.

My experience with the podcast has been no different. I have experience recording and editing. Now I will admit, my experience has never been recording students in the the classroom. I am not pleased at all with the audio quality of the recording. I am used to recording audio for video and that I will be doing things with later. In fact, I am used to having to rerecord and loop spoken dialogue in a very controlled setting. I guess that would be the first real lesson.

My experience here, however, goes way beyond the little issue of the recording. Since I didn't have to really learn anything here about editing the actual audio tracks, once I finished the mix and was ready to upload to the hosting site, my brain immediately began thinking of ways I could use this. I think I have envisioned more ways I will be able to use podcasting that even the blogging. I am so excited about the possibilities this holds for my class and my teaching.

Before listening to the interview itself, I think I should describe my class. I did a round table interview with four students from my third block class. This is a class made up of twenty students. Of those twenty, four are minorities. In this particular class, 60% of my students are female. This is a regular class, not an excellorated or honors class, however I have 9 students who take an excellerated or honors class in some other subject. As for technology, all my students said they have grown up with a television in home. Only two students said they do not have a computer or internet access at home. Three students do not own a cell phone. However, only 12 of my students said they do anything on the internet at home on a regular basis. Of the students who do not use the internet at home, they are not really using it in the classroom either, according to their responses to my survey.

Wow, what a great experience. True, doing the survey and looking into the demographics of the class that I can't see (i.e. technology use) was an eye opener. Beyond that, though, I have gotten the podcast bug. I can't wait to modify my class and start doing things with the podcast. I should send out a warning to my principal now, he will not know what to think of my class come next year.

The link to my podcast post is http://wesleyrogers.podbean.com/2010/02/06/week-5-application-technology-student-interview/

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Bringing the Classroom into the 21st Century

This week, I’ve been exploring the Partnership for 21st Century Skills website. The belief that today’s students need to be educated with the understanding that our modern world is very integrated and education has to evolve to better prepare students for this world is becoming a part of my philosophy as a teacher. In an interview about the changing workplace of the 21st century, Dr. Chris Dede discusses how the students we are graduating are heading into a world in which they must compete not only globally against other workers but against the emerging technologies themselves (Laureate, 2008). How are we in education preparing these students? Are the methods used to teach us going be enough to get our students ready?


About the site

This is really quite a website, worth far more than just a quick glance. The Partnership for 21st Century Skills is an organization dedicated to making our students literate. As the site illustrates, it was once essential for a student to learn to merely read and to sign his name. Then it became more important to become literate in other skills as math, science, and history. In today’s information age, it is now essential for a student to be literate in technology as well. I am so excited to have been shown this place in which educators can learn about methods for helping our learners become literate in these areas beyond the traditional “three R’s.” This partnership between businesses and educators provides curriculum, ideas, methods, strategies, and resources for teachers to integrate their traditional core subjects with the emerging technologies and interlink them with interdisciplinary themes such as Civics, Health Literacy, Economic and Entrepreneurial Literacy, Global Awareness, and Environmental Literacy.
I was so excited to find a site to help me. I know as an English teacher that I have to help my students become better communicators. I also know that for today’s student, that goes beyond reading a novel and writing an essay. I believe that I need to help my students learn to tap into the global world of telecommunications. I also need to help my students connect the things we do in an English class to other disciplines and relate them to this “flat” world in which we live (Friedman, 2005). Partnership for 21st Century Skills is a treasure trove of information, ideas, and resources for how I can better do this in my classroom.



The Wow Factor

I have to admit, this website really surprised me. I have been concerned for some time now that I need to do some things differently in my classroom to better prepare my students. I need to make my classroom more of a 21st century class. I just wasn’t sure how to do it. This site has shown me that I don’t have to wait for my state or my district to adopt a new curriculum or incorporate a new plan. The ideas and tools are right here at my fingertips. Score another one for the World Wide Web. Like I said, we are a global community.
A big surprise for me was the limited number of states that have gotten on board and joined the partnership. My own state is one of those yet to join this partnership. I was taken aback by this. What was even more of a surprise to me was many states much bigger than mine with far greater financial resources than ours that have not become part of the partnership.
On a more positive note, the biggest surprise for me was the accessibility to the information and resources. There is so much for a teacher on this website. Many, no, most websites offering fewer resources with less affectability tend to charge teachers for the things they offer. The Partnership provides the cornucopia of products without even asking the educator to become a member of anything. That is refreshing as well as a godsend.
I should say that I generally agree with so much of what I see on this site. I do have to question the idea that we need to completely leave the concepts developed when our culture was more agrarian. For starters, I believe we need to keep in mind that there are still the more agricultural communities and cultures. I do believe that these 21st century skills can aid them; we just need to be mindful that not all students will be going into a financial or computer industry after high school.



