Archive for the ‘Teaching’ Category

Laptop Workshop

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2003

Tonight is my night to work late so I have been busy trying to put together a simple workshop to convince the faculty here of the merits of having wireless laptops in their classrooms. 

I decided to put it together on a weblog so I could use it again, if needed.

Like I said, the night is late and I will look at this again tomorrow but if any of you have any suggestions or know of other sites or points I could make, please help!  I feel like I need something else to add some joy!

Also, I have been fighting with Manila tonight.  It is doing strange things like refusing to make small letters, adding bullets in strange spaces, and so forth.  Nothing like a good skirmish with Manila, huh?

 Laptop Workshop


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Meeting with Literature Circles Group

Tuesday, September 2nd, 2003

Today I had an overview session with the “Literature Circles” group.  I used my Weblog Workshop and browsed through parts of it, showing them examples and discussing possibilities.  Then we zeroed in on the Literature Circles weblog and the sample one Lynne Jordan and I are doing.  It is so nice to have the time to give an overview before actually teaching the “how-to’s”.  Now this group has time to think about it and  check out the samples before we start building the EduBlogs.  We are going to put them in groups of 4 or 5 and let them select their own book.  The students asked good questions. They were very interested in the comments part and wanted to know what was expected of them.  I’m thinking that it might be helpful for them if we write up some guidelines in this area but I want them to be creative and sometimes handouts stifle that! Lynne and I are thinking this through some more.

Some were even thinking of possibilities for students.  One student said her classroom teacher is very interested in what they will be doing - great! This is a terrific group with an excellent teacher.  I’ll be meeting with them again on September 16th. 


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Writing to the Moment

Friday, August 29th, 2003

via <BlogDex>

Official Blog for Dr. Chuck Tryon’s English 1101 courses at Georgia Tech. Opinions expressed are those of the writer(s), not Georgia Tech.

Found some more university blogs (both students and professor) at Georgia Tech, right down the road from me…….students reading and analyzing blogs…I like the concept. 

He’s asking his students to focus on:

(1) locating a central argument; (2) analyzing the language and style of the argument; and (3) determining how the author establishes ethos, pathos, and logos.


On
The Chutry Experiment Dr. Tyron talks about the first week.

I just finished my first week of teaching here at Georgia Tech, and not surprisingly, I’m pretty exhausted. I always forget how much energy preparing for and teaching three classes requires. As promised, I’ve linked to my course blog (with student links in the blogroll). Perceptive readers will note that I stole the title for my course from George, who borrowed it from Samuel Richardson.

So far, most of my students have expressed some enthusiasm despite this week’s technological nightmares (viruses everywhere, server problems, that sort of thing), but this is my first experience using blogs in a writing course, so I’m not quite sure what to expect. Several of my students, some of whom have written in blogs or participated in bulletin boards seem to be pretty enthusiastic.

In my case, blogging will account for about 25% of the grade, with that grade divided between quantitative and qualitative (a reflective portfolio) measures. I’ll set up a link to the course syllabus once I have it online (hopefully next week).

I’ll be following along with interest to see what these students write. 

Who is Skip Dodson?

Friday, August 29th, 2003

Great session last night with the MSIT group.  The class is Design and Development of Multimedia for Education and Training.  They’re a sharp group, caught on quickly, and handled Manila glitches well (you know the story, one or two sites just acted up and who knows why).   Plus, they were a fun group to teach!  Dr. Calandra is great and emphasized to the class that they would be reading, discussing, and developing multimedia for LEARNING.

Weblogs were created and they’re ready to go. Dr. Calandra will be going over the specifics of what he wants them to do on their weblogs later so when they are up and going, hopefully, they will want to share what they are doing.

An interesting note to mention…….when they saw my weblog where I discussed the session and showed them comments from some of you I detected a little bit of alarm from them as to the openness of weblogs and the fact that people would be reading their weblogs. One of the comments - who is Skip Dodson?  They wanted to know who these people were that were already making comments about their class.  Now we all know that that is the best part of weblogs - the learning, the growing, the sharing, and the formation of a community of learners.  We are so used to the back and forth comraderie.  We don’t even think twice about it, we love it!  However, when you are just learning, knowing that an audience is out there and so immediate can be intimidating.  I spent some time talking with them on that aspect. Dr. Calandra understands the nature of weblogs and took time to further the discussion along that line.

