Playing
a new GAME (Repost)
(The darkness troubled, me, too...)
Goals:
- develop fluency in creating, posting, and managing blog posts and blog feeds
- Investigate use of Google Docs and Google Notebook (Source)
- Incorporate WEB Quests/ Inquiry project and flexible assignment options for thematic, cross- curricular units that allow for collaborative learning along with individual accountability.
- Students will utilize tools to communicate creatively to demonstrate application of concepts
- and critical thinking skills.
Actions:
I've
set up a professional blog, and revisited a personal blog that I
don't write in enough.
I've
attempted to subscribe to everyone in my group's blog-feeds, but I
haven't mastered that yet. As I return to the Course Weblog site
list, I will use a mini-game plan, without even thinking about it,
because the steps to analytical thinking are already automated.
Directing my attention to both successful RSS feeds and to my
understanding of how to connect to a community of blogs sets up a
think aloud (quietly, in my own room—people hear talking aloud and
they think you are nuts) of metacognitive monitoring, evaluating and
taking action that repeats until I've learned by doing what I needed
to know. From this, I need to boil down these new program tricks and
tips into simple bullet-pointed steps and procedures, easily
accessible in a classroom.
I've
used Google Docs to communicate with other professional in the CCWP,
and I've read of one colleague's initial success with collaborative
documents. In terms of developing both editing skills in the
advanced students, and modes of good language usage in the second
language learning students, carefully crafted mixed ability groups
can collaborate on a variety of materials connected to content to
demonstrate their learnings. A Seedfolk
unit, for example, allows for character study and point of view
analysis, as well as the impact of setting on characters in the
story. As each character is an immigrant to Cleveland form elsewhere,
students can self select or be draw names to form groups of three to
analyze any of these and work creatively and collaboratively to
communicate what they've discovered about whey people from El
Salvador or Korea came to this country.. (12 chapters after model, 3
students per chapter)
Monitoring
See
above frustrations in the Action steps. I've learned to post and
respond, but gathering all responses in one location eludes me. Some
come to my Walden email address, others come through my gmail
address. In order to facilitate class discussion groups, I will have
to be able to take students through blog feed set up in relatively
short sequence of steps. Simplify.
Evaluation.
Halfway
to my goal, and incorporating Quests and self directed inquiries into
unit questions. As I revisit past successful lessons, I look to
blend the technology-enriched activities and projects into the unit.
Dobler and Eagleton provide a dsk-reference in how to's for modeling
the acquisition and practice of discreet new literacy skills, the
constant recursive repetition of questioning, using information,
evaluating results, searching and transforming information that makes
up
No
time yet for Google Notebooks, though I intend to remedy that soon.
I like google docs for its accessibility from any internet linked
device, and for it's collaborative editing features. Making better
use of google docs myself, rather than immediately using Open
Office's word processing program will allow me to better teach the
skills of information archival and retrieval as well as portfolio
building. .
Next
steps:
Dig
into Google Notebooks, and resubscribe to blog feeds. Trying to
accomplish the most technologically demanding class thus far in my
program while I am bouncing around the Appalachian Mountains has
brought to my attention the problem of areas with little or poor
internet access, or those still waiting on slow internet connections.
I whine when my hotel doesn't have wifi. The new normal is never
thus... Get a little help from those more proficient to learn how to
manage and incorporate 21st century tools for my 21st
century students.
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