Friday, July 31, 2015

Podcasting and Delicious.com

This week, I was introduced to a few new educational technology tools that were really interesting!
First, we were challenged to research a variety of podcasts and subscribe to at least 1 that would be beneficial to our teaching. After a bit of research, and google-wondering, I found MoMA Talks: Conversations. This is a podcast put on by the MoMA (Museum of Modern Art). It has a variety of art podcasts spanning from studies of specific artists, movements, styles of media, and many more! I was impressed with all that was available! I accessed these and subscribed through iTunes. This link shares the list and previews of the podcasts:

https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/moma-talks-conversations/id154098266?mt=2

And this link will allow you to subscribe through other resources:

http://feeds.feedburner.com/MoMATalksConversations

The second new tool I was introduced to was delicious.com, and social bookmarking! Social bookmarking is a way of linking sites that you want to bookmark, and tagging them with key words so that you can easily find what you are looking for in your list of bookmarked links! Here is a link to my delicious page:

https://delicious.com/bboverhof

Enjoy!

Saturday, July 25, 2015

Google Doc Sharing

Hello again!

I am sharing a google doc of ideas for our baby nursery! My husband has shared some of his ideas, in addition to mine, and even checked what was recently completed!




Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Dancing for the Arts!

This summer, I am on a  small committee planning the 5th Dancing for the Arts event! It is held every other year and is a fundraiser for the Art and Music programs at the elementary school where I teach. We have about 10 different groups and couples dancing. We have MC's, the event is catered, and has always (historically) sold out the theatre space that we rent! Here is the event add I recently made (on Illustrator) for a local paper:


One of our dance instructors, who is working with a group, has recently been inspired by this clip called The Evolution of Dance! I find it quite humorous and look forward to watching the group perform a rendition of this the night of the event!






Here is a map to the location of the event! It will be held in Saugatuck, at the Saugatuck Center for the Arts:




Wednesday, July 15, 2015

Quiz Making Maddness

I was introduced, through our educational technology class, to socrative.com where you can create a bank of quizzes!
Here is a quiz that I made for my 6th graders. We spend a couple of weeks learning about atmospheric color shifts, how our eye perceive color, and perspective. I would give this quiz after the presentation and 1 day of work on the project. It would be a summative assessment that I would use to see where the students are, what they know, and if they can use what was learned and apply it to the next part of the lesson.
The quiz is live and here is the room name:

Below is what the quiz would look like if I printed it, and copied it for my students to use!



Wiki Site Link

I recently created a wiki page for my educational technology class. Feel free to check it out!

http://orangeandblueartroom.pbworks.com

Thursday, July 9, 2015

Technology in Education: Is it worth it?

This week my Educational Technology class was given 2 readings to reflect upon. Below is my response to both pieces:

"When you really think about it, our current paradigm of education is not designed for learning; it is designed for sorting (Reigeluth, 1992).” In some ways, education currently sorts students by comparing students to each other, grouping them by ability or mixing ability, encouraging different strengths knowing the potential career paths for success in an individual, and standards based testing. Are we really just pigeon holing our kids, allowing for guided success or failure? Throughout the article Beyond Technology Integration: The Case for Technology Transformation, the authors challenge the purpose of education and persuade that technology shouldn’t be used to support the educational experience, but instead transform it! I agree with this and believe I use technology as support and on occasion to transform. Powerpoint presentations, lets be real, supports by displaying images and information, it does not transform the way my students learn. Google forums and shared documents have a much different effect of connecting students throughout the process and building relationships in addition to the depth of knowledge learned. I want to get to a point where my,  “teaching methods might not only shift from passive to active learning, but also help develop initiative and responsibility in learners for their own learning,”(Reigeluth, 2002, p. 10).  There is an art teacher who I recently met, who is teaching in a much different way; facilitating her students learning. The number of successful students in her class, whose pieces went onto major art competitions, was outstanding. Her students were self directed, self inspired, and were highly self motivated, taking so much pride in their work, and this concept is exactly what the article is encouraging with the use of technology. I appreciate how this article challenged me to take a look at the tools I use and discern whether they are worth the hassle, and, “work on inventing methods that are consistent with key markers of the learning-focused paradigm, keeping in mind the new capabilities that technology offers,” (Reigeluth, 2002, p.11).

The second article was a much different approach to technology in education. I rather enjoyed the article because it challenges readers to view technological advances as either an efficient problem solver or as a useless tool that, “divert(s) the intelligence and energy of talented people from addressing the issues we need most to confront,” (Postman, 1993, p.1). He goes on to bash the intent of schools to educate, and instead argues that they prepare students for social society. This may be true, but I believe that since 1993, a shift has occurred and technology has greatly played a role in allowing our students to excel individually and in groups based on their own effort and motivation. Technology motivates students, especially if using the tools that push them to expand their horizons, share their experiences and gain new ones, and when used for more than just research, facilitates collaboration. I have always thought that more technology meant more available resources to gain more knowledge and information, however Postman makes a good point in that the excess of technology has us, “swamped by information, (that we) have no control over it, and don’t know what to do with it,” (Postman, 1993, p. 3).  In addition to allowing technology to transform our teaching, we need educate our students on how to use, not abuse, technology for its greatest purposes. The skepticism Postman presents encourages me to really think about the technology that I use, being able to strongly support the choice for using it, and its transformational properties, or abandon specific tools for their lack of solving a given problem, and instead overwhelming my students with more visuals, information, and unnecessary tools. 

Works Cited
Reigeluth, C.M. (1992). The Imperative for Systemic Change, Educational Technology, 32 (11), 9-13.
Reigeluth, C.M. & Joseph, R. (2002). Beyond technology integration: The case for technology transformation. Educational Technology, 42(4), 9-13.
 Postman, N. (1993). Of Luddites, learning, and life. Technos Quarterly, 2(4).