Thursday, September 27, 2012

Week 4 Reflection

My new delicious account is:
http://www.delicious.com/cnpyke

Social bookmarking could be extremely useful for students, teachers, administration, and people in general.  Teachers could use a wiki to make a website for their students.  Students could then use delicious to keep track of all of their teachers websites, helpful websites for their classes and/or life, interests, and so on.  Instead of "losing" websites or having to save them all on your bookmark, you could just use social bookmarking instead.  Then you can also share the websites.  I feel like this is already being done on Facebook.  For example, my cousin was in the newspaper last week so she posted the article on Facebook.  Then we could all click on the article and read it.  If she wants to be able to find that article forever (or until the news takes it down) she could bookmark it and save it.  She wouldn't have to keep checking back on her Facebook and try to find it whenever she wanted to show off to someone.

Going back to how you can use this in education.  Administrators can keep track of certain websites that are most useful.  This week in one of our meetings, most of the teachers lost the website to help them make their professional development plan.  Another teacher (who still had it), had to send out another email to everyone.  If everyone just kept track of their websites, this huge issue could have been eliminated or easily solved.  A lot of time wasted for nothing!

I have been finding websites on my delicious that I would like to use in my classroom.  They are to help my students or to help me plan better lessons.  It just depends on what I am looking for.  I have also found some personal websites that I like to look at it!  Now I can easily organize all of my websites so that I can find what I am looking for in a timely manner.

In chapter 1, we read about the definition of educational technology.  It was really interesting how it use to be a 'process', 'design and use', and surrounded by media.  Now days, it is more about facilitating learning and improving performance.  That is how I would like to start using technology in my classroom.  I want my students to understand more, faster, and gain mastery.  Instead of keeping all of my students on one pace, I think that technology can help you differentiate the learning that is going on.  I can have students working on different assignments at the same time or to different levels of the assignment.  While using direct instruction in class, you always have a student behind, on track, and ahead.  Using technology can help each student meet different goals and learn as much as they can.  I think that it will improve performance and help make learning more fun.

To me what is missing in this chapter is how to use the technology in order to gain the goals that I have for myself and my students.  I want to try new things in my classroom, but I am not sure how to get started or how to 'train' my students to be ethical while using technology.  I also see a lot of negatives that are getting in the way:  who is going to pay for the technology?  What happens when the technology decides not to work? Are my students really getting ahead?  How can I measure this?

To me there are just a lot of unanswered questions and I am hoping that through this semester more of my questions get answered so I can start using more technology in my classroom in order to help my students get the most out of their education.


Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Week 3 Reflection

This week we made a wiki page!  My wiki page can be found here!

I really enjoyed using my wiki this week.  So far, this is my favorite thing (besides blogger of course!)  I currently have a website for my class through google.  However, a teacher back in North Carolina helped me make it and I can't remember how exactly to do everything.  I feel like the wiki was a lot easier to use then my google website.  I'm hoping that sometime soon I will have enough time to make another class website.  I am definitely thinking that wiki may be my top choice right now.  Everything is laid out so nice and easily for you.  You don't have to search through a bunch of different things in order to make a new page or make your new page display where you want it to.  It is very user friendly and easy to start up and make changes to!  I think that it would be easy to set up different pages depending on the classes that I am teaching.  I could link the notes, homework, free graphing calculators, tutorials, and other websites that I think my students could find useful.  My students could in turn tell me what they have found useful and maybe what needs to be changed.  I could have a spot on my wiki for parents to contact me and easily be able to email me.  I'm trying to think of a way that I could have my students make their own wiki for a project in my class.  Since I teach math, I'm not sure if I found wiki's extremely useful and would love to be able to learn more about them and be able to use them in my classroom!

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Week One Reflection

I'm not sure why this didn't post last week, and I just noticed it this week.  But here it is!


The articles we read this week were definitely coming from two different perspectives.  While I was reading the first article, I felt like I agreed with pretty much everything that was said.  Technology definitely helps a lot in the classroom.  When I use lessons on my SMART board that are engaging, my students want to come up to the board and show the rest of the class what they know.  I can embed different videos off of the internet in order to make my students laugh, see how what we learning can be applied to real life, or look up current events (Check this out for factoring!).  We can do so much more, so much faster!  I have also used programs like castle learning where you can get instant results for the grade the whole class earns on a test.  It will also give you all of the statistics about each question, objective, student, class, and all your classes together.  After spending awhile to make the test, the results you get afterwards it definitely worth the effort you have to put in.

