Saturday, October 12, 2013
Tuesday, October 8, 2013
Section 7
The Internet provides
educators with endless opportunities to enhance student learning. I teach World
History, and for so long this subject has been taught in the classic sit and
get format. Perhaps the notion is that history has happened and the teacher is
there to teach the students what happened, why it happened, when it happened,
etc. E-Learning provides an outlet in which students can apply their knowledge,
and more importantly, expand on what they are being taught. As I have mentioned
so many times before, we live in an age in which the information is easily
assessable without the need of a teacher. Educators are now encouraged to be facilitators.
Some teachers refuse to honor this because they feel the need to teach in a
traditional manner. Whether it be arrogance or fear, the fact of the matter is
that educators are not meeting the needs of their students. In my classroom, I
can teach about the French Revolution. I can tell them the causes and effects,
and even have them analyze the cause and effect relationships to other
revolutions they are to learn. What E-Learning can do for my students, is allow
them to connect with the French Revolution. They don’t have to stick with other
revolutions from the textbook such as the Russian Revolution or the American
Revolution. They can actually compare the French Revolution to modern day
revolutions. For example, the Arab Spring has emerged in the last few years.
Although some of my students have never really heard of the revolutions taking
place, they can learn about them and visualize what an actual revolution looks
like because of the Internet. They can understand the ideas of indoctrination and
totalitarianism whenever they watch a youtube video provided my Lisa Ling (sp?)
as she snuck into North Korea and gave us a glimpse of this sort of
dictatorship first hand. This not only makes the content relatable, it ignites
passion within my students. They want to KNOW why and how, and they DESIRE to
learn more. It’s amazing to watch their minds race and their eyebrows lifted in
amazement.
Reusable design is a
great way to have our students interact with the course content. A program that
was introduced to my department, and that I have not yet used, is called
stratelogica. It is a program that provides maps from every era in history and
can be as detailed as showing every battlefield in history. The students can
interactively participate in this program and it gives them the opportunity to
become a part of the learning process. For example, they can take a portion of
the map and create their own legends and essentially design their own maps with
the use of their new and old knowledge.
We no longer need to pass out copies of maps (what a waste of paper!)
and we can instead give the students a digital means in which to learn
essential geography skills. I plan to take some courses provided by our district
that will give me a thorough lesson in how to facilitate learning through this
fantastic program.
As I read this chapter, I immediately thought
of Virgin Airlines. I have only flown Virgin once, but what an experience it
was for me. As I have flown many times before, I cannot think of one time I
actually paid attention to or listened to what happens if the plane were to
encounter trouble. It was boring, and my thought was if we are going down then
we are going down and there is not a thing I can do about it and I would
probably have heart attack and die immediately anyway. But Virgin Airlines did
it right, and for the first time ever, I paid attention and knew exactly what
to do in case of an emergency. This airline used a video (not flight
attendants) to explain what to do in case of an emergency and how to act on a
plane. It was hilarious, innovative, and I literally wanted to watch it again
after. In fact, whenever I got home I searched the web for the video so I could
watch it again and share it with my husband. Now that is rich media! Here is
the link:
(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eyygn8HFTCo)
. As I began this course, media instruction began to weigh heavily on my mind.
I began to scan the Internet for innovative videos to use in order to grasp the
attention of my students. I found a guy, John Green, who has created a series
of World History crash courses that are 8-12 minutes long and cover various
periods of history. It is hilarious, relevant, and very innovative, much like
the video I fell in love with on Virgin Airlines. Next semester I plan to start
using these videos to introduce or conclude ( I have not decided yet) each remaining
unit. I cannot wait to see the impact it will have in my classroom.
Sunday, October 6, 2013
Section 6
I teach World History at the 10th grade
level. I am currently in my 12th year, and have witnessed the
evolution from direct instruction to and IT classroom. I feel as though my
undergraduate experiences did not prepare me for the current state of
education. Whenever To put things into perspective, when I was in college, we
used only Library books in order to complete research papers. In addition to
meeting various criteria in obtaining my Masters Degree, it is my hope that I
gain an understanding of how to implement technology into my daily lesson
cycle. I also desire to continue my education in the field of technology in
order to maintain the proper knowledge and motivation in order to ensure a
successful learning environment for all my students.
I decided early on that I was not looking for an
economic income, but rather physiological fulfillment. While I do enjoy the
finer things in life, such as travel and food, I do not believe I will be happy
working a job in which I am unable to serve others. There are career paths I
could have chosen that provide both economic and psychological satisfaction,
however, I love teaching young people. I absolutely believe everyone is capable
of learning, and I know that everyone has the desire to learn; they just have
to find that spark that will ignite what is already inside of their soul.
