Saturday, 10 January 2015

Why we Need Technology in Education

Why we Need Technology in Education (and why it Isn't a Waste of Time).



I am biased. I love technology, and see it as a way to open up a whole new world of opportunities for my students. Not only does it break down the traditional barriers established by the four walls of a classroom, it provides students with authentic audiences, and allows students to explore new ways of learning. For those reasons, along with many others, I feel that it is fair for me to feel this way about technology. And I'm never going to apologize for my passion, because it is what drives what I do. However, I can understand how technology can be unnerving for some educators, especially when they have misconceptions about the role technology plays in a learning environment. 

It is important to establish that technology will never replace good pedagogy. In fact, it is imperative that the two to go hand in hand. The image below comes from an academic article by Harris & Hoffer (2011). It outlines the importance of teachers having strong knowledge in the areas of content, pedagogy, and technology. When teachers are strong in all three areas, that is where the best teaching will occur. It is not enough just to know the tech tools. You must also know the content you are teaching, and have strong pedagogy skills as well. If technology is being used without knowledge of pedagogy or content, it will not be effective in helping students learn. 


Harris & Hoffer (2011)

In the past few days, I have heard colleagues express the notions that through our use of technology we are neglecting the whole child, that we need to stop pushing technology in our schools, and that the use of technology shouldn't be at the forefront of learning. Misconceptions about how technology should be used in the classroom exist because it is misunderstood. Technology hasn't engulfed our entire classrooms and it isn't being used to replace methods that we know work. It is being utilized as a way to enhance and enrich learning opportunities where possible. It offers new ways to engage learners and diversifies opportunities available to students in the classroom. It provides accessibility tools for struggling learners. Teachers who are effective in their use of technology realize that there needs to be balance, and are willing to do the work to ensure that balance exists for the sake of their students. Even if it takes twice the time and effort, because they see the value everyday. 

Teachers who fear or lack an understanding of technology should take a peek into the classrooms of teachers who are effectively using it. They might be surprised to find how intentional the use of technology really is, and how meaningful the learning opportunities are. Using technology in a way that supports learning takes more work than a person might expect. It is more than just popping students on laptops and telling them to research something. Students need scaffolding, supports, and to be explicitly taught the skills essential to using the technology for learning. It also takes a lot of dedication on the part of the teacher to learn the tools, and recognize how best to use them in the classroom. We owe it to our students to create environments in our classrooms that foster the development of skills necessary for 21st century learners, especially since by the time they graduate, they will need these skills to be successful in their future careers. Below is the framework for student learning designed by Alberta Ed. The reason I have included it is to remind educators that education is changing (even here in our own province), and so are the skills that are students will need. We can't ignore technology, because it isn't going away. How can we teach students to be digitally and technologically fluent if we aren't using it in our classrooms? Food for thought. 


Wednesday, 17 December 2014

Science Notebooks

After taking a graduate course on teaching science, I have been trying to integrate the idea of science notebooks into my sixth grade science classroom. We are working on sky science, and so I created the following notebook. Using Google Classroom, I shared it with my students, who have been working through the different tasks. Below are some of the resources we learned about in my course on science notebooks that I found useful. My hope is that as the year progresses, my use of science notebooks will begin to be more authentic and align with the nature of science and the practices of real scientists. 

http://www.sciencenotebooks.org/
http://goo.gl/XykRnA
http://goo.gl/XykRnA
http://ebecri.org/content/toolkit

Our Science notebooks:

http://goo.gl/p9nWY6

Friday, 12 December 2014

Race to Save Christmas

https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0ByN_OLXLIuI2bWdubW9EYUpzOWs&usp=sharing

In grade one, we have been working on a Christmas game, where the kids solve riddles and math clues to try and save the North Pole from some bad elves that have invaded! The link above is to the folder with all the resources if you wanted to check it out. When they solve a clue, we tweet "santa" (I made an account @mr_clausHOHO), and Santa Tweets us back our next clue the following day. We tracked our progress on a big paper map of the north pole, but I also made a digital copy. 



Here is an example of our Tweets from Santa


This is an example of one of the math clues the kids had to solve 
This project was just a fun way to spend December, while still working on math problems. The Twitter aspect made the kids really buy in! 

#HourOfCode



I decided that I would introduce my class to the hour of code. After reading a lot about it on Twitter, I realized that even though it doesn't specifically align with our outcomes, it does teach students a whole bunch of essential skills that they need to learn, such as problem solving, communicating, patterning, enhancing their understanding of technology and engaging them at a difficult time of year. Below are the sites that we used for our hour of code:

www.madewithcode.com/projects
www.crunchzilla.com/code-monster
scratch.mit.edu
studio.code.org/s/frozen/stage/1/puzzle/1
codecombat.com


Thursday, 27 November 2014

Exit Pass Templates

I usually try to have my students authentically use Twitter in the classroom, along with other tools such as Today's Meet, Padlet, or Socrative to do digital exit passes. However, today we had the internet go down at our school, and it reminded me that sometimes we need an alternative. So I created the following templates to help engage students. The PDF is linked below.  



https://drive.google.com/file/d/0ByN_OLXLIuI2MkowcDFqNndMNHc/view?usp=sharing

Wednesday, 26 November 2014

Race Through Space- Science Game

This year, I started down the path of implementing elements of game-based learning into my classroom. After taking a course on technology this summer and reading the book "Reality is Broken" by Jane McGonigal, I really began to see the benefit of engaging students in a non-traditional way. The trend of using elements of games (such as badges, levels, quests or missions, etc.) is referred to as gamification. The first big game we did this year was something I called the "Zombie Apocalypse: Math Edition". Students earned supplies to survive the zombie apocalypse, which they did by correctly answering math problems, or demonstrating mathematical thinking. I have embedded it below if anyone is interested in checking it out. 


This month, the game I created relates to science. Students will be using clues to track Santa through the solar system in a race to save Christmas. We are using a passport and badges to track their progress. The kids are really excited to get started, and I can't wait to see how quickly they learn all about sky science. I have add a link to the project and an example of my badges below. 



http://goo.gl/3Dq09j
 




Wednesday, 29 October 2014

Using Google Draw

I have found myself using Google Draw a lot in my classroom lately. Below are a few examples of ways that I have found it useful:


1. Creating student sheets for math
Ordinarily, it is quite difficult to get student sheets formatted the way you want in math. Google Draw allows you to freely move objects around, which is ideal for math! I always just modify the page size to custom and then input 8.5 X 11 so that it prints on a standard page. 


2. Creating Badges
With my grade sixes, I have tried to take a more gamified approach to math this year, using badges to notify students when they have "levelled up", beat a boss level problem, or are demonstrating mathematical thinking and vocabulary. I make all of my badges in Google Draw, and then I also use classbadges.com to award them to students. They find it extremely motivating! I also sometimes make badges for my first graders to send home in their agendas. Below are two badge examples. 






In teaching grade one, I often create sheets to laminate as parts of my centres. I create the individual sheets using Google Draw. Once I have them all finished, I download them as PDFs, and use a chrome app called PDFmergy to put them all together into one PDF document to share with colleagues. Below is an example.