Here is a link to my Prezi:
http://prezi.com/q2y7z8wgucjf/?utm_campaign=share&utm_medium=copy&rc=ex0share
Ms Weller
Thursday, April 10, 2014
Wednesday, April 9, 2014
Discussion 3.1
For our online meet up, we chose to use Facebook. Facebook is a great tool because you can access it from anywhere: phone, computer, iPad, tablet, etc. At our school, Facebook isn't blocked, so we could use this as a way to instant message each other. I think, nowadays, it is a lot easier to send a colleague, parent or student an email to talk about something. As for using Facebook with my students, the parents or other colleagues, that is a slippery slope. When I taught high school, my rule was: once you graduate, you can add me on Facebook. Of course, there are certain students I would never add, but there are some I would love to keep in touch with. I would not use Facebook with my current students. It is too easy for my students to snoop around my Facebook page. I do not need them to know what I am up to in my personal life. However, if I created a class page or group, then that would be different. I could make privacy settings and they wouldn't be able to see my person page.
I coached water polo for five years and I made a water polo group on Facebook. I posted our workout schedules, game schedules, announcements, pictures, stats, etc. I kept it a closed group, so I had to invite you to be in the group. Three different summers we took our athletes to Hungary to compete. I used both a Facebook page and a Blogspot to keep the parents in the loop. It was a great way for parents to see pictures and I would write daily updates as well. I think this really kept the parents at ease because they were constantly updated and could see what their daughters were doing.
Another platform that we used was Google docs. Jenn and I work at the same school, so we were able to brainstorm some more ideas for our Prezi on a Google doc. We could both be on the document at the same time and add whatever we wanted. This was a great platform because we were abel to do this while we were at work. Teachers are the best at multitasking!
What do you find is the best way to communicate with your colleagues while at work?
I coached water polo for five years and I made a water polo group on Facebook. I posted our workout schedules, game schedules, announcements, pictures, stats, etc. I kept it a closed group, so I had to invite you to be in the group. Three different summers we took our athletes to Hungary to compete. I used both a Facebook page and a Blogspot to keep the parents in the loop. It was a great way for parents to see pictures and I would write daily updates as well. I think this really kept the parents at ease because they were constantly updated and could see what their daughters were doing.
Another platform that we used was Google docs. Jenn and I work at the same school, so we were able to brainstorm some more ideas for our Prezi on a Google doc. We could both be on the document at the same time and add whatever we wanted. This was a great platform because we were abel to do this while we were at work. Teachers are the best at multitasking!
What do you find is the best way to communicate with your colleagues while at work?
Thursday, March 13, 2014
Assignment 2.1: Video Cast
- Link to the video I watched:
- Author of the video:
- Jason Borgen: Monte Vista Christian Schools, Watsonville, Ca
- Title of the video I watched:
- Going Paperless: Diverse Learning with iPads and Apps
Watch my VideoCast:
Motivating Middle School Students
This is my second year of teaching middle school. My first three years of teaching I taught high school. Oh how I miss my independent, not as hormonal, high school kiddos! Middle school is a beast of its own and I am trying to wrap my brain around it, even on year two. This year has been especially challenging due to my students being very: sheltered, religious, immature and not college bound.
Since most of my students are not college bound, I am trying new ways to motivate them to do work and want to love learning. My girls will get through high school and then get married. My boys will go onto Rabbinical school. With this being said, the girls just want to get through high school and the boys are more focused on their Judaic studies classes.
According to Barbara Gross Davis, she stated that one of the ways to motivate your students is to, "Help students find personal meaning and value in the material." As a general studies teacher (English and History) I constantly battle the kids for their attention and the want to learn the subjects I am teaching. I try to make real life connections everyday. We watch the CNN Student News Podcast everyday. I really find it important for them to connect to the outside world that they are very sheltered from.
At the start of our second semester, I decided to put my history classes into groups(they are my biggest classes of 8 and 12). We are a small private school and our classes are divided by gender, just an fyi. I then gave out team points each day as a motivation to keep their team members on task. The reward: five points of extra credit o the next chapter test for the winning group. I was very excited that this was working!!! I also came up with a lot more group work for the students to do. It was awesome to see some leaders emerge out of each group.