Even in education, there are ways to move up the
professional ladder and even earn more money. As of now, I have little interest
in any supervising role. I much prefer to remain in the classroom with the goal
of inspiring young people to develop a love of learning, in addition to
critical thinking skills.
While I do
believe this class has offered me some important tools in continuing my goal of
creating a student-centered classroom with the use of Instructional Technology,
there is still a lot for me to learn. There are so many tools available through
the web and I need to continue to reshape my lesson cycle in such a way that it
reflects the technological revolution of the last decade. More than anything, I believe this class has
given me the motivation to spend more time lesson planning and researching how
my students learn, rather than focus on how I am going to teach them. I need to
learn to be more creative in my lesson cycle and give the students the
opportunity to take control of his or her learning and apply the knowledge that
I have in the past spent too much time giving them from in front of the
classroom.
I am
greatly inspired by people such as Kimone Gooden, who was able to quickly reach
low-income middle school students through the use of technology. She was a part
of a nonprofit organization called Citizen Teacher, whose aim is to give to
lower income students what students in higher income districts receive – high
quality education. Gooden explained, “Over the course of a semester I
witnessed the students' level of interest and excitement increase. I saw a new
awareness develop around what was possible that they did not envision before.
Engineering, marketing, and IT were now added to the list of careers our
students wanted to pursue when they grew up.” In just a few short weeks, this
woman, through the ideas and goals of a few volunteers, changed the course of
young peoples’ lives; and much of this was teaching them how to blog! (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/kimone-gooden/cisco-it-doesnt-take-a-teacher_b_3998540.html).
I am also inspired by people such as Cullen White, who teaches IP classes
and is frustrated that the classes he teaches are viewed in education as
electives, rather than core or AP classes. He is teaching young people
applicable and interesting ideas, and the administration in secondary education
is falling short in its commitment to excellence. Cullen writes, “The things we
explore together are far too interesting, too important. In one class, we're
learning how data moves from device to device, and how to build our own
networks. In another, we're building Web apps while learning how to obtain
feedback from users and analyze data. There is never a dull moment. Students
are constantly engaged by the meaningful, hands-on experiences that my classroom
provides. Why wouldn't they be? They know that what we learn matters, because
my courses mimic the same online, tech-enabled world that they grew up in. What
we do is immediately relevant to them” (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/cullen-white/cisco-our-future-depends-on-put_b_3962330.html). Cullen believes that if we do not adequately
prepare our students for the IT boom in the job industry, we could likely face
an economic crisis. Just like the beginning of this section discuses, history
has proven that many technological advancements have had huge impact on
societies – good and bad; but technology isn’t going away – so as much as we
grumble about the negative impact and disservice it does to our youth, we need
to realize it is here and moving fast, and we owe it to our young people to
prepare them properly.
For me, I will continue to take classes that will better prepare me for the
rapidity of this technological revolution. I have one more class to take before
graduating, and it is an ETEC course. Furthermore, I plan to take advantage of
the many continuing educational opportunities that my school district provides
in the way of technology.
Sunday, September 29, 2013
Section 5
For section 5, I chose to look at P-12 Education,
post-Secondary Education, and Health Education. I found many similarities and
differences in these three components. All three of these fields are constantly
searching for new and better ways to promote efficient learning. They also tend
to lean toward the notion that students learn best when directly involved in
their learning. This includes the need for all three components to ensure that
its faculty is staying up-to-date with the changes that constantly occur, which
results in an increase in knowledge on behalf of the students. Furthermore, all
three components receive government funding to research data and introduce new
technologies to the fields.
Some of the differences I noted were the motivation and
participation in faculty members, level of expectation and accountability for
faculty members, how government money is used, and the pressure placed on the
faculty involving risks and multiple task objectives. In post-Secondary education, the
administration has a tough time getting its faculty members to attend workshop
trainings and stay up to date on the technological advancement, which take
place from year to year. In P-12 education, it is require that teachers attend
various workshops, and I assume that teachers in elementary through the high
school level are held to a much higher standard. In Health Care Education, much
of the time faculty members are required to be professors/teachers/ mentors as
well as continue to actively practice medicine. This of course makes it
difficult for the faculty to divide their time evenly, as well as participate
in workshops and lectures related to their fields. Money is given to all three types of these
educational fields, but how the three components use the money is different. In
P-12 education, the money is not as freely used and has more restrictions. In
the university level, how the money is allocated depends on the University,
which is much different than P-12 education. In P-12 and post-Secondary
education, there are risks involved, to a degree. In P-12 there are end of
course exams and standardized tests that place a lot of pressure on the teacher
and gives them less freedom. Post-Secondary does not have these types of tests;
therefore, professors do not face these types of pressures. Health care education
is perhaps the riskiest of all three components. Many times, the decisions
faced by the faculty have a life and death outcome. This is very frightening,
and with regulations and standards in place (HIPPA laws and such) berries are
placed in front of the faculty in regards to teaching effectively.
