Sunday, January 31, 2010

So GAME PLAN, How We Doin?

In monitoring my plan, we have come through my second week and my second Friday reflection on my progress.
My first assessment realization: In a world where technology can get student instant results, spending time to learn to apply technology they already own is unappealing.
In my Contemporary Issues in Science classes this week, students took a tour of our school. Some of it has been newly renovated with updated lighting and energy conservation features, while some of it is twenty years old or more. Students brought along their cell phones to take pictures of features to inclued and discuss in their persuasive essay on the need or the challenges of conserving electricity in our high school. Not entirely sure how we'd get each student access to the images on their phones, I was able to rely on the fact that many students knew how to email themselves the photos. Others asked tech savvy students to take photos for them and gave them email addresses to use while easily a third of the class had no idea how to access the images stored on their phone and would rather lose the points in the assignment the photo would earn them than bother with the technology. This surprised me. "Couldn't I just get an image from the internet of a CF lightbulb?"
Second realization: web 2.0 tools are developed so rapidly that tech savvy teachers move on quickly. Needing to get on-the-job-training on the Blackboard Academy blog features, I found out that the district is moving away from that platform. My time and efforts would be better spent designing wiki spaces from free hosts on the web. So back to the drawing board with that goal.
Questions to follow up: Which wiki space will allow me the most free features, but still give me security for student privacy - a requirement fo my district?

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Moving Forward with my GAME Plan

Its nearly Friday and time for my first week's Game Plan reflection. Happy with my goals? Yes, and excited as well to bring 21st century techniques to my 21st century learners.

I realize that, in order to improve the quality of my teaching through technology tools, I will need support and the shared expertise of my colleagues and peers. For example, my goal to implement the use of student blogging as a learning and reflecting tool has required me to seek out training in the discussion features on Blackboard Academy - the web page program our school district subscribes to. I have found a colleague in the Social studies department of our high school who has used student discussion boards for two years now and she is guiding me through the steps to moderate student postings. I'm slow at manipulating the program, but getting better. I'll certainly appreciate the mentoring of any colleagues out there using this feature on Blackboard Academy.

I have also run into challenges implementing my students' cell phone use for class projects. Many do not know how to upload photos they've take with their own camera/cell phone. I am having to learn the features of many different phones to guide them. I'll be searching for additional information online about two different phone models in order to assist students unless I can find one program online to coordinate this featue for the students. I am open to suggestions...

Sunday, January 17, 2010

My Technology GAME Plan

My GAME PLAN:

There is an organization known as the International Society for Technology in Education. Their National Education Standards provide a guideline for teachers to become proficient in educating students with and through technology. For reference, please follow the link to the standards: http://www.iste.org/Content/NavigationMenu/NETS/ForTeachers/2008Standards/NETS_T_Standards_Final.pdf. This year I have spent a great deal of time in class modeling the use of technology tools and promoting digital citizenship. I both teach and expect the ethical use of online material in student work. I have also made a serious commitment to engage in professional growth in this area by focusing my free time on earning a master’s degree in Instructional Technology. My use of technology to facilitate learning, however, still needs improvement. I have set myself two goals to strengthen my proficiency. The first is to facilitate and inspire student learning and the second is to design and develop digital age learning experiences for my students.

In order to achieve these goals I plan to promote innovative thinking daily in class and develop an online place for student reflection and sharing. I have begun by setting up an online classroom with assignments and handouts posted but will expand, now, and use the discussion features of the software. My high school students come to class loaded down with technology and I plan to use their cell phones and cell phone cameras to full advantage when planning homework assignments and sharing learning. Imagine photographing and uploading your own home’s electricity meter when studying energy conservation. Podcasting from a cell phone when a student is standing by an idling bus or sharing a ride in a carpool is a great way to make understanding greenhouse gas emissions real.

In order to evaluate my progress I will invite colleagues in for peer observation and keep a weekly log --a Friday reflection—about my goals. What I’ve tried and what I feel was successful will inform my teaching practice in years to come.

