With my Second Graders we've been working on understanding the importance of giving credit to ourselves and others for creative works. We used the My Creative Works Lesson from Common Sense Media, I adapted part of this to better fit my needs.
Instead of creating a time capsule I created an online gallery of my photos in my 500 account . I deliberately omitted dates, titles and the author. I showed the gallery to to the students taking care to hide my name; we talked about each image. As we viewed each image I asked if they knew who took the photos or when it was taken or what the title of the photo was. Each time the kids noted they didn't have anyway of knowing. At the end the kids commented that they really wish they knew who took the photos. I shared that I was the photographer and that it's important to let others know about the works you create. We talked about why it's important to give credit to the creator.
Next, I introduced the website Picassohead and we talked briefly about who Pablo Picasso was. Much to my surprise, only one student in one of my three second grade classes had ever heard of Picasso. I talked a little bit about Picasso's style of artwork and I molded briefly how to use the features of the site.
We then talked about the importance of putting our name, date and a title on all our works. They saw in the Picassohead Gallery that all works had a date and title, some of the works were by "unknown" artists so this reinforced the importance of putting their names on their works.
With their instructions in mind they headed to their computers and got to work creating Picassoheads. When they finished they saved their work to the Gallery and explored the Gallery, some went back a created a second work of art.
To wrap up I asked them how to give credit to a creative work that they make or find? Without any difficulty they were able to tell me, put the author's name, title of the work and date it was created.
Teaching technology and supporting educators in integration of tech into their classrooms.
Wednesday, November 26, 2014
Saturday, November 22, 2014
Teaching Technology to Kindergarten
When I first learned that kindergarten was part of my course load this year I cringed with fear. Kindergarten Teachers are a rear and special bread of teachers. They're so young and still just learning how to be in school, add to that nearly all of these kids were new or fairly new to the English Language and you might begin to understand my fear. How was I going to teach them? Where should I start? In the end I opted to skip teaching them how to turn on the computers (smart move since a month in we got all new computers that get turned on in a completely different manner). I decided to start with mouse. Yes the mouse. Since we don't have tablets or touch screens it was the most logical place to start.
I found some wonderful websites to help build mousing skills. I set things ups and was ready to go with my Kinders or so I thought...I got them on the computers and some did a wonderful job and had great fun playing the mousing skill games. Others had no clue how to hold a mouse let alone understand the difference between a left click and a right click. So I went back to the drawing board. I searched the resources left for me by Jen Simon and stumbled upon a Mouse Handling Activity that she had found on Teachers Pay Teachers. I printed out the activity part and cut out the mice and glued on tails. I then went in search of a video or song to help the kids understand how to use a mouse and found the My Computer Mouse Song.
For the next session I went into the Kindergarten classrooms, as my lab was far too small to do anything except be on computers. I played the song a few times for the kids then they went to their tables and we did the Mouse Handling Activity. With the help of the classroom teachers we got most of the kids understanding how to hold the mouse and what a right click was.
Armed with their new mousing skill we met in the lab the following session and tried our mousing skill website with far greater success. Now, don't get the wrong idea I still have kids who don't know left from right or even how to properly hold the mouse, but for several of the kids the offline activity helped them gain some valuable vocabulary and comfort needed to start to be successful on the computers.
I found some wonderful websites to help build mousing skills. I set things ups and was ready to go with my Kinders or so I thought...I got them on the computers and some did a wonderful job and had great fun playing the mousing skill games. Others had no clue how to hold a mouse let alone understand the difference between a left click and a right click. So I went back to the drawing board. I searched the resources left for me by Jen Simon and stumbled upon a Mouse Handling Activity that she had found on Teachers Pay Teachers. I printed out the activity part and cut out the mice and glued on tails. I then went in search of a video or song to help the kids understand how to use a mouse and found the My Computer Mouse Song.
For the next session I went into the Kindergarten classrooms, as my lab was far too small to do anything except be on computers. I played the song a few times for the kids then they went to their tables and we did the Mouse Handling Activity. With the help of the classroom teachers we got most of the kids understanding how to hold the mouse and what a right click was.
Armed with their new mousing skill we met in the lab the following session and tried our mousing skill website with far greater success. Now, don't get the wrong idea I still have kids who don't know left from right or even how to properly hold the mouse, but for several of the kids the offline activity helped them gain some valuable vocabulary and comfort needed to start to be successful on the computers.
Mouse Skill Building Sites
Friday, November 21, 2014
Wordless Books
In early October I was approached by the grade 2 team about collaborating on a wordless book project. Their students were hard at work writing stories to go with the images of wordless books from the school library. The teachers wanted to find a technological way of sharing these stories with the rest of the students in the school. I shared a few options with them and we settled on QR Codes.
