Tag: 21st Century teaching

  • Reblog: Five-Minute Film Festival: Inspirational Teachers (via edutopia)

    ORIGINALLY POSTED TO EDUTOPIA: EDUTOPIA.ORG
    BY KEYANA STEVENS on July 17, 2015

    People have so many different reasons to join the education field — what inspired you to become an educator? Perhaps you feel a desire to give back to the community, or you relish the intellectual challenge, or perhaps the simple reward of seeing a student smile every day is your motivation. But I suspect that for many people, an encounter with an inspiring educator might have been the spark that led to this career path. Read on for more video profiles of inspiring teachers across the country and their stories.

    Video Playlist: Inspirational Teachers

    Watch the player below to see the whole playlist, or view it on YouTube.
    [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=videoseries?list=PLrMqXQ2J_13vcbHVJTImOO2wmWDDVi0md]
    1. Teacher Chris Emdin Finding Ways to Make Math Fun (3:44)
      Dr. Chris Emdin, a science educator and professor at the Columbia Teachers College, started the #HipHopEd movement to help teachers connect science and math education with students’ real-world interests. This video was originally created as an advertisement for Office Depot, but Emdin’s message of “meeting students on their own cultural turf” will resonate with teachers everywhere.
    2. Shelter from the Storm (3:39)
      Ms. Reifler is a teacher in a low-income elementary school in east Los Angeles. She encourages her students to look beyond their circumstances and envision what a “good life” could mean for them. Like any teacher, Ms. Reifler only has one year to spend with her students, but as the video says, “A moment with a good teacher can give a lifetime of hope.”
    3. David Hunter, Zombie-Based Learning (2:34)
      David Hunter noticed how much his students loved books and movies about the zombie apocalypse, and instead of telling them to read something else, he found a way to add the concept into his curriculum. He uses a self-made graphic textbook to teach students about disease outbreaks and survival skills, incorporating state curriculum standards and project-based learning in creative ways.
    4. Meditation 4 Madmen – Kevin “Teach” Baas (4:53)
      If you saw Kevin Baas riding his motorcycle down the street you might not immediately think “educator,” but the shop class teacher’s passion for helping his students succeed is the same as any other’s. (The second half of this video does get a bit advertorial, so when you get to that point, hit pause and check out the website for Kevin’s Kennedy Chopper Class here.)
    5. Ahoy! Meet Nancy Davis, the Pirate Teacher (4:45)
      When Nancy Davis, an elementary school teacher, had to have eye surgery for cancer, she worried that her students might be put off by the eye patch she had to wear — so she turned it into an opportunity for fun instead, and became the Pirate Teacher!
    6. Wright’s Law: A Unique Teacher Imparts Real Life Lessons (11:58)
      Physics teacher Jeffrey Wright is most well-known to his students for his whimsical science experiments and classroom demonstrations. His drive to be a good teacher and mentor to his students comes in spite of — or perhaps because of — surprising personal challenges. Be warned: you might want to save this one for watching in the privacy of your home, as it will make you cry (happy) tears.

    More Resources on Inspiring Teachers

    For more stories about educators that go above and beyond the call of duty, check out these additional articles!
  • Hot Topic: Digital Storytelling

    By now you might have heard of Digital Storytelling and it’s popularity in corporate communication, and also education. While there is a lot of information out there, I found the following example (from TELIC Stories) rather interesting:

    Ian Guest, who completed his MSc in 2011, leads the ICT support team in a school in Sheffield. In this story he talks about how even the smallest of interactions while studying for TELIC can still have significant unanticipated outcomes. Ian explains how his use of social media developed during the course and how it has had an impact on his own professional practice.

    A transcript of Ian’s video is also available.

    Have you come across any interesting examples? Better yet, have you tried it out? Drop us a comment, or share your story on your blog.

    UPDATE: The ESRRC ’15 committee has accepted the proposal to add a Digital Storytelling workshop to this year’s conference proceedings! I’m expecting some really cool and useful work – be sure to be there!

    *Educational Students’ Regional Research Conference
  • Reblog: Why Teachers and Students Should Blog (via edudemic.com)

    ORIGINALLY POSTED TO EDUDEMIC: EDUDEMIC.COM
    BY HANNA SHEKHTER on May 30, 2015

    Blogs have the potential to expand student creativity, not to mention their writing skills. Language Arts and Reading specialists will love that, right? But how do I convince them that their students are thirsty for the knowledge they want to share but not the same way that they themselves obtained it? These kids are 21st century students and are adapting to a digital world that they are eager to learn from.

    Fortunately for teachers, blogs are surprisingly easy to use. They require minimum technical knowledge and are quickly and easily created and maintained. Students will be able to pick up how to use blogging platforms with minimal technical assistance and teachers will enjoy the ease in the initial setup. Unlike many traditional Web sites, blogs are flexible in design and can be changed relatively easily. Best of all, students and teachers will find them convenient and accessible via any computer or mobile device.

    Why Blogging is Great for Students


    1. Blogs Allow for Multi-Faceted Learning

    Educators need to teach important materials in several ways because each one of our students learns differently. What’s more, we also need to provide students with multiple ways to engage with assignments, based on their individual talents. Blogging is one technique for doing so, as it can allow a quieter student, for example, to feel heard online. Those shy and quiet students feel less pressure when they need to “speak” in their blog or when giving peer feedback, as they are discussing the text on their own terms. Additionally, this journaling format works great with read-and-write learners as well as visual learners.