Have any of you had this part come up?  How do you alleviate the concerns?   An important part of all this is for us to share in this area, too.  We want to empower but not shut them down in these important beginning stages of learning the power of weblogs.  I plan to continue to get feedback from them later on their thoughts, concerns, and ideas. 

This group is a tech-savy group but those few moments of alarm coming from a tech-savy group gave me pause to re-think.  It parallels with the students being afraid of putting their writing out there for others to see.  No matter how you cut it, there is always that element of fear and apprehension.  It’s not just fear of writing for others to see but a complicated mixture of learning something new, wrapping your brain around a new way of communicating, and then realizing at the same time that you may just be  doing all of this for quite a large audience. Attention is being called to you by others - that’s not everyone’s cup of tea.  Emotions are so important in learning.  Any comments?

An aside to Skip - hope you don’t mind my title but it just seemed to fit the session.  :-)


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More on Those Just Beginning the Weblog Journey

Thursday, August 28th, 2003

I’m putting the final touches on my Weblog Workshop site for this afternoon. I plan to close with thoughts & reflections for those beginning the weblog journey. I’m trying to keep it simple yet relevant. Comments are welcome!

Here they are:

  • At first, keep it simple. There is much to learn. Don’t worry about what you don’t know. Just focus on how much you can achieve with learning just a little. That’s one of the amazing things about weblogs.
  • There is not a “right” or a “wrong” way to post. This is an area that is wide open for exploration of learning possiblilities for both students and teachers.
  • Although you will probably begin by creating a weblog for your own use, keep students in mind throughout the process. Students need lots of practice engaging in exciting, collaborative learning activities where they have to discuss, think, contribute, read, and write. Weblogs are a perfect place for this so include them in your thoughts and planning.
  • Don’t agonize over your postings. Of course you want to write well. What you have to say is important. But don’t get lost in feeling that every post needs to be perfect. We need more education voices (and student voices) heard!
  • Try to post on a regular basis. If you don’t have time to collect all your thoughts, go ahead and post the beginning of a thought or an idea. You can always go back and add more later in a future post.
  • Take the time to comment on your fellow classmate’s weblogs, as well as others you visit. This is the way online communities develop and grow.
  • If you are quoting another source be sure to give them credit.
  • Be sure to write a little about yourself on the About link. People visiting your site want to know a little about you and why you created a weblog.
  • The links you create on the side will be of interest to those visiting your site. I always check that out and love when I find a new link that leads to further learning!
  • Get ready to enter an exciting world of weblog possibilities. You’ll be joining a community of learners like yourself. I have learned so much from a cohort of dynamic, interesting, and caring EduBloggers. It’s inservice in its best form, designed by us, for us.
  • Have fun and enjoy the learning journey!

Literature Circles EduBlogs Coming Up!

Tuesday, August 19th, 2003

I met again yesterday with Lynne Jordan, early education literacy instructor.  I have created the main weblog, Literature Circles. It links to our Literacy & Technology Teacher’s EduBlog.  Lynne and I are going to complete a few chapters of Bud, Not Buddy to use as a sample for the pre-service teachers.  I won’t be teaching the class until September, but Lynne is giving me time to come talk about weblogs first and then two sessions are planned with the students.  The good thing about this group is that I will be doing other technology lessons with them so I will be available to help them as they need it on the weblogs.  Plus, this group will be going out into the schools before too long.  They can put it in the hands of the students!

I’m meeting today with the entire cohort for a planning session.  Lynne wants me to share what we are planning with the rest of the group.

I may “tweak” this some more so any suggestions are welcomed!

