web 2.0 for educators

Post on 19-Nov-2014

1.283 Views

Category:

Education

2 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

DESCRIPTION

Dr. Voltz presentation to educators on how they can use Web 2.0 tools in today's classrooms and schools.

TRANSCRIPT

1

Web 2.0for Educators

Dr. Richard J. VoltzAssociate Director

Illinois Association of School Administrators

QuickTime™ and aH.264 decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

3

5

6

QuickTime™ and aJVT/AVC Coding decompressorare needed to see this picture.

SocialnomicsOver half the world's population is under 30 years old

•96% of  Millennials have joined a social network

•Facebook tops Google for weekly traffic in the US

•1 out of 8 couples in the US met via social media

•80% of companies use social media for recruitment (and 95% of that percentage use LinkedIn)

• Ashton Kutcher and  Britney Spears have more Twitter followers than the entire populations of Sweden, Israel, Switzerland, Ireland, Norway and Panama combined - 4.8 million each

•50% of mobile internet traffic in the UK is for Facebook

•78% of Wikipedia content is in languages other than English

•25% of search results for the world's top 20 largest brands are links to user-generated content

•90% of people skips ads via  TiVo/ DVR

Think-Pair-ShareWhat implications does the information in this video have to do with

education?

Slides available at http://bit.ly/9pDPt7

What do you want to get out of this

workshop?

14

Is this your school?

Would you like your school to look like

this?

Improving literacy with iPod touch

Morning announcements with iPod touch

Mooresville, NC Trip

Marzano Study

• Evaluation Study of the Effects of Promethean ActivClassroom on Student Achievement

• Results clearly show that technology … makes a positive impact on learning

• Content, and knowing what you're trying to teach, is key.

22

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

23

Mooresville Statistics

• From 38 to 8 in student achievement in two years after 1:1

• May be number 1 this year

• Increased attendance

• Decreased suspensions

• All 34 sub-categories meet NCLB except 1

Yes and...If my school had a

1:1 program ...

Yes but...If my school looked

like the previous pictures ...

Change is difficult…make it fun

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

If a blind student can compete in HS athletics, you can learn Web 2.0...

30

Let’s Learn Twitter

http://twitter.com/

http://bit.ly/

34

35

36

37

Blogger: Anne Peoples, University of Ulster

Helene Blowers has identified the new Digital Divide (Reality Check 2.010), as one between those with the skills to find and use information and those without.  Among some of the skills she highlights are:

•Knowing how to “think” about search•Knowing how to validate soft information•Knowing how to get information to travel to you instead of chasing it•Knowing where to find information in new “hot” channel

38

Google MagicFill and LookUp Function

39

QuickTime™ and aJVT/AVC Coding decompressorare needed to see this picture.

39

40

Do students learn different today,

should educators change?

What technology do you think students

want in the classroom today?

43

Technology kids want in their classrooms...

• Laptops• Bluetooth• Cell Phone• Digital Camera• Graphing Calculator• Nintendo NS• Video Camera• Flash Drive

4444

4646

Chatterous

http://chatterous.com/iasa/

48

Five K-12 Technology Trends for 2010by Bridget McCrea THE journal 12/10/09

1. eBooks will continue to proliferate

2. Netbook functionality will grow

3. More teachers will use interactive whiteboards

4. Personal devices will infiltrate the classroom

5. Technology will enable tailored curriculum

4949

Ustream video with your iPhone

http://ustre.am/cOSn

52

What do teachers and schools need to do to stay in front in this race toward 21st Century learning?

Think, Pair, Share

54

55

Get infrastructure in place

56

Have a plan

57

If public education spends $ on technology then we cannot

still teach the same.

59

Train Teachers

What is the best way to train teachers?

61

RV Idea

62

More RV Ideas...

63

Technology costs, where can you save?

64

Try new teaching strategies

jingproject.com

Mathtrain-1.TV   Probability with Ben and Jerry

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

68

Determine what works for you...

69

Remedial Software

70

Response generators

71

polleverywhere.com

72

http://bit.ly/9vvv4B

All of this is why we need to organize

teachers into Professional

Learning Communities

74

What I’d Buy Instead of an Interactive Whiteboard by Bill Ferriter, The Tempered Radical

• Give me $5,000-$6,000 to spend on a middle school classroom with 25 students and I’ll buy:

– 5 Netbook Computers  Cost:  $1,250

• Give me one netbook for every 5 kids in my classroom and I can create instant workstations for groups.

