I firmly believe that sustainable skills with technology do not come from teaching separate courses about software, but through carefully interweaving effective technology use into our children's daily experiences. The more authentic the experience the more value they will place in what they've learned. My approach to enhancing a student's skills with technology is to encourage different ways of thinking. Here are a few ways of thinking that are essential in 21st Century education: Global Thinking, Spatial Thinking, Conceptual Thinking, Systems Thinking, Communicative Thinking, and Integrated Thinking. Though there are definitions for each of these labels, I prefer using a real example:
Three first grade boys get into an altercation on the playground and would typically have been separated and reprimanded, however systems thinking offers another possibility.(Watch Video #3) As a group, the boys investigated how saying "mean things" lead to "hurt feelings" which then lead to more "mean things" being said. They drew out a reciprocating loop diagram and discussed ways they could break this cycle. Through Systems Thinking each boy could now design strategies to better adapt to all manner of future situations. Additionally, if any of these three were to see other students fighting they could help prevent it from happening.
The next post will clearly identify each way of thinking and provide examples, resources, and ideas for finding these opportunities in a classroom setting.
Edusomnia
How to Archive and Catalogue Tweets
Whoa. When I plug into TweetDeck or HootSuite through my edusomnia twitter account I really have to get ready for an information superhighway. I will monitor maybe 6-7 twitter hashes for an hour and I will have squirreled away from 100-200 ideas and 20-30 new resources. For the longest time I wondered why I should plug in if I can't somehow archive and catalogue all the tweets that I found helpful and interesting. Recently I found a way! Here's the skinny on how to archive and catalogue information from twitter streams. Here's what you need, a Twitter account, a Delicious account and a connection between the two using Packrati.us. Load up your favorite Twitter streaming engine (HootSuite or Tweetdeck are my favs) and set up a column where you can see your own twitter tweets or retweets. Now you're ready to label and archive. Let's say I find a fantastic site from EdTech on iPads. I want to archive and save this forever! So I immediately retweet it and in the retweet dialogue, make sure I like the title, and then remove any unwanted @ or # tags. Finally and most importantly I add my own # tag like #ipad and then I send it. Now I wait a few seconds for it to refresh on my tweet/retweet column and then add it to my favorites. Packrati.us automatically uses the #tag to create a Delicious tag with my resource now safely stored for reading or accessing when I have more time. Hope this was helpful. Edusomnia.
Build a Technology Course that Doesn't Focus on Technology?
Sounds crazy I know. Build a technology course that doesn't focus on technology? What’s the rationale? Too often schools and services have invested exorbitant amounts of resources on technology but don’t really know how to effectively implement its use. It has happened so often, in fact, that our critics have labeled technology integration as a “gimmick”. Have you started to see this trend as well?
Technology disuse or misuse usually comes from instructors focusing primarily on software and hardware, whereas they should be working to improve a student’s skill in solving tasks or problems through the use various forms of technology. Schools and teachers shouldn’t tie themselves to a particular piece of software or platform; rather they should be designing challenges where the only requirement is that students solve the problem. Whether the student used PowerPoint or Keynote is irrelevant to how well the challenge was met, and at what level did the student design their presentation. Question, “If we can’t measure a student’s technology competence with how they use software, then how can we measure for success?” Answer, “A measurement of learning skills.” How do you measure student's success with technology at your school?
An excellent example would be ISTE/NETS on “Communication and Collaboration”. “Students use digital media and environments to communicate and work collaboratively, including at a distance, to support individual learning and contribute to the learning of others, specifically to interact, collaborate, and publish with peers, experts, or others employing a variety of digital environments and media.” This learning objective can manifest through a plethora of software, both local and cloud, to meet the needs of this objective. I am also fond of visual devices that help to shape the skills our students should be learning to be successful in a world driven by information technology. This particular image comes from Billings Middle School's "Technology with Intention."
What do you think of this chart? Do you have an infographic you would like to share?
I am also partial to NECREL's old "Range of Use" chart.
Please let me know your opinion on this chart and send in any skill infographics you've found helpful.
Technology disuse or misuse usually comes from instructors focusing primarily on software and hardware, whereas they should be working to improve a student’s skill in solving tasks or problems through the use various forms of technology. Schools and teachers shouldn’t tie themselves to a particular piece of software or platform; rather they should be designing challenges where the only requirement is that students solve the problem. Whether the student used PowerPoint or Keynote is irrelevant to how well the challenge was met, and at what level did the student design their presentation. Question, “If we can’t measure a student’s technology competence with how they use software, then how can we measure for success?” Answer, “A measurement of learning skills.” How do you measure student's success with technology at your school?
An excellent example would be ISTE/NETS on “Communication and Collaboration”. “Students use digital media and environments to communicate and work collaboratively, including at a distance, to support individual learning and contribute to the learning of others, specifically to interact, collaborate, and publish with peers, experts, or others employing a variety of digital environments and media.” This learning objective can manifest through a plethora of software, both local and cloud, to meet the needs of this objective. I am also fond of visual devices that help to shape the skills our students should be learning to be successful in a world driven by information technology. This particular image comes from Billings Middle School's "Technology with Intention."
What do you think of this chart? Do you have an infographic you would like to share?
I am also partial to NECREL's old "Range of Use" chart.
Please let me know your opinion on this chart and send in any skill infographics you've found helpful.
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