Time flies! We are in Week 11 now. Enjoy your spring break!
Given the situation with Coronavirus, all of your classes are now moving online. I hope you have become more comfortable taking online courses after going through 10 weeks in this class. If you have technical issues with this class and other classes, please let me know. I am glad to help.
As I mentioned on Twitter, you could check a series of blog posts written by my advisor about how to teach online during COVID-19. I got inspired by her posts. You might get inspired, too! Here is the link: https://vanessadennen.com/teaching-online-during-covid-19/
It's time to summarize what I have learned from your blog posts #6-10. I am so glad to hear that most of you enjoy blogging in our class. I would like you to know that your blog provides an effective way for me as your online teacher to check your understanding of course topics and learn more about you. Besides, I have enjoyed reading your thought-provoking posts and comments on your posts. I liked or commented on some of your posts. To be honest, I have learned a lot from you guys. I always believe in learning by teaching.
As I did in my last post, I am about to mention you and your blog posts in different weeks. I hope you would read my post first, and then check the blog posts I am about to mention later. You are also encouraged to go back to read your own posts and peers' comments on your posts.
Something about Post # 6
You did a great job in sharing a lesson plan and evaluating it using the Dynamic Instructional Design model! I am impressed by how you might use PowerPoint to support student learning at each level of Bloom’s Taxonomy. When you work as a teacher in the future, you will often run into Bloom’s Taxonomy. As instructional designers and teachers, we often establish learning objectives in alignment with each level of Bloom’s Taxonomy.
Your reflections on the WebQuest assignment are thoughtful. I am glad to hear that you guys enjoyed working on it. I am impressed by your creativity.
I am sharing lesson plans evaluated by you guys. If you have not checked those lesson plans, feel free to check them.
On CPALMS mentioned in Module 5, a lesson plan by Morgan, a lesson plan by Jacob, a lesson plan by Kemory
On the Scholastic website, a lesson plan by Edda, a lesson plan by Erika, a lesson plan by Liz, a lesson plan by Olivia Maihan, a lesson plan by Hayley
On Teachers.org, a lesson plan by Noelle, a lesson plan by Alina, a lesson plan by Olivia Wilkening
On OER Commons, a lesson plan by Hannah. Please note: since the lesson plan is an open educational resource (OER), any teacher can download, revise it, use it in their class, and then redistribute online without worrying about the copyright issue.
On Education.com, a lesson plan by Brittany
A lesson plan by Evelyn, a lesson plan by Alexis
Mallory evaluated a lesson plan in a Google Doc:
Note:
One question for you: How will you apply the Dynamic Instructional Design model to guide your lesson plans for your future class?
You did a great job in discussing assistive and adaptive technologies! Some of you had seen the application of assistive and adaptive technologies in classrooms.
Noelle provided two great examples: assistive listening technology for Deaf or hard of hearing and Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC) devices for individuals that are non-verbal. Evelyn provided two examples of adaptive technologies like screen readers and a microphone for students with a hearing problem.
Hannah has experience with IStation at the school that she works at. IStation provided students with an adaptive curriculum.
Jacob shared two assistive technologies: spell checker and a voice recognition program.
Olivia shared Braille for the blind and attached a pic in her blog.
Brittany defined assistive and adaptive technologies in her words and shared several examples including wheelchairs and Braille books.
The challenges you talked about included: time to set up assistive and adaptive technologies, the usability and cost of these technologies, and how to properly integrate these technologies.
Note:
one question for you: what do you think of the learning curve when it comes to using assistive and adaptive technologies?
You well explained why the key universal design principles were important. As Malyce stated, by following universal design principles, no matter their experiences, knowledge, or abilities, the lessons are effective in helping them to learn and the activities are achievable for them.
Thanks for sharing great academic software you would like to implement in your future class! Your classmates shared a list of interesting software tools, including, but not limited to:
You did a great job in discussing the role that technology plays in teacher professional development! Most of you agreed that we should stay informed of technology trends since our future students will grow with new technologies.
I am glad to hear that you learned a lot like new skills in using action buttons and transitions from the two PowerPoint assignment. That's what I expected for you. I agree with you that it can be time-consuming to make good and creative slides.
But believe me, you will have to make presentation slides for different purposes given different situations in the future. In the past weeks, I have worked on my presentation slides for my dissertation defense. I have revised it so many times and used the feature "Rehearse Timings" to record how many minutes it takes me to present each slide. In the future, to prepare for an important presentation with limited presentation time, you could use this feature to prepare for the important presentation.
I am sharing those websites some of you would use to stay updated with technology trends:
As I did in my last post, I am about to mention you and your blog posts in different weeks. I hope you would read my post first, and then check the blog posts I am about to mention later. You are also encouraged to go back to read your own posts and peers' comments on your posts.