It seems to me that all three components realize the need to
amend the current institution and evolve as the world around us changes. The difficulty
for all three of these fields, is that
they each have berries in place that make it difficult to implement Instructional
Design – some of these berries are outside influences the other issue is the difficulty
creating an atmosphere of motivated faculty members. My field of study is P-12 education, and I greatful to not have the risk involved in Health Care education. Although I get frustrated with all that is required of secondary educators, I see the consequenes (post-secondary education) for not having supportive faculty.
Sunday, September 22, 2013
Section 4
Chapter 14
One issue I have grappled with over the
years is time management within my school year. Each class period my students
are required to take a twenty-question short answer quiz. While this is
effective in preparing them for Unit exams and ensuring they are keeping up
with the rigorous workload, it is very time consuming for me. I spend so much
time grading these quizzes that I feel as though I could make better use of
that time lesson planning. One solution I came up with very recently is that I
have my students grade their own quiz the same day they take the quiz. I have
them use different color ink then they used while taking the quiz, and I go
over the entire quiz aloud as they check their answers. Not only has the
greatly impacted the amount of time I have to plan lessons, it has also been
very beneficial to their learning. They hear, almost immediately, the correct
answers to the quiz, instead of just waiting on me to grade them and hand them
back. Furthermore, I no longer rely on them to check their wrong answers to see
what the correct answer is; this ensures they are learning from their mistakes
and will be less likely to make the same mistake whenever it is time for their
unit test.
Chapter 15
I like how the text refers to
Performance Support as “band aids” that are in place in order to assist and
prepare an employee for situations that might arise which can hinder his or her
work performance. As I stated in the section above, deep into my teaching
career I noticed an issue with time management. I think that this is not an
issue that is isolated to my classroom, but is an ongoing issue for many
educators. We have so many responsibilities that are required of us, whenever
our main objective is to ensure a quality education for the learner. I believe
a good performance support system would be that educators are taught early on
about the importance of time management, and how to properly delegate the time
we spend on various tasks. Throughout an educator’s career, we are required to
take part in many staff development trainings. These trainings are required, in
addition to the extensive training we are require to have a the beginning of
our career. I cannot think of training that I have had in my 12-year career
that touched on time management. Perhaps a good Performance Support method for
this issue would be staff development support and training sessions
specifically designed to assist teachers in managing their time and numerous
responsibilities in a more efficient and effective manner.
Chapter 16
After reading chapter 16, I realized that Tactic
Knowledge would probably be the most useful type of knowledge that can be used
during a collaboration process. Often times, schools divide their teachers into
teams according to their grade and content area. This is an effective way for
teachers to share their prior knowledge, frustrations, concerns, and ideas with
one another. Veteran teachers are probably most equipped in discussing time
management. If I had been able to collaborate more with a veteran teacher
during my early years, perhaps they could have given me some advice as to how
to effectively allocate my time. In fact, the resolution I came up with, was
not 100 % my idea. I remembered a former teacher, now retired, who used to have
his students, grade his or her own tests. He would brag that his workload was
lessoned and he truly believed that the students learned from that grading
process. This teacher and I never collaborated, but if we had, perhaps he would
have encouraged me to do this a long time ago. I also like the idea of
Partner-supplier relationships. To me, this could mean that evaluate myself
more through my students. Perhaps I could find out if they feel they learn
better through grading their own quiz.
Chapter 17
I am in
informal learning advocate. Since the beginning of my career I have heard
experts and read studies that consistently point out that students learn more
from one another than they do their teacher. I feel that this is obvious; they
can memorize a song in a few short minutes, and hey gravitate towards certain
music, art, and activities that they experiment with on their own and with
their friends. People learn when they are in love with whatever it is they are
learning. As a teacher, this has been a struggle. Although I realize these
aforementioned facts, it is still very difficult to create these types of
learning environments. Furthermore, all the staff development trainings are
extremely educator-centered and speak very little about informal learning. It
is not an easy to task to teach this type of learning, and you have to
constantly be thinking of new ideas and way to facilitate this type of
“instruction”.