My Students and Me

Our students are different than we were twenty years ago. I was recently in a meeting in which a fellow educator commented that students aren’t any different today than we were as students. I understand what he was talking about; he was referring to discipline and classroom behavior along with teachers being prepared for their students. However, when you think about it from this 21st century frame of mind, I would say students are very different. Our students today know how to work a computer and surf the web before they can even read. My own children are a perfect example. Every thing they do seems to be multitasking with the latest technologies. Even students who struggle with reading a novel read and comprehend vast amounts on the web (Miners and Pascopella, 2007). Partnership for 21st Century Skills has great implications for my students and me. This is literally a clearinghouse of information for educators. I have instant, free access to ideas, suggestions, resources, and strategies along with a curriculum to help me reach these contemporary students in my classroom. Not only will this help me and make me a better teacher, but by becoming better armed as I enter my class, I will be making my students more rounded and better prepared when they leave the high school.


References:

Friedman, T. (2005, April 3). It's a flat world, after all. The New York Times. Retrieved January 18, 2010, from
http://www.nytimes.com

Laureate Education, Inc. (Executive Producer). (2008). [DVD]. Understanding the Impact of Technology on Education, Work, and Society, “The Changing Work Environment: Part 2.” Baltimore, MD.

Miners, Z., & Pascopella, A. (2007).
The new literacies. District Administration, 43(10), 26–34.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Using Blogs in my Classroom

“Weblogs truly expand the walls of the classroom.” (Richardson, 2009) This is exactly what I want to do with and for my students. I don’t want learning to end just because the bell rings. When I was first beginning in the classroom, I thought students would just do this on their own. Boy was I wrong. True, there are the few who do. And that doesn’t mean that students are bad learners. They are just being teenagers. I have to come up with ways to keep things going after they leave my classroom. Blogging assignments can be one way I am able to do this.

One way I plan to begin using blogs with my English classes is to have my students blog as characters from the novel Battle of Jericho while we are reading it. I plan to have my students respond as characters from the novel to discuss why he/she (the character) wishes to join the Warriors of Distinction. I believe this will help to accomplish multiple goals. I want my students to comprehend the varied motivations for the different characters. It could be discussed in class, but I would like for my students to take on much of the interpretation by this point of the course. My students will gain better depth and understanding of the characters if they not only look into the characters on their own, but express this understanding by speaking or blogging as the character. This will also provide my students with an opportunity to gain insight from each other. As weblogs are a part of the World Wide Web for anyone to access (Richardson, 2009), each student will be able to read the blogs of his peers. A student might get something from another student that he didn’t get himself. It will be interesting to see the differences of interpretation here. This, too, should add to the learning for my students as they read their peers’ blogs.

Since virtually anyone can read blogs, I know that blogging will be a great way to showcase my students’ work. I am not quite yet sure how I want to utilize this. I am still working on this exactly. To my peers, I would like suggestions as to how you guys will be doing this with blogs in your curriculums.

As I become more confident and better at this, I know blogging will become one of those things that is just part of my class’s curriculum. I will probably be asking myself one day, “How did I teach and not do this?”


Reference: Richardson, Will. (2009). Blogs, wikis, podcasts, and other powerful web tools for classrooms. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Pr.

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

In the beginning...

I am an English teacher. I've been teaching for eleven years now, and have always felt I was ahead of my fellow teachers as far as incorporating technology into my classroom is concerned. However, I have yet to utilize blogging in my class.

Well, it is time for me to do so. I am first just trying to learn to blog myself. Once I've done so, I want to learn ways to include blogging in my curriculum.

Any ideas or tips anyone can give me as to how to incorporate blogging or make assignments inwhich my students blog I would be most happy to recieve.

Thanks. Look forward to hearing from you guys.