Sunday, December 27, 2009

Reflections on Web Literacy Training

Over the course of the last eight weeks I have learned so much about the web that I can now call myself "web literate". I have always been able to read for understanding and write factually -- even with a bit of scepticism. But now I can say I am educated enough about web grammar, search engines, and domain names; about the content standards in New York state that address internet and technology use; and even about the nature of inquiry itself and what makes a great question.
I have become fascinated by the teachings of Alan November in his book Web Literacy for Educators and have joined in his Building Learning Communities project. I have made is a personal professional development goal to expand my knowledge in this area and to implement web-based technologies in all my classes in order to develop a community of learners. I plan to attend the summer conference called BLC 10 in Boston this summer from July 14-16. (Maybe I'll see you there.)
The most striking aspect of my learning has been the idea of focusing on the ethical use of information found online. My students are masters of cut and paste assignments. They can construct a powerpoint presentation that would blow your mind - even if they understand very little of the content. As detectives, they can put facts in sequential order--facts they have never verified nor written themselves. By framing web assignments as ethics assignments where students ethical use of another's writing or image will be examined and graded, students do remarkable better on these same powerpoint presentations. They, themselves become more expert on a topic when researching it through this lens. I think it is brilliant. And it is in many ways one of the most important aspects of Web literacy.

Web Literacy

For learning and instruction of both the basics and the specifics of web source evaluation, there is no better example web site to use than the Pacific Northwest Tree Octopus page found at the url: http:// zapatopi.net/treeoctopus/. After a lesson on search engines, in which the criteria for search results are explored, a google.com search on the term octopus will lead you right to this web page. Type octopus as a search term in the google search box. It places ninth in the search results listed so it is a very well-linked and well-liked web page.
Following the link takes you to a beautifully designed web page. Diagrams, aesthetically pleasing colors, and a plea to save the endangered creature draw you into reading the page. Tabs near the top make the page easy to navigate through and, look, there must be a thousand words of content. On first glance, there are several links on the page, news stories with recent dates, and ‘old’ advertisements depicting the creature in the 1920’s. Before we can believe the content, though, we should carry out an evaluation as suggested by November (2008).
Begin by reading the web address of the page: www.zapatopi.net/treeoctopus/. By truncating this address back to the first forward slash by hitting the back spare key, the domain name of the homepage for this information is found to be www.zapatopi.net. This is not an educational site ending in .edu or even a wildlife organization ending in .org. Navigating over to this shortened web address takes us to its home page, shown to the left . The home page contains mainly a blog dedicated to entertaining diversions by a person named Lyle Zapato. So simply Reading the url leads us to believe the content could be false. We could get distracted by all the links and content on this page but, lets stay focused on our evaluation.
Back at the tree octopus page, we should examine and evaluate the content shown. It seems legitimate. There is a photograph of an octopus in a tree – its coloring described by the text on the page and a believable map of areas where the creatures are found. Hovering over the darker green text changes the pointer to a hand, showing that these words are links to other web pages. But, examining the text, we read that the tree octopus is not actually on the endangered species list and further, that one of its predators is the mythical creature, the sasquatch.
Next, we also need to analyze the authorship of the web page if we are to trust its (now doubtful) content. Who is Lyle Zapato? No credentials are listed on his home page, nothing is mentioned about his expertise as either a biologist, a historian, or even a journalist working for a news outlet requiring fact checking. No problem, we have search engines at our command, so type in “Lyle Zapato” biography into a google search box and voila – the name shows up on a list of hoaxes maintained on the Wikipedia site. We see that, indeed, this site is a hoax.
Just for fun and the educational value of it, return to the tree octopus page to study the links. The first link, on the term Temperate Rainforest, takes us to a Wikipedia page whose neutrality is in dispute. A link on the photo of an old magazine cover showing a tree octopus hat from the 1920’s takes you to another webpage from the zapatopi home page. This is a great way to show students that links that keep you in the same web domain do not independently verify the legitimacy of the content they show. You just end up in a closed loop. There are also a few very clever News links on the tree octopus page like the link shown below.
2009-11-12 Steinhart Aquarium Successfully Breeds Dwarf Cuttlefish (Zoo & Aquarium Visitor)
Anchored to an algae-covered rock in a 120-gallon tank at the California Academy of Sciences' Steinhart Aquarium, a cluster of inky-colored cuttlefish eggs is beginning to swell -- evidence of success for the Academy's new captive breeding program for dwarf cuttlefish, Sepia Bandensis.
We are not to be fooled by these News links as anyone may link their web page to these pages. The Steinhart Aquarium does not mention a tree octopus nor does it link back to this web page. A different link on a logo with a name that is similar to the real conservation group Greenpeace turns out to be a false one that displays the message
”Sorry! We could not find www.greenpeas.org. It may be unavailable or may not exist. Try using the suggestions or related links below, or search again using our web search. “
The Pacific Northwest Tree Octopus website is a well-designed site. It is a very witty, entertaining site which can also be very helpful in learning and educating others about the legitimacy of information found on the web. I believe students will appreciate the colourful page design and be convinced of its authenticity simply by virtue of all the pages and pages of content. Many students, even older secondary school students, actually surf the web. They skim read and scroll through text looking for terms to use or information to quote without actually verifying facts with an independent site. The half-truths claimed can be convincing. The map of the Washington state area and likely photo shopped image of the octopus in tree branches are partially real, just manipulated in ways a sceptical web-surfer would be suspicious of.
Many web searches turn up blog pages as results. My high school science students have used information from web logs in past research projects and were confused as to why their information was questionable. Students must be able to recognize blog postings as opinion and determine whether they should risk believing the information they report. A blog posting can lead to an actual verified fact about the research topic, but the verification must first be undertaken.

