Below you will find a link to my final project for my Digital Learning Applications class.
Please click here to go to my project or copy and paste this link:
https://sway.office.com/9E3B5vYyVxC0QIOP?ref=Link
Lessons learned in EDU311 Digital Applications.
Below you will find a link to my final project for my Digital Learning Applications class.
Please click here to go to my project or copy and paste this link:
https://sway.office.com/9E3B5vYyVxC0QIOP?ref=Link
Interview on
Standardized Testing:
1.
What is the purpose of standardized testing? Do you think they work?
2.
It has been determined that students take an
average of 112 standardized tests from the time they enter Pre-K until they graduate
from 12th grade. Do you
think we test the students too much?
3.
Does the time used to prep students for
standardized tests take away from your mandated curriculum?
4.
Do you think that the tests do more harm then
good? And why?
Interview on Virtual Learning:
1.
What do you like about virtual learning?
“It’s a shorter time. I don’t have class as long.”
2.
What do you miss not attending classes in
person?
“My friends. And participating in class and writing on the
board.”
3.
Do you feel that you’re learning more or less
with virtual learning? Why?
“I think more. There’s more independent work so there’s not
a lot of talking to bother you.”
4.
Do you think it’s harder or easier to ask the
teacher for help?
“It’s easier, because you can hit
the button on the screen “raise your hand.”
I don’t have to raise my hand and he (the teacher) doesn’t have to look
around. He can see it on the screen.”
5.
If you could change one thing about virtual learning,
what would it be?
Nothing. I wouldn’t change anything. It’s fine the way it is. it is.
Students
can develop critical thinking skills when assigned the role of student
researcher. Becoming a researcher
hopefully engages students in the learning process. They learn to find, vet, and publish
information. They learn to find credible
websites and by this, I mean that they learn to assess whether a site is
promoting a product, belief or facts.
They learn to improve their use of search tools, such as the advanced
search option using specific key words or phrases, as well as other
“smartsearch” techniques such as link.
Learning how to use these tools teaches students how to do a more direct
search than they are used to doing. They
have to think outside the box, which helps them develop critical thinking
skills. They learn to ask better
questions, find factual and correct answers and apply the information found to
their lesson or project.
The
difficulties I foresee in assigning students the role of student researcher is
that they don’t know how to do a correct online search, choose unreliable
websites and perhaps plagiarize material that they do find.
If
I had to design an assessment that required my students to use the internet,
the assessment would involve students providing deep thought into the
questions. If they were learning about the US taking land from the Native
Americans, questions could be along the lines of: Why did the US believe it was okay to take
Native American land by force? Why do
you think the Native Americans signed contracts to give their land to the
US? Do you think the US had the right to
take their land? In order for the
question to differ from a memorization question, the question would have to
based on critical thinking skills.
Students would have to take what they learned and apply it to the
question.
In my podcast, I discuss lessons I learned from
Charlie Brown and his gang. To hear my podcast, click here
In the
case of doing the wiki, jobs that can be created are researchers, scribes, global
communicator/collaborators, and tutorial designers. Researchers would conduct research on the
topic of the wiki. Global communicators
can interview others across the country or around the world and incorporate an
interview into the wiki. The scribe can
take notes during a lesson on the topic or take notes during the
interview. The tutorial designer can
create tutorials for the topic or create a tutorial on how to use apps or
equipment that may be needed to create pages on a wiki or even a blog post. And each of the jobs entails others, such as editors,
sharers, greeters, photographers, videographers, and web posters.
In just a daily lesson, student jobs that can be incorporated into a classroom include scribes and researchers, which incorporates editors. You can also have jobs that use sharers, greeters, photographers and videographers when there is a classroom visitor/speaker.
When I
look back at my time in school, the things that I remember most are the times
when I shined in class. When I was proud
of something I did or something I made on my own. Or even when I had a sense of
purpose and helped others.
I can help my students create an educational legacy by
giving them the means to build their confidence, offering them opportunities to
collaborate, and create work that they are proud of, work that they will share
with or create for their class. It has
been proven that because students care more about what their peers think, they
will put in the extra effort to get it right. Even giving students a sense of
empowerment by providing them with projects that will live on with others or
within themselves will create an educational legacy for students. Confidence, purpose
and empowerment creates motivation. Motivation
inspires students to take ownership of their work and creates a sense of pride.
Having students work together on a classroom project,
create a fundraiser for those less fortunate, or create a class blog where
everyone participates and contributes are just a few ways that will assist
students in creating an educational legacy that would outlast their own student
experiences, experiences that will remain with them and last a lifetime.
Below you will find a link to my final project for my Digital Learning Applications class. Please click here to go to my project or copy an...