    2. Blogs Promote Literacy and Sharpen Writing Skills

    Blogging gives students an opportunity to become published authors and showcase their writing skills. In addition, blogs give students the ability to improve communication and collaboration through the commenting feature. Peer review and feedback become an invaluable part of the writing process. Students from other parts of the world can also comment and provide a new cultural perspective to our own students’ thoughts and opinions. Students’ writing skills are vastly improved through the blogging process, since they have to work harder to hold the readers’ attention. To do that, every word, phrase, sentence, and even punctuation mark must add something to the posting.


    3. Blogs Are Accessible and Engaging

    With the availability of blog apps, blogging has become very simple and accessible to our students. They can blog from anywhere about anything whenever they are in the mood to reflect. They are not tied down to a desk and feel more free using this writing media. Also, in the age where every person has a camera in their pocket, we have become a society that journals through photography and video. Along with other multimedia artifacts, blogs become more engaging and almost interactive for the readers.

    4. Blogs Can Serve as a Classroom Management Tool

    When used as an in-class assignment, blogs can keep your students on task and focused. The more blogs students post, the more opportunities they have for others to comment on their blog. It’s an exciting feeling for students to see proof of someone reading their published work, taking time to reflect on it, and posting their opinion or question. Creating a classroom blog instead of individual blogs fosters an online community for your students to extend the classroom beyond the 4 walls. The learning continues wherever they go and their thoughts and conversations keep going.Blogging is a great tool to create student portfolios, as it can be used both as a “learning portfolio” and a “showcase portfolio”.


    5 Tips That Will Make Blogging a Breeze


    1. Use a simple blog application

    Look for popular classroom blogging apps that have been tested in classrooms and made simple even for early elementary students. Blogger is a Google app and is completely free. It is easy and simple to use if you have a Google account you can set up your blog in minutes from a computer or mobile device. Edublogs lets you easily create and manage student and teacher blogs, customize designs and include videos, photos and podcasts. Kidblog provides teachers with the tools to help students publish writing safely online. Students exercise digital citizenship within a secure classroom blogging space and teachers can monitor all student activity. Other great options include WordPress, Weebly, and Tumblr (for photoblogs).


    2. Start with a specific writing prompt

    If you’re beginning with a class rather than an individual blog, you’ll be responsible for those initial posts, while the students will respond in comments. As students demonstrate both keenness and responsibility, give them more freedom where they earn the right to write posts on the class blog and/or get their own student blog. You can start with Sentence Starters like “Today was the best day ever…” Image-based prompts that can also be incorporated into daily and/or creative writing activities whether they are pictures you took or random ones from a web site or app. You can also invite students to create prompts for the class and use these prompts whenever possible.


    3. Create a rubric

    Providing detailed explanations of an assignment using a rubric can help students in both completing tasks and thinking about their performance. Be sure to include expectations for the first post as well as for commenting on another student’s post.


    4. Know your audience

    The audience makes the work matter to students as they have an opportunity to showcase their writing and respond to real feedback. Initially, the teacher and classroom peers are the major audience that provide the feedback. However, you may want to consider sharing the blog details with parents through the school website and newsletters to grow the audience to family members and other parents. This can have unexpected practical use. For instance, if a student is writing a piece on the topic of technology and one of the parents in the classroom is an engineer, that student may be eager to produce quality work to get real feedback — and they may find themselves a great interview source, too.


    5. Make content concise

    Tight, concise, easy-to-read pieces are ideal for most online readers. Long, complex, convoluted ones are just confusing. Very often, the longer a piece is, the less the writer holds a reader’s interest — all the more so on small screens. As such, your students would do well to get right to the point — a skill they’ll find valuable as they continue up the academic ladder.


    Takeaways


    Educators know that students write better when they have a real audience. But with blogging any student can write for the world to see. Students have an authentic audience for their writing and that has an impact on the quality of their posts and comments. Encouraging students to blog about all sorts of topics helps them see connections among subjects and different aspects of their life and realize that writing is a worthwhile skill in any field.

    Want to learn more? Visit Hanna’s blog here.

    Edudemic editor’s note: This is an update to Hanna Shekter’s original post on this subject, which first ran on January 5th, 2013. A lot has changed since then, so we invited Hanna back to update her wonderful tips.

  • [Teaching] On the future of digital learning(?)

    During March of 2013, PBS LearningMedia conducted a survey of American teachers (PreK-12) to ascertain how practicing educators are using, and expect to use digital media and technology for teaching and learning. Their findings are illustrated in the infographic below:
    from: pbslearningmedia.org

    Of the 1,544 participants:
    • 93% say that technology is motivating and useful for students;
    • 88% believe educational technology reinforces and expands concepts;
    • 79% believe educational technology is helpful in responding to a variety of learning styles;
    • 81% have access to personal computers or laptops in the classroom and 63% use them daily;
    • 58% have interactive whiteboards (SMART Boards);
    • 52% have tablets or electronic readers;
    • To supplement technology in their classrooms, at least several times a month, educators use
      • images (91%),
      • videos (90%),
      • online lesson plans (68%),
      • games/interactives (66%);
    • 63% wish the had access to more content to use with their new technology;
    • 71% wish they had a special department whose sole job is to help support them with technology;
    • 86% want more training on the technologies they use in the classroom;
    • 65% say they will spend more time learning about and implementing technology;
    • 58% say that 5-7 years from [now], they will still be using traditional textbooks, but with digital media and technology supporting learning;
    • 52% say their roles will include more technology support.
    • Most educators think the next 5-7 years will show in increase in the use of
      • tablets or electronic readers (78%),
      • mobile devices (71%), and
      • personal computers (69%).
    *Value of Educational Technology
    *Use of Technology and Media
    *Needs for Success
    *Future of Digital Learning
    Where would you position yourself?