websites as instructional tools a website is a terrible thing to waste
DESCRIPTION
Websites as Instructional Tools A Website Is A Terrible Thing To Waste. Carolynn Mortensen. Problem or Need Background. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Websites as Instructional
ToolsA Website Is A Terrible
Thing To Waste
Carolynn Mortensen
Problem or Need Background
As educators, we strive to provide students with a wide-range of knowledge so that they will become productive members of society. We must use best practices supported by research to optimize the opportunity to achieve this goal.
The research is clear that parents’ involvement in their child’s education improves outcomes in areas such as learning, attendance, behavior, and graduation rate. Increased and meaningful communication between home and school enhances parent involvement. (Center for the Study of Education Policy, 2004, p. 100)
Center for the Study of Education Policy, (2004). School/home communication: using technology to enhance parental Iinvolvement. Retrieved from http://www.eric.ed.gov/PDFS/ED514357.pdf
The need is to ensure teachers are employingclassroom websites to enhance communication betweenHome and school. The problem is to provide the tools and training to educators in such a way that they are most likely to incorporate the classroom website as a standard in their teaching practices.
Process of Development (Barriers)
•LCMS System• Individual District Provides Hosting and Management
•Training Hours•Home Internet Access For Parents and Teachers
• Proper use of websites as educational tools
• Maintaining current information
• Parent Support• Teacher Support• Administrative
Support
• Parents• Teachers• Schools• Districts
Hardware Training
FundingImplementation
Findings For Innovation: - Fidonet: S Curve
The first use of websites asinstructional tools was in the formof the CBBS or computerized bulletinboard system. Through this innovation, schools around the world were able to communicateon academic topics and schoolswere also able to communicatewith their students often providing a “homework hotline”Type of program or a socialnetwork for students to meet online (monitored by teachersAt the school).
The S-curve ends sharply when the Internet with graphics became popular and school began to provide teachers a classroom website like we think of today.
1995 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 19920
5000
10000
15000
20000
25000
Year
Num
ber
of N
odes
(BB
S si
tes)
Bush, R. (1993). FidonNet: Technology, Use, Tools, and History. Retrieved July 21, 2011, from http://www.fidonet.org/inet92_Randy_Bush.txt
The growth of the Internet swept theworld as depicted in this S-Curvechart, opening the doors for theclassroom website as a viable tool tofurther educational goals.
Internet Growth Statistics - Global Village Online. (n.d.). . Retrieved July 21, 2011, from http://www.internetworldstats.com/emarketing.htm
Findings For Innovation: - Internet Use: S Curve
Findings For Innovation: - Modern Classroom Website: S Curve
Gathering statistics now on this hard-to-find data!
Bush, R. (1993). FidonNet: Technology, Use, Tools, and History. Retrieved July 21, 2011, from http://www.fidonet.org/inet92_Randy_Bush.txt
Commercialization: Behind The Current Leaning Community ManagementSystems (LCMS)
The Learning Community Management System (LCMS) is a relatively new term in education technology. The concept involves combining the idea of a content management system for providing district, campus, and classroom websites with other critical education tools such as gradebooks and lesson planning applications. Along with these resources, today’s LCMS may provide teachers the ability to create quizzes and tests and additional communication avenues.
The popularity of the classroom website in education has created a demand for a tool that supports teachers at all levels of skill and technology integration abilities and provides a consistent and
professional look for the hosting district.
Current LCMS providers include:• edline: www.edline.com• Schoolwires: www.schoolwires.com• Moodle: www.moodle.org (open source)
Websites as Instructional Tools: Innovators and Early Adopters
oInnovators•New teachers •Campus Technology Leaders•District Educational Technology Trainers/Department
oEarly Adopters•Learner-centered classroom teacher who acts as
facilitator
Dias, L. B. (1999). Integrating technology. Learning and Leading with Technology, 27, 10–13.
Websites as Instructional Tools: Laggards
oLaggards•Teachers unwilling to change the way they teach their
students•Teachers unwilling to change their role in the classroom
or their classroom physical arrangement•Teachers unwilling to use new tools to teach•Often teachers near the end of the teaching career
Dias, L. B. (1999). Integrating technology. Learning and Leading with Technology, 27, 10–13.
Websites as Instructional Tools: Strategies to Facilitate Adoption
•Create a common vision: Determine the goal of the innovation and ensure that this goal is reinforced with adopters.
•Plan carefully: Prepare a roll-out plan and introduce the new innovation thoughtfully.
•Plan for the Barriers: Be prepared to address barriers before they happen.
•Model expectations: Model the expected behavior as much as possible.•Ongoing Support: Provide ongoing support through online web pages, tutorials, and easily accessible resources.
• Help educators recognize their progress and understand it is a process that takes time.
Dias, L. B. (1999). Integrating technology. Learning and Leading with Technology, 27, 10–13.
TRANSITIONAL With Section Titles
References• Koeber, C. (2005). Introducing Multimedia Presentations and a Course Website to an Introductory
Sociology Course: How Technology Affects Student Perceptions of Teaching Effectiveness. Teaching Sociology, 33(3), 285 -300. doi:10.1177/0092055X0503300309
• McMillen, P. S., & Pehrsson, D.-E. (n.d.). EBSCOhost: Improving a Counselor Education Web Site through Usability Testing: The Bib... Retrieved June 19, 2011, from http://web.ebscohost.com.ezp.waldenulibrary.org/ehost/pdfviewer/pdfviewer?vid=10&hid=107&sid=38ad2503-14de-4c66-a849-1d6d0525169a%40sessionmgr111
• National Standards for Parent/Family Involvement Programs. (n.d.). . Retrieved from http://www.ptasonline.org/kspta/national_standards.pdf
• Risinger, C. F. (n.d.). Promising Practices in Using the Internet to Teach Social Studies. Retrieved from http://linksource.ebsco.com.ezp.waldenulibrary.org/FullText.aspx?linkout=http%3a%2f%2fezp.waldenulibrary.org%2flogin%3furl%3dhttp%3a%2f%2ffind.galegroup.com%2fopenurl%2fopenurl%3furl_ver%3dZ39.88-2004%26url_ctx_fmt%3dinfo%253Aofi%252Ffmt%253Akev%253Amtx%253Actx%26req_dat%3dinfo%253Asid%252Fgale%253Augnid%253Aminn4020%26res_id%3dinfo%253Asid%252Fgale%253AEAIM%26ctx_enc%3dinfo%253Aofi%253Aenc%253AUTF-8%26rft_val_fmt%3dinfo%253Aofi%252Ffmt%253Akev%253Amtx%253Ajournal%26rft.issn%3d0037-7724%26rft.volume%3d70%26rft.issue%3d7-%26rft.spage%3d409
• School/Home Communication: Using Technology to Enhance Parent Involvement. (n.d.). . Retrieved from http://www.eric.ed.gov/PDFS/ED514357.pdf