I read a great article online titled: Six Ways to Motivate Students to Learn. One of the ways to motivate students is to make things social in the classroom. We all know that our students like to chat and work with each other. I like to do activities called jigsaw. I will make each person an expert on a different section of the worksheet. The experts will all meet together and then they will go back and teach their group what they learned. I found this a great way to have the students work on so many different skills, yet it also makes it fun for them because they feel a little bit more in control of their learning.
What do you guys do to keep your students motivated??
Gross, Davis, Barbara: Tools for Teaching , Jossey-Bass Publishers: San Francisco, 1993
Six Ways to Motivate Students to Learn. Retrieved on March 13, 2014
http://blogs.kqed.org/mindshift/2013/09/six-ways-motivate-students-to-learn/
Since most of my students are not college bound, I am trying new ways to motivate them to do work and want to love learning. My girls will get through high school and then get married. My boys will go onto Rabbinical school. With this being said, the girls just want to get through high school and the boys are more focused on their Judaic studies classes.
According to Barbara Gross Davis, she stated that one of the ways to motivate your students is to, "Help students find personal meaning and value in the material." As a general studies teacher (English and History) I constantly battle the kids for their attention and the want to learn the subjects I am teaching. I try to make real life connections everyday. We watch the CNN Student News Podcast everyday. I really find it important for them to connect to the outside world that they are very sheltered from.
At the start of our second semester, I decided to put my history classes into groups(they are my biggest classes of 8 and 12). We are a small private school and our classes are divided by gender, just an fyi. I then gave out team points each day as a motivation to keep their team members on task. The reward: five points of extra credit o the next chapter test for the winning group. I was very excited that this was working!!! I also came up with a lot more group work for the students to do. It was awesome to see some leaders emerge out of each group.
I read a great article online titled: Six Ways to Motivate Students to Learn. One of the ways to motivate students is to make things social in the classroom. We all know that our students like to chat and work with each other. I like to do activities called jigsaw. I will make each person an expert on a different section of the worksheet. The experts will all meet together and then they will go back and teach their group what they learned. I found this a great way to have the students work on so many different skills, yet it also makes it fun for them because they feel a little bit more in control of their learning.
What do you guys do to keep your students motivated??
Sources:
Gross, Davis, Barbara: Tools for Teaching , Jossey-Bass Publishers: San Francisco, 1993
Six Ways to Motivate Students to Learn. Retrieved on March 13, 2014
http://blogs.kqed.org/mindshift/2013/09/six-ways-motivate-students-to-learn/
Thursday, March 6, 2014
Readings 1.1
Standard 1.5: Promoting critical thinking through inquiry, problem solving, and reflection:
While reading, Maximizing the impact- The pivotal role of technology in the 21st Century, it said: "Online, collaborative projects with peers or experts in other states or countries
can expose them to different cultures and perspectives."(pg. 6) Our school uses google drive, so it is very easy for our students to be at separate computers, but still collaborate with each other. Our students also went to the Seismic Lab in Pasadena to be face to face with real experts on their research today they were doing. Both teachers and students can benefit from collaboration.
Right now, myself and two other teachers, are collaborating and working on the 8th grade project. Our students are researching about earthquakes and plate tectonics. Along with their research and data, they have also been given the task to see if the Los Angeles area or San Francisco area would be safer to build a new campus of our school there. Our school is very small and classes are divided by gender. So, the boys have one city area and the girls have another. They have been building earthquake safe models, reading newspaper articles, interpreting data and creating their own company logos. Using their problem solving skills, they have to determine if their city area is safe to build a new school. We are also having them write a letter to their local senator to back up their reasonings and make it more real to them. Our students have been engaged and excited to learn about this topic and to do the various tasks we have assigned. Technology has played a huge role in getting this project going. The students put in math equations on spread sheet to be able to draw their logos for their companies.
Standard 2.2: Creating physical or virtual learning environments that promote student learning, reflect
diversity, and encourage constructive and productive interactions among students.
In reading, Maximizing the impact- The pivotal role of technology in the 21st Century, it talks about using research based approaches, both for the teachers and for the students to learn.(pg. 3) I think that some learning has shifted from teacher centered, to student centered. We need to give the students the freedom and the skills to research about topics they are interested in.