Last year I gave an assignment in which students were
to create fictitious blogs of various enlightenment thinkers. They are very
into social media and I thought this would be a good way for them to get
involved in their own learning process and research. It turned out to be very
enjoyable and successful for most students, and I will definitely initiate this
assignment again. The thing I will do differently is managing their progress
more effectively. I allowed so much freedom that it became difficult for me to
ensure accountability is met. Perhaps the next time I will give better
guidelines as to exactly what I want for them to research, post about, and in
their commenting section, what they needed to include.
Another informal type learning that I believe to be effective
is the National History Day presentations in which I require my students to
become participants. National History Day is a lot like Science Fair, in that
the students can basically create any type of presentation they desire, such as
a documentary, essay, theatrical performance, website, etc. At first, I thought
the students were going to hate the assignment, but they actually loved
participating; and incoming students actually look forward to participating.
They have such freedom in this presentation, get to work alone or with peers,
and I am simply a coach or guide. I actually do very little if any work leading
up to the day of presentation. I have had quite a few students advance to
regional competitions as well as state level competitions. The first year I did
this, I did not manage them as the year progressed. However, I found that the
students were not as motivated and at times lacked focused, so I set some
guidelines, and due dates and this seemed to me all they needed in regards to
management.
Sunday, September 15, 2013
Section 3 #'s 1,2, & 3
Brinkerhoff’s Success Case
Method is a more specialized model. It delves into the specifics of finding out
if a certain program worked. There are 5 steps in this model: 1) plan a case
study, 2) build an impact model, 3) conduct a survey, 4) schedule in-depth
interviews, 5) Write up and communicate findings. I have actually used this
model before, and although, time consuming, it really gave me an idea as to
what impact I was having communicating with my students’ parents. Basically, I
followed this model in order to find out if certain ways of communicating to my
parents was successful. I used three classes in my research, and overall, I
figured out what was working and what was not working. Furthermore, just by
using this model, I found myself more focused on the needs of my students.
Since there was such a detailed process, I stayed focused on communicating with
my parents – more so than if I were to have conducted no evaluation whatsoever.
Evaluation is important for
both the student and the teacher. The text talks about all the reasons
education is important for the learner. It allows the teacher to design better
quality lessons, learn where the competency levels of his or her students, and
allows the teacher to assess what it is he or she needs to reteach. But I think
it is important to point out that evaluation has really great benefits for the
students as well. It teachers students a sense of accomplishment, how to manage
their time and study effectively (various study skills, etc.), and also gives
them motivation.
During an economic downtime,
I would make sure to recruit a team in order to prepare for this task. I
would make the primary theme of the staff development team be something to the
tune of…”we have people and time but no money”, and go from there. I do feel
that in education we are fortunate in that we are usually prepared for dips in
the economy and can plan ahead – I know that in my school district we know the
summer before the school year is to begin, how our financial situation will be
during the upcoming school year. I do believe that as a leader, it is important
to assess “the current situation and plan what can be done to solve the problem.”
As a leader of this team, I will need to create a few goals that we want to
achieve. One of these goals would be to create an online source through our
school online document system (called eduphoria), which allows all the teachers in the school to upload a
technological lesson plan that does not require a lot of resources. For example,
in years past, I have created a blog assignment much like this class is
designed, and the students were to blog about a specific topic a few days a
weeks. They could do this from home or even at their local or school library.
The only resource needed for this assignment was access to a computer. I did
not come up with this lesson plan on my own, I enlisted the help of a college who
depends heavily on technology in her classroom. I feel as though there are many
teachers out there that have great ideas and we need to learn that sharing our
lesson plans and ideas can only benefit our students.
Sunday, September 8, 2013
Section II #3
Differing epistemic stances lead to differing approaches to learning and instruction, and ultimately to problem-solving. Explain differences in problem-solving when approached from behaviorist and constructivist perspectives. How do the approaches differ in both the nature of the problem to be solved and in facilitating the problem solving process? Finally, what effect might these differences have on learner motivation?