– 5 YEARS of VoiceThread for my Students   Cost:  $300

• With little digital skill, kids of all ages can interact in Socratic style conversations on school related topics with one another both in and out of school.

– 5 YEARS of Brainpop Access for my Classroom  Cost:  $731

• Brainpop is a service that creates short (3-5 minute) animated videos on topics across the curriculum.

– 5 YEARS of Access to Poll Everywhere  Cost:  $645

• What makes Poll Everywhere—an online application that allows teachers to create and deliver quick surveys—unique is that students can respond to surveys via text message from their cell phones, making the need for student responders obsolete in most middle school classrooms considering the number of students carrying cell phones to school each day.

– A Mid-Range Data Projector   Cost:  $595

– Total = $3,521– Camtasia Screencasting Software   Cost:  $179

75

Students need to be more involved in their own learning

As an educator what concerns you about 21st Century

Learning?

Whose world are we preparing students for ?

What kind of work will they do ?

What skills will they need ?

Why a Digital Conversion?

• Close the Digital Divide

• Relevant Instruction

• 21st Century Readiness (Half the jobs today require technology skills, expected to be 77% in the next decade - Bureau of Labor Statistics)

• Real World Experience

• Instructional Practice

• Improving Academic Achievement

New Views of Learning

. . . from traditional student learning rote memory of predetermined facts disseminated by teachers

. . . to cognitive science

students construct meaning by making

connections with prior knowledge

through language

DistrictPercent Proficient using EOG

Reading and Math; EOC

Per Pupil

Expenditure

1 Chapel Hill Carrboro 88% $10,579.00

2 Polk County 85% $10,449.00

3 Carteret County 83% $9,272.00

4 Transylvania County 83% $8,860.00

5 Watauga County 82% $8,305.00

6 Union County 82% $7,739.00

7 Camden County 81.9% $8,742.00

8 MGSD 81.8% $7,902.00

9 Yancey County 81.6% $9,417.00

10 Dare County 81.6% $11,011.00

Formula: Number of Proficient Test Scores on Reading Grades 3-8, Math Grades 3-8, and EOCs divided by the total number of tests taken in school year 2008-09.

Mooresville Graded School District305 N. Main StreetMooresville, North Carolina 28115704.658.2530704.663.3005 fax

MGSD Ranked

8th in State

NIU professor brings video games to class

• "Students would always be sort of on the edge of their seat watching this thing because it's just so cool to see how it works," Coller said of the video. "But that sentiment just ended as soon as you turned off the video, and then they're back to their boring old homework again."

• "Right away, they just really warmed up to it," Coller said. "They were incredibly jazzed about it. So right away, I just saw the learning levels were just so much higher and excitement levels were just so much higher than anything I had done before."

83

Video Conferencing

• Connect with experts

• Virtual Field Trips

• Working Together

• Accessing previously unavailable courses

• Teaching the teachers

The single most important factor in a student's

achievement is the quality of his or her teacher.

Reports by:The National Council on Teacher Quality ("Increasing the Odds," 2005) and

The New Teacher Project ("The Widget Effect," 2009)

Web 2.0 Enables

Web 2.0 Tools for Teachers by Nik Peachey

Socialization – Through socialization our students can use the language and skills they are learning to build networks and develop relationships with real people.

Web 2.0 Tools for Teachers by Nik Peachey

Collaboration – They can work together with others to construct

and share real knowledge.

Web 2.0 Tools for Teachers by Nik Peachey

Creativity – They can create genuine products, in a wide range and

combination of media to high standards, that will have a real audience.

Web 2.0 Tools for Teachers by Nik Peachey

Authenticity – The tasks and activities they do and the people

they communicate with to do them are real and motivating.

Web 2.0 Tools for Teachers by Nik Peachey

Sharing – They can share what they create and learn from each other.

Web 2.0 Tools for Teachers by Nik Peachey

ClassroomApplications

GoogleScreencasting

94

95

Google Docs to Prepare Tests

96

QuickTime™ and aJVT/AVC Coding decompressorare needed to see this picture.

97

98

Google Teacher Example

100

What could your students do?

105

And this…

Senior Emily Smak, 20, tries out the treadmill workstation in one of the study lounges in the new Education and Human Services Building at Central Michigan University. There is a new iMac computer attached to it so students can get a little exercise while doing homework or other things on the computer.

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

113

Do you think students are

more engaged outside of school than in school?