Monday, November 23, 2009

Conducting Research in Education

Finding Answers by Starting with the Right Questions
Teachers are all very curious about how to teach 21st century learners. I know I am. Employing technology tools and engaging students in making meaning from the curriculum are suggestions for helping all students learn better. How well do they work?
In order to begin research in a topic of challenging educational importance, I have to formulate questions which prove and also disprove my own hypothesis. These questions drive the research and help me search for answers that could be already published. Answers can be found for teachers through scientific inquiry which is evidence based and conducted along accepted guiding principles. Quality questions determine the impact that research will have on accepted knowledge. ( McMillan & Schumaker, 2006, p.7)
In designing a research study, I have started with a problem statement. My problem statement is …I plan to evaluate the impact on unit test scores of web-based inquiry lessons versus traditional lecture and lab lessons of high school students in chemistry.

To start looking for answers I need to research questions for inquiry. These could fall into three question categories.
Descriptive questions: Which students benefit from learning via the web? Do some learners actually get hampered by learning involving a computer?
Relationship question: Do web based inquiry lessons teach content well? In other words, what is the relationship between inquiry lessons and recall of the content?
Difference question: Will students remember content better from their own inquiry differently than from teacher directed instruction? Will students understand content better from searching for answers to their own questions?

Reference: Mcmillan, James, and Sally Schumacher. "Fundamental Principles of Educational Research." Research in Education: Evidence Based Inquiry (6th Edition). Boston, MA: Allyn & Bacon, 2006. 1-20. Print.

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Educational Research in Science

I am designing an educational research project about web-based inquiry. As a master's student in Instructional Technology, I know well that students in the 21st century learn differently than past generations. It is rare to find a classroom in the U.S. today that does not use the world wide web in some way, but are teachers using the web in significant, meaningful ways?
I am interested in finding out how well my high school science students actually learn using the web. In inquiry projects, the students pose meaningful questions and search out the answers. High school science courses, however, are packed with content leaving little time in the year for exploring issues of interest to students. Since inquiry based projects are designed to help students become better thinkers and better question designers, will this translate to better understanding of core curriculum required in a high school science class? It makes sense to know this before redesigning class curricula, so I have developed this research question:

I plan to evaluate the impact of web-based inquiry lessons versus traditional lecture and lab lessons on the achievement of high school students in chemistry.


I am interested in your feedback and opinions on the work, on the topic, and on the research question itself. I'd like to make sure I am covering all the bases and your collaboration adds more brainpower and creativity to the process.