When one solves a problem, he or she needs to be involved in the problem-solving process. I understand the Behaviorists view that the teacher can provide the reinforcement needed in order to achieve motivation in the classroom, but I tend to lean more towards the constuctivists view, that real motivation is obtained when the students are at the center of their learning. Since the beginning of my career, it was very evident to me that I had to make the subjet I teach relavant to the students. Otherwise, I would lose most of them - even the AP student needs to have motivation to achieve success in my classroom. And the only way I can ever get the motivation, is to make the content relavant to the student. For example, I recently taught my pre-AP World History class about the crisis in Syria. They are very bright students, but thier eyes would gaze over as the very mention of "Arab Spring" or even "Chemical Warfare". I mean, come on! Chemical Warfare? How is that not interesting? Well, to 15 year old, pubescent teenagers, it just isn't. So, instead of me teaching them from the front of the classroom, I had them research certain aspects of what is going on, teach each other, and then as a group figure out how to solve the problem in Syria without United States intervention. I even went as far as to have the students think of ways to be an international superpower without the use of weapons. The students were very engaged and empassioned. Furthermore, the situation in Syria became more real to them. I also think that they got more involved in the learning because they didn't feel like the students getting information from the teacher - they were teaching each other - they owned thier learning. To me, that is more meaningful than any speech or powerpoint lesson. I think that if we do not meet our students to where they are today (people who do not need for us to give them all the information since it is right there at their computer), the we could possibly lose the motivation of an entire generation.
When one solves a problem, he or she needs to be involved in the problem-solving process. I understand the Behaviorists view that the teacher can provide the reinforcement needed in order to achieve motivation in the classroom, but I tend to lean more towards the constuctivists view, that real motivation is obtained when the students are at the center of their learning. Since the beginning of my career, it was very evident to me that I had to make the subjet I teach relavant to the students. Otherwise, I would lose most of them - even the AP student needs to have motivation to achieve success in my classroom. And the only way I can ever get the motivation, is to make the content relavant to the student. For example, I recently taught my pre-AP World History class about the crisis in Syria. They are very bright students, but thier eyes would gaze over as the very mention of "Arab Spring" or even "Chemical Warfare". I mean, come on! Chemical Warfare? How is that not interesting? Well, to 15 year old, pubescent teenagers, it just isn't. So, instead of me teaching them from the front of the classroom, I had them research certain aspects of what is going on, teach each other, and then as a group figure out how to solve the problem in Syria without United States intervention. I even went as far as to have the students think of ways to be an international superpower without the use of weapons. The students were very engaged and empassioned. Furthermore, the situation in Syria became more real to them. I also think that they got more involved in the learning because they didn't feel like the students getting information from the teacher - they were teaching each other - they owned thier learning. To me, that is more meaningful than any speech or powerpoint lesson. I think that if we do not meet our students to where they are today (people who do not need for us to give them all the information since it is right there at their computer), the we could possibly lose the motivation of an entire generation.
Saturday, September 7, 2013
Section II #2
Chapters in this section present two contrasting epistemic stances: positivist and relativist. However, a third stance, the contextualist or hermeneutical, is also widely recognized. This stance falls somewhere between the strictly objectivist/positivist beliefs about knowing and the purely subjectivist/relativist stance. While designers and educators with a positivist stance generally apply behaviorist principles to the design and development of instruction, those with either a contextualist or relativist epistemological framework employ constructivist theories and methods. However, relativists ascribe to radical constructivist approaches, while contextualists draw upon social constructivist theories and models. Based on what you’ve read about positivist and relativist epistemologies, as well as behaviorist and constructivist approaches, try to more fully describe a contextualist epistemology. How might it differ from either a relativist or positivist stance, and how might social constructivism differ from either behaviorist or radical constructivist approached to learning and instruction?