Did You Know 4.0

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

What is your school doing

about it?

Education, Today and Tomorrow

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Will paper copy library books ever be replaced with digital

books?

How close are we to 1:1 classroom

computing?

Virtual Textbooks

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/09/education/09textbook.html?_r=2&ref=education

At Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, a select group of freshmen received Kindles, an online book reader, instead of the textbooks.

Reading on the Kindle will get students to read

books independently, but it is also all-inclusive and boosts their reading and critical thinking skills

regardless of reading level, said Deanna Isley.

eDGe has an e-reader screen on the left and an LCD screen on the right for color displays

134

134

Student concentrates on an iPod learning program. Oswalt Elementary School third-graders use iPod Touches

for math and reading lessons at the Walnut campus Jan. 5, 2010

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Under $200 (Netbook & Linux)

Would you allow students to have their own mobile devices in

school?

141

142

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

iTunesU

Should we teach differently today because students learn

differently?

How young professionals say they learn.

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

“I can look it up on-line, find an expert and then collaborate with that person on a solution.”

Break-Out Session

154

What app do you want to see?http://bit.ly/9vvv4B

A Classroom Today

Scribes Team:Have students use Google Docs

to take class notes

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Research team:Use Google

and AltaVista for students to do research

Tutorial Team:Students and teachers can use Jing

to Create Screencasts

Jing

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Teachers can make screenshot

tutorials

Teachers can record lessons

• Put on web site• Absent students can view• Students on homebound instruction can view• Students who need to view and hear for

further understanding can view• When teacher is absent, real teacher is actually

teaching

Record Lecture Using ProfCastSave to GarageBand

Embed in iWebUpload to WebPage

Jing for grading...

171

QuickTime™ and aJVT/AVC Coding decompressorare needed to see this picture.

Curriculum Team:Have Students Make Video and

Audio Podcasts

YouTube

• Started in February 2005• Bought by Google in November 2006 for

$1.65M• Already has more content than TV and TV

started in 1940’s.• If TV played 24/7 since inception, YouTube still

has more content.

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Digital Education The Hollywood Treatment at NECC

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

http://kidsvid.4teachers.org/

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Tortoise Run

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Educational Videos byDeveloper of Wikipedia

Teachers and Students can make their own web pages using Ning,

Wiki, WordPress, and others

Ning

http://iasa4u.ning.com/

Wiki

http://iasa.wikispaces.com/

193

QuickTime™ and aJVT/AVC Coding decompressorare needed to see this picture.

Global team:Teachers can use e-pals and Skype

to connect to others all over the world.

Teachers can use SkypeIn their classrooms

197

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Skype Teacher Resources

• http://aroundtheworldwith80schools.wikispaces.com• http://Onlineprojects4teachers• http://Skypeforeducators• http://Skypeinschools.pbworks.com• http://Skypeanauthor.wetpaint.com• http://skyeintheclassroom.wordpress.com

How does digital text (hypertext) change education?

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

YouTube - Hudson Flight 1549 HD Animation with audio for US Airways Water Landing-1

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

How open should the Internet be for teachers?

How open should the Internet be for students?

Social Networking in School

NSBA Survey (July 2007)

• 52% of schools prohibit social networking• Problem is student safety on-line• List of Educational Networking sites at

http://www.educationalnetworking.com/List+of+Networks

http://thejournal.com/articles/2009/09/16/social-networking-in-schools-incentives-for-participation.aspx

Add Twitter To Your Communication

214

Follow me on Twitter at rvoltz and IllinoisASA

http://twitter4teachers.pbworks.com/

Teachers use Twitter

• To communicate with students and parents on homework and class activities

• To link up with other teachers in a type of professional learning community

Start discussing:“ What is the future

computer for classroom use?”

http://www.cellphonesinlearning.com/

Encourage teachers to engage students in their own learning

“We should instead use technology funding to bolster new learning models and innovations, such as online-learning environments, to level the playing field and allow students from all walks of life -- from small, rural communities to budget-strapped urban schools -- to access the rich variety that is now available only to children in wealthy suburban districts.”

Inspiring Idea

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Start Your Own Blog

Read Blogs

• Look for blogs written by people who share your interest

• Who do these bloggers follow?• Who comments to these blogs?• Comment to the blog yourself

Start an audio Podcast and update regularly

For studentsFor parents

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

http://bit.ly/7fyVVs

To join IASA4U.NING.COM

rvoltz@iasaedu.org

top related