All the Way to 5! A counting movie
by Heidi Thibodeau (AKA Heidi Beezley)
Here's a video made for my Edtec 572 class at SDSU. It is meant to teach children age 18 months and older, in particular Orion, my son, how to count to five.
Monday, March 17, 2008
Sunday, March 9, 2008
How is the CUE conferences like climbing a cliff?
Coming into the conference I felt pretty good about my level of technology use and skill with applying it. Last year when I went to CUE, I went immediately into overload. Every presentation taught me so many new things that I couldn't wait to try out. I went home a year ago and created a SecondLife avatar, started a Blog, set up a Del.ic.ious account, and pulled a bunch of RSS feeds together. It took me quite a bit of time to learn how to use these tools and others that I have begun to learn over the last few years. But coming into CUE this year (2008), I felt like I had fairly successfully scrambled up the technology cliff and I was feeling pretty comfortable.
Little did I know that after a bit of plateu there was a whole new cliff just waiting to be scaled. Once again, CUE has presented me with a whole new array of tools to try out and see if I can use in teaching. For example, I had not realized the tremendous capacity of Google Earth especially in regard to all of the layers that are available for exploration. Thank you Alix Pesheette. I also messed around with Maya in a Digital Media Academy presentation, and I bought, er, won the T-shirt, so I am officially a Maya fan. Also played with Flash and looked into using SCORM with Moodle. So, once again I have a lot of work ahead.
However, one thing comes to mind that is obviously very important, how are these great gadgets to be applied so that they really and truly improve learning, not just provide some amusement to the kids that get to play around with them. I have two people to thank for keeping this in the forefront of my thinking - Jerry Ruiz and Bernie Dodge. I work with Jerry, and whenever we would run into each other in the hallway, we would talk about the sessions that we had seen. Jerry tended to assess his sessions on whether the speaker focused on application in the classroom. In talking to him, I realized that most of the sessions that I had been to had not focused on this obviously critical topic.
Luckily, I went to one talk, Bernie Dodge's, where the entire focus was on how to design lessons (the examples given were webquests, but the idea could, of course, be applied to any type of lesson) that prompt higher order mental processes in students. That is, in teaching we provide some input, expect something to happen inside the student's brain (memorization, summarization, etc.) and then students produce an output that shows what they have learned. Bernie Dodge's point was that the design of our input and expectations for output should cause something exciting to happen in the spinning wheels of a child's mind. They should have to make complex decisions and be the Decider!
Ok, gotta go to bed now. This time change is messing me up, but thank you to CUE, to the speakers, and all of those individuals that were inspirational at the conference!
Sunday, March 2, 2008
New Tech Tools!
Hello there,
I am currently taking a class called Edtec 572 - Technology for Course Delivery. We are just over 5 weeks into the course, but already there are way more technology tools that I have been introduced to than I can keep up with, and I love it.
One of the tech tools that I am most excited about using is the suite of Google Docs. I've used the Google Word and Excel equivalent before, but I hadn't ever used the PowerPoint equivalent tool. Also, I've never edited a page at the exact same time as someone else. I really think that GoogleDocs is a powerful tool and though we are using it in a graduate level class, I think it has a lot of potential for k-12. For example, I would love to have students create a multimedia presentation using the presentation software where students are able to collaborate on the project from home because the document itself is online. There would be no worry about access or different versions floating around.
Okay, another great tool that I can't wait to use is wikispaces. I've seen it presented, I know people who use it, I've used wikis in Moodle, but I hadn't tried wikispaces until very recently. I think it is awesome. I can't wait to try it. Once again, I think this is a tool that would be great for use in the classroom. It would be great for a collaborative project where students are asked to synthesize information and present it online.
I am looking forward to more, but I have a lot of catching up to do. The list of emerging technologies has given me a lot of extra homework, because some of the tools look like a lot of fun.
I am currently taking a class called Edtec 572 - Technology for Course Delivery. We are just over 5 weeks into the course, but already there are way more technology tools that I have been introduced to than I can keep up with, and I love it.
One of the tech tools that I am most excited about using is the suite of Google Docs. I've used the Google Word and Excel equivalent before, but I hadn't ever used the PowerPoint equivalent tool. Also, I've never edited a page at the exact same time as someone else. I really think that GoogleDocs is a powerful tool and though we are using it in a graduate level class, I think it has a lot of potential for k-12. For example, I would love to have students create a multimedia presentation using the presentation software where students are able to collaborate on the project from home because the document itself is online. There would be no worry about access or different versions floating around.
Okay, another great tool that I can't wait to use is wikispaces. I've seen it presented, I know people who use it, I've used wikis in Moodle, but I hadn't tried wikispaces until very recently. I think it is awesome. I can't wait to try it. Once again, I think this is a tool that would be great for use in the classroom. It would be great for a collaborative project where students are asked to synthesize information and present it online.
I am looking forward to more, but I have a lot of catching up to do. The list of emerging technologies has given me a lot of extra homework, because some of the tools look like a lot of fun.
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