I am not a fan of the positivist approach to education. I feel as thought, it is very "old school" and probably why I hated school so much during my younger years. All learners are different, come from different backgrouds, and thier prior knowledge will always differ. To be so concrete in the field of education, is not eduation, but rather indoctrination. Positivism, a philosphy brought forth by an elite French man called Auguste Comte, was developed as the Old Regime in France was crumbling as a result of the French Revolution. He believed in a social order in which experts were experts and everyone else should ask no questions and believe what they are told. Well of course an elitist would want education to be that way. How dare the poor become educated and take his land away! I digress, my point is that I believe freedom for all humans comes with education. There is a reason prisons are filled with the uneducated, and the poor have a difficult time coming out of poverty. Furthermore, isn't it vital to education to know why? To ask questions? To truly believe in what is being taught? This is why I am more in favor of the realtivists approach to education. While I agree that teachers and professors are to facilitate the learning process, and give information to the students, I think it is equally as important to create an educational environment where the student becomes a life-long learner - thirsty for knowledge. In the Constructivists approach, the classroom is designed as such that the students are a part of the learning process. Social Constructivism allows the students to become affected by what they are learning through a real-life process of collaborating with others. Radical Constructivists believe that people all learn differently because we all hear words differently and therefore cannot possibly have the same exact knowledge. This reminds me of a movie I once watched, called "Waking Life" in which there was one scene where two women were discussing this very viewpoint - one of the women said that when two people say they love each other they do not mean the same thing - because each person has thier own experiences and memories of the word, love. This is very deep thinking, of course, but it is worth noting that we do all hold different histories and memories and therefore, it only makes sense that we cannot every really learn the same and have the same knowledge. To me, it seems that constructivists try to take pieces for positivists, realitivsts, social constructivism and radical constructivism, and create a learning environment that is cohesive to all the different learning philosophies and learning types. Interesting stuff....my brain is hurting. :)
I am not a fan of the positivist approach to education. I feel as thought, it is very "old school" and probably why I hated school so much during my younger years. All learners are different, come from different backgrouds, and thier prior knowledge will always differ. To be so concrete in the field of education, is not eduation, but rather indoctrination. Positivism, a philosphy brought forth by an elite French man called Auguste Comte, was developed as the Old Regime in France was crumbling as a result of the French Revolution. He believed in a social order in which experts were experts and everyone else should ask no questions and believe what they are told. Well of course an elitist would want education to be that way. How dare the poor become educated and take his land away! I digress, my point is that I believe freedom for all humans comes with education. There is a reason prisons are filled with the uneducated, and the poor have a difficult time coming out of poverty. Furthermore, isn't it vital to education to know why? To ask questions? To truly believe in what is being taught? This is why I am more in favor of the realtivists approach to education. While I agree that teachers and professors are to facilitate the learning process, and give information to the students, I think it is equally as important to create an educational environment where the student becomes a life-long learner - thirsty for knowledge. In the Constructivists approach, the classroom is designed as such that the students are a part of the learning process. Social Constructivism allows the students to become affected by what they are learning through a real-life process of collaborating with others. Radical Constructivists believe that people all learn differently because we all hear words differently and therefore cannot possibly have the same exact knowledge. This reminds me of a movie I once watched, called "Waking Life" in which there was one scene where two women were discussing this very viewpoint - one of the women said that when two people say they love each other they do not mean the same thing - because each person has thier own experiences and memories of the word, love. This is very deep thinking, of course, but it is worth noting that we do all hold different histories and memories and therefore, it only makes sense that we cannot every really learn the same and have the same knowledge. To me, it seems that constructivists try to take pieces for positivists, realitivsts, social constructivism and radical constructivism, and create a learning environment that is cohesive to all the different learning philosophies and learning types. Interesting stuff....my brain is hurting. :)
Friday, September 6, 2013
Section II #1
#1
Basically, early in the 20th century, much of the studies of learners had to do with how the teacher was affecting the learner. Later on in the century, the cognitive development of the learner became the focus, rather than the effectiveness of the teacher. Therefore, instructional design was modeled after strategies that would assist the learner in the processing of information and how they applied their knowledge. To me, it seems they began to shift their focus on how to promote higher level learning. It is one things to be able to regurgitate information, and another thing to be able to truly understand and apply what one is learning. I have always been fascinated with the Montessori School, it is very learner-centered and a lot less structured than the average private or public school. There are no exams, and there is a much more holistic approach to learning. It really reminds me of Atticus Finch in To Kill a Mockingbird - his children are constantly questioning him and wanting answers to questions, but instead of telling them what his beliefs are and how to think, he socratically (I think I just made up a word:) allows them the opportunity to forge their own beliefs and own way of thinking. It is nice to think that as educators we can just teach the content - but that really is too easy. The challenge is - and the challenge should be - that we are constantly experimenting with new ways to encourage our students to own their learning, and how to apply what they are being taught.
Basically, early in the 20th century, much of the studies of learners had to do with how the teacher was affecting the learner. Later on in the century, the cognitive development of the learner became the focus, rather than the effectiveness of the teacher. Therefore, instructional design was modeled after strategies that would assist the learner in the processing of information and how they applied their knowledge. To me, it seems they began to shift their focus on how to promote higher level learning. It is one things to be able to regurgitate information, and another thing to be able to truly understand and apply what one is learning. I have always been fascinated with the Montessori School, it is very learner-centered and a lot less structured than the average private or public school. There are no exams, and there is a much more holistic approach to learning. It really reminds me of Atticus Finch in To Kill a Mockingbird - his children are constantly questioning him and wanting answers to questions, but instead of telling them what his beliefs are and how to think, he socratically (I think I just made up a word:) allows them the opportunity to forge their own beliefs and own way of thinking. It is nice to think that as educators we can just teach the content - but that really is too easy. The challenge is - and the challenge should be - that we are constantly experimenting with new ways to encourage our students to own their learning, and how to apply what they are being taught.