However, it definitely depends on the teacher.  The article talked about the number of hours and time that you have to put towards learning how to use new technology.  To me, that is probably the biggest negative.  For instance, this week I got a SMART board in my new classroom.  I spent over 3 hours installing, uninstalling, and reinstalling the SMART board software.  After playing with the board over and over again, I finally found the only other teacher in the classroom who has one.  We spent another 30 minutes playing with the board during our planning period.  We started to unplug everything and figured out that one of the cords in the back was cut in half.  Well no wonder the stupid thing didn’t work!  I think the second article was more geared towards this type of problem.  Instead of seeing any positives at all, he was probably only in classroom that used technology ineffectively.  At my old school, our principal made it mandatory that we used laptops once in a week in our classrooms.  I loved it!  I could have the students play math related games, browse the internet to see how much cars cost with different percent of interest rates, and so forth.  However, a lot of the other teachers would just let the lap tops sit in their rooms.  Yes, it took me awhile to come up with fun activities but my students could apply what we were learning to real life and get real answers right away.  Answers that will hopefully help them buy their own car when they turn 16.  

The main thing that I have learned over the past couple of years is that you can’t already have a curriculum ready to go and only use technology when you absolutely have to.  You need to use the technology to build your curriculum.  Now days, students need to know how to use computers, make websites, blogs, tweet, etc. in order to be competitive with others in the job field.  If you go into marketing and you need to know how to reach hundreds of people in order to increase your business.  The grammar, art, and mathematics have to be used with technology in order to be successful.  I feel like a lot of us teachers are letting our students down right now by not including all of the skills that they need to be successful.  It’s not always goals and objectives that we are teaching them on a daily basis that make them successful, it’s how they are applying those along with the technology that can set them apart from every other high school graduate.

Another thing that pressed my buttons about the second article, he never used any studies to prove that what he was saying was true.  He was clearly just stating his opinion.  While we are in school, we are taught that we have to back up our opinion by facts.  Our facts must come from reliable sources and we must cite those sources in our articles or papers that we write.  

Week 2 Reflection


So far I really like having a blog.  I have been using it to watch what other people post.  I have not been posting myself, but I have been able to find a lot of other math teachers who have really good lessons who are sharing.  I find it hard to find good lessons by just searching the internet.  You have to go through a lot of stuff before you find something that does that job.  A lot of times, I would just get annoyed and end up making something by myself.  On blogger, I have started to follow a couple of other people in order to find good activities that will help my students learn.
I think that I am confused with the RSS reader.  I tried to add everyone to mine and I'm not sure if I'm not doing it right or what exactly is going wrong.  I understand that you can see who has new posts, but do you have to go to the site that you are following them on to see their new posts?  I keep trying to click on their name but nothing is happening.  Any ideas?
I think a blogger could fit into a few different parts of Dale's cones.  It depends on what you are trying to get out of it.  I think that it would mostly fall under exhibits.  It's a working model that is displayed in a meanful way.  You can easily read and see what people are trying to get across.  You can click on different links and go to different sites based on what you are trying to accomplish.  With this being said, I also think that you would be under verbal symbols and demonstrations depending on what people are blogging about.  Some people who are blogging, can post videos of them teaching, cooking, sewing, doing anything!  If they are using their blogger for this reason, it would be more of demonstrating.  Some other people use their blogger to just put out their ideas, these blogs would fall under verbal.  
I would put RSS reader under exhibits also since it gives you a meaningful list that you can go back to.  Like I said previously, I'm just not sure how these lists are extremely useful.
I could see using blogger with my students in many different ways.  I could easily post their homework or any questions that a majority of the students have.  I could also post videos from Khan Academy, Brainstorm, or any of those websites to help my students if they get stuck on a problem at home.  With blogging, the students could also talk to one another about the different problems to get help on them.  I'm just not convinced that blogger would be a better tool then other websites like schoology.
If I had my students do a blogger, I would also have them sign up for RSS reader so they could easily know when others post on their blogs.  However, right now I don't feel comfortable enough with RSS reader to have my students sign up for it.