Thinking Out Loud

Wednesday, July 30th, 2003

I’ve been thinking about projects for this coming school year. I want a project that focuses once again on writing, thinking, and collaboration with others. I am thinking about forming a group of ESL students who would be paired with students from possibly a fifth grade classroom. I’m thinking out loud here so bear with me. The time would probably be just an hour for the ESL students as time out of class for them is hard to come by. I would have the other students for two hours. We would meet once a week. I’m thinking of having the ESL students talk to their other “half” (not sure if I will set up topics based on a theme, stick with current events, vocabulary development activities that are fun, let it free-flow, or have a combination of these). This would be a type of language experience type approach, if needed. I know the ESL kids need more authentic speaking and writing activities and a chance to participate more with technology. I do know that I want to make sure that they have an audience who will respond to what they are writing - another class or a group of volunteers that I can gather together. I would probably start with a class weblog, then branch off to “pair” weblogs or “individual weblogs”. Anyway, I’m just a thinking. What do you think?  Any thoughts or suggestions from all of you out there would be appreciated!

What’s it Like to Teach Using Only Blogs?

Tuesday, June 10th, 2003

Individual Student Blogs and Class-wide Blogs: What’s it Like to Teach Using Only Blogs?

This is an interesting example of teaching using only blogs. FSU has a course (ENC 1102),  which is a second semester of a required two semester composition sequence at FSU. There are two instructors team-teaching with about 50 students broken into three secions of students participating in coursle/online weblog community.

They used blogger and had a class website  and individual student sites. Blogging was the main form of interaction, supplemented by email. The email component was used mostly for exchanging drafts and for response purposes.

Students created blogs on Tripod.  Links to the student sites are on the teaching assistant’s page.

Note this comment from the instructor:

I got to know my students (and they me) better in this online class than I ever have in my face to face classes. All that interacting (email, commuity weblog, individual blogsites) we did made me much more approachable to them, both when we were on the class website and via email. And the ones who blogged about their regular lives on their individual blogsites…I felt like I really got to know everyone.

The way blogging promoted friendship  between classmates in ways they “hadn’t been brave enough to hope for when we were planning the course” was discussed.

The professor also noted some of the difficulties experienced by students:

On the flip side of this, some students had trouble making their first papers flow and be properly linear because they were pulling material straight from their blogs. Making the transition from blogging to traditional paper actually, in retrospect, seemed more difficult for students than the transition from traditional paper writing to hypertext writing. In the future, I might skip the traditional paper altogether and ask students to write all of their major assignments in hypertext. This makes sense too, because all of the writing students did for the class (except that traditional paper) was for the web.

The tripod blog is for paying subscribers only. They have a feature called “Blog Buddy Page” which lets you create a page that displays the entries of your friends’ blogs. They also have community blogs that are shared so multiple authors can post to the blog. Their BLOG FAQ was interesting to read.

 


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XPlana Becoming a Must Read

Tuesday, May 20th, 2003

The ieSpell tool highlighted on XPlana  by Laura Gibbs is a little plug-in utility for Internet Explorer that allows you to spellcheck any text that you type into a web form.

Here’s the blurb at the ieSpell website:

ieSpell is a free Internet Explorer browser extension that spell checks text input boxes on a webpage. It should come in particularly handy for users who do a lot of web-based text entry (e.g. web mails, forums, blogs, diaries). Even if your web application already includes spell checking functionality, you might still want to install this utility because it is definitely much faster than a server-side solution. Plus you get to store and use your personal word list across all your applications, instead of maintaining separate ones on each application.

Laura has also written an article about IRFANView which is free image editing software from IRFANView. 

Laura writes the following:

Anyway, this piece of software is definitely worth your consideration - if you want your students to learn something about image manipulation, this is the best free tool that I can think of. Here are just some of its many features:

  • All standard image file types supported

  • Cropping and resizing

  • Image rotation

  • Sharpen, blur, and other filter effects

One other article focused on Composer.  We use that here at Georgia State for outgoing teachers to publish their ePortfolios.  It is a great FREE tool.

XPlana is not losing sight of  this need yet still provides a great cross section of resources for all of us in education.  They are becoming a daily must-read for me.  Thank-you XPlana!


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