Sunday, September 1, 2013
Since media comes from the word "medium" and medium simply means - the transfer of information - I have to suggest that a chalkboard, textbook, and teacher, can all be considered a type of media. With that being said, I do not believe that those 3 elements should be relied on in regards to Instruction Design. In the first three chapters of the text, the definition of Instructional Design has shifted in past 50 years. This shift is due to the evolution of technology, and it seems logical to me that our classrooms evolve along with technology. We serve our students best, whenever we understand how they learn best - and they are dependent on computers, ipads, kindles, nooks, social media, etc. How can we be effective, relate to the students, and ensure they are part of the learning process, if we refuse to become part of the lives in which they live - become a part of their reality? Clearly students can receive and learn information from their teachers and textbooks - but should that be their only source of learning? I believe it is irresponsible for a teacher to rely on their own voice and the voices of a few authors of texts to educate today's younger generation.
Thursday, August 29, 2013
Week 1 Question #2
As the STAAR test became a large focus within my school, I completely changed many of my lessons. Our school became very data driven, and we had monthly meetings and district-wide unit tests, that allowed us to see where the students' strengths and weaknesses were. I really found this useful, because I was able to see where I needed to foucs more of my attention.
As a capmus, our main focus became that of rigor, and I needed to focus more of my lessons around the process of analyzing and applying knowledge. As I mentioned in my previous post, I no longer could act a a giver of information; I was now needing to focus on becomming more of a facilitator. As I began to reshape the scope of my lessons, I began with goals for each unit - essential questions that I wanted to make sure my students were able to answer at the close of each unit.
A couple years ago, I read about "flipping the classroom", a decided to implement this idea in my classroom. This new idea was was learner-centered, in that I did not orally give them the information they needed. Instead, I referred to the KHAN Academy and John Green's youtube series, and various written sources sent home, and the students were to learn the content on their own in thier homes. This way, the class period would be devoted to applying thier knew and prior knowledge. I created projects that would require them to apply thier knowledge, and in class lessons that required the students to analyze various ideas, as well as make decisions about how they felt about the things they were learning. My goal was to make World History relatable, so that they were able to apply the histoical content with real world issues. For example, when studying the Agricultural Revolution that occurred at the dawn of civilization, I had the studetns read about the causes and effects of the revolution, as well as compare and contrast that time with revolutions that might be occurring today. They had to decide whether they belived the postitive effects outweighted bad, and they were able to do this by using thier access to the web to reserach all the effects that Agriculture has had on our planet.
In order to measure the outcome of their learning in a meaningful way, I like to use DBQ's. DBQ's, are document based questions essays that require the students to analyze primary and secondary sources, in order to write an essay over various themes in History. Using these sources, the students are require to make important decisions about how they feel about the content. By reading thier essays, I am able to distinguish whether or not they have learned to make the content applicable. This is an excellent way for me to evaluate thier learning. Another way to evaluate thier learning, is that I have the students use our computer labs to create documentaries, movie trailers, and blogs. I love the blogs, because the students are very in tune with any type of social media, and they seem to involve themselves much more in the learning process.
The only portion of the six charactrstics that I have not been able to apply to my classroom, is team effort. Social Studies is unable to have common planning periods, and outside planning groups, because the majority of our teachers in that content area are coaches. They have very busy schedules and all of them have the same conference periods and athletic periods, leaving those of non-coaches to fill in for those class periods they are not in the classroom. I have seen two subject areas benefit greatly from working as a team and having common planning periods. Our Science and Math departments have heavily followed all six of these characteristics and the over success rate has been astronomical. It is evident to me that by reshaping their entire system, they have been able to reach so many students. They plan together, make use of technology, create innovative lessons that encourage the students to apply their knowledge on a DAILY basis. By doing these things, those two core areas have seen a great deal of success.
As a capmus, our main focus became that of rigor, and I needed to focus more of my lessons around the process of analyzing and applying knowledge. As I mentioned in my previous post, I no longer could act a a giver of information; I was now needing to focus on becomming more of a facilitator. As I began to reshape the scope of my lessons, I began with goals for each unit - essential questions that I wanted to make sure my students were able to answer at the close of each unit.