After completing their writing process (pre-write, write, revise and edit) the students came to the lab to "publish" verbally their stories. Each child recorded themselves telling their stories, then listened to the playback and decided if they liked what they heard. If they were happy we saved it, if not they were able to a second reading.
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| Audio Recording |
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| Wordless Book display in the library |
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| Close up of the books with their QR code bookmarks |
Thursday, November 20, 2014
Jumping in
When Jen Simon told me for probably the millionth time I needed to be blogging about what I was teaching my students, it finally sunk in. That was about a month ago and here I sit with three blog post partially written and none published.
Today during my taxi ride into school I thought about this blog and made a conscious decision to come in today and get my blog officially up, running and shared with the world. But how? What was the best way to introduce my blog to the world? As I drove past a local public school seeing balloons dotting the courtyard I decided I need a proper launch if you will, I need this post right here. To announce to the world, my school and myself that I was really doing this.
I am currently a K-5 Technology Teacher in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. I love what I do and the kids for the most part are like kids anywhere in the world. They are eager to learn and just a eager to do and share what they are doing with others. They want to do a good job and be complimented for it. They have good days and bad days. They sometimes listens and follow instructions but often get distracted or simply don't have enough English yet to fully grasp and comprehend what their tasks are. I model and demonstrate and talk a lot more then I would like during my lessons, but such is the life of a teacher, especially when teaching students whose native language is not their learning language.
At the Elementary Campus where I spend most of my days, I have a small lab with a Promethean Board which, often gets unplugged because of PE classes on the other side of the wall. I have a printer and 20 student-use computers operating Windows 8. That's it, there's nothing more. No tablets, no laptops, no bee-bots, nothing. We do have a fairly well parent-supported BYOD program in grades 4 and 5, but I am not overly involved in that, at this campus.
I also teach part time at the new Nha Be campus, over there I currently teacher grades 1-5. There I have a large computer lab inside the school library. It has 20 student-use computers, Dell all in ones, complete with touch screens. There is also a projector so I can model for students, but no printer. Nha Be also does the BYOD in grades 4 and 5. Grade 5 is in full swing, the grade 4 here is just getting started. Oddly at this new location some of the parents I am told (by administration) are against the use of technology, that's a whole different set of issues I get to help teachers try to deal with.
As as school we are in the process of acquiring MinecraftEDU for use with grade 3-5 and everyone is all a buzz about that at the moment, but that's for another day.
I love my job, despite not having all the cool tech toys other schools have. I am hopeful to get many of those things in years to come, but for now I work with what we have and make the most of it.
Today during my taxi ride into school I thought about this blog and made a conscious decision to come in today and get my blog officially up, running and shared with the world. But how? What was the best way to introduce my blog to the world? As I drove past a local public school seeing balloons dotting the courtyard I decided I need a proper launch if you will, I need this post right here. To announce to the world, my school and myself that I was really doing this.
I am currently a K-5 Technology Teacher in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. I love what I do and the kids for the most part are like kids anywhere in the world. They are eager to learn and just a eager to do and share what they are doing with others. They want to do a good job and be complimented for it. They have good days and bad days. They sometimes listens and follow instructions but often get distracted or simply don't have enough English yet to fully grasp and comprehend what their tasks are. I model and demonstrate and talk a lot more then I would like during my lessons, but such is the life of a teacher, especially when teaching students whose native language is not their learning language.
At the Elementary Campus where I spend most of my days, I have a small lab with a Promethean Board which, often gets unplugged because of PE classes on the other side of the wall. I have a printer and 20 student-use computers operating Windows 8. That's it, there's nothing more. No tablets, no laptops, no bee-bots, nothing. We do have a fairly well parent-supported BYOD program in grades 4 and 5, but I am not overly involved in that, at this campus.
I also teach part time at the new Nha Be campus, over there I currently teacher grades 1-5. There I have a large computer lab inside the school library. It has 20 student-use computers, Dell all in ones, complete with touch screens. There is also a projector so I can model for students, but no printer. Nha Be also does the BYOD in grades 4 and 5. Grade 5 is in full swing, the grade 4 here is just getting started. Oddly at this new location some of the parents I am told (by administration) are against the use of technology, that's a whole different set of issues I get to help teachers try to deal with.
As as school we are in the process of acquiring MinecraftEDU for use with grade 3-5 and everyone is all a buzz about that at the moment, but that's for another day.
I love my job, despite not having all the cool tech toys other schools have. I am hopeful to get many of those things in years to come, but for now I work with what we have and make the most of it.
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