In my 8th grade English class, we are reading Farewell to Manzanar. I found two wonderful websites that had primary sources online for them to read about Japanese Internment camps. One website had various newspaper articles from the Los Angeles and San Francisco areas during the time. I had each student find an article, summarize it and then present it to the class. I had my students share their article link and summary with me via google drive. The second website I had them look at, had all of the Japanese Internet camps listed. I assigned each student a specific internment camp(I only have 8 students) and then had them answer various questions I handed out to them. I had them create a PowerPoint or Prezi and they will be presenting them in my class next week. I also made sure to have them include at least seven pictures with captions for us to look at. By reading the newspaper articles and researching about a specific camp, it has really opened up my students eyes as to what our main character and her family have been going through in our book. I think it hits home for some of them because our book takes place in Long Beach in the beginning. I keep hearing my students say: "Wow, that's not fair! I can't believe they had to rush out of their homes and leave everything, just because they were Japanese." By hearing these comments, I know my students are understanding the struggles that the Japanese Americans went through during WWII.
In reading, Maximizing the impact- The pivotal role of technology in the 21st Century, it talks about using research based approaches, both for the teachers and for the students to learn.(pg. 3) I think that some learning has shifted from teacher centered, to student centered. We need to give the students the freedom and the skills to research about topics they are interested in.
In my 8th grade English class, we are reading Farewell to Manzanar. I found two wonderful websites that had primary sources online for them to read about Japanese Internment camps. One website had various newspaper articles from the Los Angeles and San Francisco areas during the time. I had each student find an article, summarize it and then present it to the class. I had my students share their article link and summary with me via google drive. The second website I had them look at, had all of the Japanese Internet camps listed. I assigned each student a specific internment camp(I only have 8 students) and then had them answer various questions I handed out to them. I had them create a PowerPoint or Prezi and they will be presenting them in my class next week. I also made sure to have them include at least seven pictures with captions for us to look at. By reading the newspaper articles and researching about a specific camp, it has really opened up my students eyes as to what our main character and her family have been going through in our book. I think it hits home for some of them because our book takes place in Long Beach in the beginning. I keep hearing my students say: "Wow, that's not fair! I can't believe they had to rush out of their homes and leave everything, just because they were Japanese." By hearing these comments, I know my students are understanding the struggles that the Japanese Americans went through during WWII.
Standard 5.2 Collecting and analyzing assessment data from a variety of sources to inform instruction: In the video, Differentiating Instruction Through Interactive Games (Tech2Learn Series), the teacher talks about his different ways that he is about to analyze the student's assessment data from different games that they are playing. It was hard for me to relate to this video because I teach middle school, but I have my students use other online tools.
At our school, we use the Scholastic reading program. Three times a year, we have our students log into the system and take a reading comprehension test. The end result is being able to find out what their lexile range is. I only allow my students to pick their independent reading book that is around their exile range. Also, most of the books our students read, there will also be a short quiz that goes along with it through Scholastic. So, once a quarter, my students will log in and take a quiz on their book. If their book is not in the system, then they can create their own quiz.
At our school, we use the Scholastic reading program. Three times a year, we have our students log into the system and take a reading comprehension test. The end result is being able to find out what their lexile range is. I only allow my students to pick their independent reading book that is around their exile range. Also, most of the books our students read, there will also be a short quiz that goes along with it through Scholastic. So, once a quarter, my students will log in and take a quiz on their book. If their book is not in the system, then they can create their own quiz.
Standard 5.5 Involving all students in self-assessment, goal setting, and monitoring progress.
Not only do I set goals, but at the start of each quarter, I have my students answer about four questions that are for their goals for the current quarter. For quarters two, three and four, I have them reflect on their previous quarter to see if they achieved their goals. I encourage them to set realistic goals that they think they can achieve each quarter.
In reading, Maximizing the impact- The pivotal role of technology in the 21st Century, it says: "Technology also can support teachers with professional development." (pg. 11) As teachers, we are constantly setting goals for both our classes and for ourselves. I recently returned from teaching in Asia and I know that technology is area that I want the most professional development in. I feel like so many schools have great technology based learning going on!
Not only do I set goals, but at the start of each quarter, I have my students answer about four questions that are for their goals for the current quarter. For quarters two, three and four, I have them reflect on their previous quarter to see if they achieved their goals. I encourage them to set realistic goals that they think they can achieve each quarter.
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