A couple years ago, I read about "flipping the classroom", a decided to implement this idea in my classroom. This new idea was was learner-centered, in that I did not orally give them the information they needed. Instead, I referred to the KHAN Academy and John Green's youtube series, and various written sources sent home, and the students were to learn the content on their own in thier homes. This way, the class period would be devoted to applying thier knew and prior knowledge. I created projects that would require them to apply thier knowledge, and in class lessons that required the students to analyze various ideas, as well as make decisions about how they felt about the things they were learning. My goal was to make World History relatable, so that they were able to apply the histoical content with real world issues. For example, when studying the Agricultural Revolution that occurred at the dawn of civilization, I had the studetns read about the causes and effects of the revolution, as well as compare and contrast that time with revolutions that might be occurring today. They had to decide whether they belived the postitive effects outweighted bad, and they were able to do this by using thier access to the web to reserach all the effects that Agriculture has had on our planet.
In order to measure the outcome of their learning in a meaningful way, I like to use DBQ's. DBQ's, are document based questions essays that require the students to analyze primary and secondary sources, in order to write an essay over various themes in History. Using these sources, the students are require to make important decisions about how they feel about the content. By reading thier essays, I am able to distinguish whether or not they have learned to make the content applicable. This is an excellent way for me to evaluate thier learning. Another way to evaluate thier learning, is that I have the students use our computer labs to create documentaries, movie trailers, and blogs. I love the blogs, because the students are very in tune with any type of social media, and they seem to involve themselves much more in the learning process.
The only portion of the six charactrstics that I have not been able to apply to my classroom, is team effort. Social Studies is unable to have common planning periods, and outside planning groups, because the majority of our teachers in that content area are coaches. They have very busy schedules and all of them have the same conference periods and athletic periods, leaving those of non-coaches to fill in for those class periods they are not in the classroom. I have seen two subject areas benefit greatly from working as a team and having common planning periods. Our Science and Math departments have heavily followed all six of these characteristics and the over success rate has been astronomical. It is evident to me that by reshaping their entire system, they have been able to reach so many students. They plan together, make use of technology, create innovative lessons that encourage the students to apply their knowledge on a DAILY basis. By doing these things, those two core areas have seen a great deal of success.
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
Week 1 Question #1
It was no surprise to read that the definition of Instructional Design has changed for the last 50 years. Technology has changed and with that came the realization that education practices should change as well. It seems that it was not until the late 1970's that the analysis portion of learning became a topic of discussion. This was not shocking to me, because as I began my career in 2001, it was still a common practice to have a sit and get style approach in the classroom. Teachers refused to give up their role as the provider of facts, and worksheets and movies were amongst the most common practices used in the classroom. Between the 70's and 90's there was a huge shift in technology when it came to computers. I remember being in high school (late 90's) and we there was no Internet on my campus, and in college, I still used all books for my resources when writing a research paper. So when I began my teaching career, the push for the use of technology within our curriculum was not a big topic of discussion. In fact, we had that 60's and 70's mindset of media in the classroom is instructional design. Over the last 20-30 years, the definition of Instructional Design has changed in a few important ways: 1) it became apparent that the learner needed to be able to analyze what they are learning; 2) the ultimate goal for education became the "improvement of learning"; 3) teachers and professors are being held more accountable in their teaching approach.; and 4) In order for humans to be successful, they need to learn by the instructor and on their own.
Honestly, at the beginning of my career it was easy to fall into the old school mentality of how students should learn. Also, I love the subject I teach, so I enjoyed standing in front of my class and making History come alive through storytelling. The main problem with this, however, is that my students were getting more and more advanced in technology themselves, that I was starting to lose them. They needed so much more than what I was giving them. They didn't (and don't) need me to give them all the information from the content - then can find that with the touch of a finger and click of a mouse - they needed to learn how to think deeply and apply their knowledge. Therefore, in the last few years, I have changed the makeup of my classroom and have begun giving up my role as the giver of information and have taken on a more facilitating role.
Honestly, at the beginning of my career it was easy to fall into the old school mentality of how students should learn. Also, I love the subject I teach, so I enjoyed standing in front of my class and making History come alive through storytelling. The main problem with this, however, is that my students were getting more and more advanced in technology themselves, that I was starting to lose them. They needed so much more than what I was giving them. They didn't (and don't) need me to give them all the information from the content - then can find that with the touch of a finger and click of a mouse - they needed to learn how to think deeply and apply their knowledge. Therefore, in the last few years, I have changed the makeup of my classroom and have begun giving up my role as the giver of information and have taken on a more facilitating role.
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