Something about Post # 6
Thanks for sharing your school website or class page in your post # 6, I learned that different kinds of information were shared publically on different school websites or class pages. You did a great job in discussing the Digital Divide and reflecting on your experience with Twitter!
I am glad to hear that most of you find Twitter has been beneficial. Let's continue to use Twitter to build your personal learning network and communicate with your peers, future students, and parents. For some of you, I am sorry to hear that you did not find Twitter beneficial. I hope you will contact me. We can work together to address your concern with Twitter and other social media tools for building your personal learning network.
I am sharing some interesting class pages shared by your classmate. Check them out if you are interested.
I am glad to hear that most of you find Twitter has been beneficial. Let's continue to use Twitter to build your personal learning network and communicate with your peers, future students, and parents. For some of you, I am sorry to hear that you did not find Twitter beneficial. I hope you will contact me. We can work together to address your concern with Twitter and other social media tools for building your personal learning network.
I am sharing some interesting class pages shared by your classmate. Check them out if you are interested.
- Noelle shared one class page (https://earhart.goddardusd.com/49583_3) for 2nd grade, which includes interesting buttons you can click on.
- Malyce shared one interesting teacher's page (https://sa.tcitys.org/o/scholars-academy/teacher_pages#/teachers/1398/pages/2459).
- Erika shared one band teacher's page (https://www.franklinboe.org/Page/12926) including important dates and tabs linked to assignments.
- Evelyn shared one teacher's page (https://www.leonschools.net/Page/15949). This teacher uses the Class Dojo app to track every student's behavior.
- Alexis shared one class page (http://www.badenacademy.org/mssmith/) for Mrs. Davis's 2nd Grade, with lots of pictures available without logging into the system
- Morgan shared an interesting school website (http://hitchcock.mpsomaha.org/home) with embedding the Twitter timeline
- Mallory shared one school website (https://www.leonschools.net/hawksrise) where various kinds of information including assignment and class schedules are shared.
- Jacob shared a school website (http://www.viking.portage.k12.oh.us/middle-school-class-pages) where they had class pages for every teacher in every grade for every subject. Each teacher's website includes various kinds of information
- Olivia shared a great teacher's class page (https://mballenger-scs.weebly.com/homework.html) including various kinds of information about homework, schedules, files, etc.
- Hayley shared a great teacher's class page (https://sites.google.com/wrsd.net/msalberghini) including information like announcements, homework, chapter videos, links, etc.
Something about Post # 7
You well explained why or why not you would like to maintain a course website as a future teacher or a speech-language pathologist. Every coin has two sides.
I am impressed by how you guys envision yourself using technology to accomplish your professional responsibilities more efficiently and effectively. I am sharing some tools you plan to use as follows:
I am impressed by how you guys envision yourself using technology to accomplish your professional responsibilities more efficiently and effectively. I am sharing some tools you plan to use as follows:
- Noelle expected to use smart boards and blog
- Malyce expected to use Facebook, Twitter, and webinars in a formal and involved setting
- Erika expected to use Blogger to keep her colleagues, friends, and family up-to-date on research she is partaking in.
- Liz expected to attend college classes, use Blog, and Twitter to accomplish her professional responsibilities
- Alina expected to attend webinars and use blogs to continue her professional development
- Hannah, Hayley, and Brittany would use a teacher website to accomplish their professional responsibilities
- Hayley also expected to use Twitter to communicate and collaborate with others
- Jacob expected to use RescueTime and Twitter to accomplish her professional responsibilities.
- Olivia expected Kahoot, some educational videos, and probably have some interactive games for the kids to keep them motivated
- Kemory expected to use blogs, webinars, and twitter to help with her professional development as a teacher in the future
- I encourage you to explore the above-mentioned tools. Here are two questions for you to think about: have you used some or all of the above tools? How do you think these tools will help you accomplish your professional responsibilities more efficiently and effectively?
Something about Post # 8
You did a great job in sharing a lesson plan and evaluating it using the Dynamic Instructional Design model! I am impressed by how you might use PowerPoint to support student learning at each level of Bloom’s Taxonomy. When you work as a teacher in the future, you will often run into Bloom’s Taxonomy. As instructional designers and teachers, we often establish learning objectives in alignment with each level of Bloom’s Taxonomy.
Your reflections on the WebQuest assignment are thoughtful. I am glad to hear that you guys enjoyed working on it. I am impressed by your creativity.
I am sharing lesson plans evaluated by you guys. If you have not checked those lesson plans, feel free to check them.
On CPALMS mentioned in Module 5, a lesson plan by Morgan, a lesson plan by Jacob, a lesson plan by Kemory
On the Scholastic website, a lesson plan by Edda, a lesson plan by Erika, a lesson plan by Liz, a lesson plan by Olivia Maihan, a lesson plan by Hayley
On Teachers.org, a lesson plan by Noelle, a lesson plan by Alina, a lesson plan by Olivia Wilkening
On OER Commons, a lesson plan by Hannah. Please note: since the lesson plan is an open educational resource (OER), any teacher can download, revise it, use it in their class, and then redistribute online without worrying about the copyright issue.
On Education.com, a lesson plan by Brittany
A lesson plan by Evelyn, a lesson plan by Alexis
Mallory evaluated a lesson plan in a Google Doc:
Note:
One question for you: How will you apply the Dynamic Instructional Design model to guide your lesson plans for your future class?
You did a great job in discussing assistive and adaptive technologies! Some of you had seen the application of assistive and adaptive technologies in classrooms.
Noelle provided two great examples: assistive listening technology for Deaf or hard of hearing and Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC) devices for individuals that are non-verbal. Evelyn provided two examples of adaptive technologies like screen readers and a microphone for students with a hearing problem.
Hannah has experience with IStation at the school that she works at. IStation provided students with an adaptive curriculum.
Jacob shared two assistive technologies: spell checker and a voice recognition program.
Olivia shared Braille for the blind and attached a pic in her blog.
Brittany defined assistive and adaptive technologies in her words and shared several examples including wheelchairs and Braille books.
The challenges you talked about included: time to set up assistive and adaptive technologies, the usability and cost of these technologies, and how to properly integrate these technologies.
Note:
one question for you: what do you think of the learning curve when it comes to using assistive and adaptive technologies?
You well explained why the key universal design principles were important. As Malyce stated, by following universal design principles, no matter their experiences, knowledge, or abilities, the lessons are effective in helping them to learn and the activities are achievable for them.
Thanks for sharing great academic software you would like to implement in your future class! Your classmates shared a list of interesting software tools, including, but not limited to:
- Kahoot shared by Edda, Noelle, Alexis, Liz, Hannah
- Socrative shared by Alexis
- Google Drive including tools like Google slides/docs shared by Noelle, Morgan, Liz, Kemory, Hayley, and Olivia Wilkening
- Ted-Ed shared by Edda
- Gizmos and Thinglink shared by Malyce
- Notability shared by Evelyn, Olivia
- FASTT MATH shared by Morgan
- Educational games like JumpStart shared by Mallory
- OneCalendar shared by Alina
- Class websites hosted on Wix or Weebly (Alina)
- Keyboarding Without Tears for Grades K-5 (Hannah)
- TypingPal shared by Brittany
- Quizlet. Prezi shared by Jacob
- Khan academy shared by Olivia
- Edmodo shared by Kemory and Hayley
I encourage you to check those tools. You might need to use them in your future class.
Something about Post # 10
You did a great job in discussing the role that technology plays in teacher professional development! Most of you agreed that we should stay informed of technology trends since our future students will grow with new technologies.
I am glad to hear that you learned a lot like new skills in using action buttons and transitions from the two PowerPoint assignment. That's what I expected for you. I agree with you that it can be time-consuming to make good and creative slides.
But believe me, you will have to make presentation slides for different purposes given different situations in the future. In the past weeks, I have worked on my presentation slides for my dissertation defense. I have revised it so many times and used the feature "Rehearse Timings" to record how many minutes it takes me to present each slide. In the future, to prepare for an important presentation with limited presentation time, you could use this feature to prepare for the important presentation.
I am sharing those websites some of you would use to stay updated with technology trends:
- https://www.teach-nology.com/teachers/educational_technology/ shared by Edda.
- http://educationaltechnologyguy.blogspot.com/ shared by Malyce in Canvas
- https://www.theverge.com/tech shared by Alexis in Canvas
- https://edtechteacher.org/ shared by Hayley. It provides many great sources, resources, events, articles.
- https://www.apple.com/ shared by Mallory. Like Mallory, I am using a lot of Apple products.
- https://www.techradar.com/ shared by Olivia
- https://techcrunch.com/ shared by Olivia Wilkening
Note
I only summarized post # 10 submitted by some of you by March 19. Given the situation with COVID-19, I extended the deadline for #10 to March 22. It's absolutely OK that you submitted your post # 10 by March 22. But I am sorry that I could not include your post in this post.
This is the end! Thanks for reading it through!
Good luck with your blog post # 11. Please let me know if you have any questions.
I only summarized post # 10 submitted by some of you by March 19. Given the situation with COVID-19, I extended the deadline for #10 to March 22. It's absolutely OK that you submitted your post # 10 by March 22. But I am sorry that I could not include your post in this post.
This is the end! Thanks for reading it through!
Good luck with your blog post # 11. Please let me know if you have any questions.