In yesterday's staff meeting there was an extended conversation about cell phones. This is not a new issue, but the problem that gets brought up every year is that it's hard to enforce a rule that is not practiced consistently. Some teachers don't allow students do use their cell phones in class (in accordance with the school rules); others do, on a situational basis; still others let students text as much as they want as long as the work is getting done; other teachers have been known to answer their own phones or text in the middle of class. There were also archly-oblique comments about the security staff, some of whom spend extensive time on their phones in the hallways.
The end of the discussion was a blanket statement: no cell phone use by students. Students may not even charge their cell phones in class, because if another student steals the cell phone, the teacher will be held accountable. "If we walk into a classroom and there are cell phones charging, we're going to have a problem," is the principal's quote.
Okay. So. In this environment, how does a teacher move forward with integrating the use of communication technology into class? Am I thwarted? Is all lost?
Well, it helps to have an ace in the hole. I'm fortunate to have a co-conspirator among the administrators, and he has already confirmed that, should there be a complaint about me allowing students to use cell phones for academic purposes, he'll back me up. Students will still be prohibited from using cell phones for non-academic purposes in my class.
We'll see how that works in practice. Meanwhile, I'm getting my Socrative quiz banks ready!
Saturday, September 8, 2012
Friday, September 7, 2012
Use of Paper when "Digital" is the Buzzword
Yesterday during training on our on-line gradebook/attendance program, I asked a question of the developers: why isn't the "mock bubble sheet" page (which is essentially just a table with the students names at left) a printable document?
The administrator who was running the show jumped up and grabbed the microphone from the developer (who was in the process of saying, "Sure, we can do that.") and went into a brief...well, really I feel I have to call it a tirade...about how we're not supposed to be working on paper at all, and people should be avoiding printing out ANYTHING if they can help it, and none of our records should be being kept on paper, etc. etc. etc.
I think I managed to keep my temper once I regained the microphone, and firmly pointed out that I need to be able to keep records as I'm walking around the classroom -- a check mark here for a student being on-task, a note that so-and-so had dozed off and needed to be woken -- which I will input into the computer during my prep. I simply can't teach from behind the computer screen, I don't want to forget what behaviors I'm seeing, I want to award participation bonuses appropriate -- and, no, not everybody has an iPad.
Even in the digital age, some things are just easier with pen and paper, and easier still if I can just get an already existing form to be printable.
*grumble*
The administrator who was running the show jumped up and grabbed the microphone from the developer (who was in the process of saying, "Sure, we can do that.") and went into a brief...well, really I feel I have to call it a tirade...about how we're not supposed to be working on paper at all, and people should be avoiding printing out ANYTHING if they can help it, and none of our records should be being kept on paper, etc. etc. etc.
I think I managed to keep my temper once I regained the microphone, and firmly pointed out that I need to be able to keep records as I'm walking around the classroom -- a check mark here for a student being on-task, a note that so-and-so had dozed off and needed to be woken -- which I will input into the computer during my prep. I simply can't teach from behind the computer screen, I don't want to forget what behaviors I'm seeing, I want to award participation bonuses appropriate -- and, no, not everybody has an iPad.
Even in the digital age, some things are just easier with pen and paper, and easier still if I can just get an already existing form to be printable.
*grumble*
Saturday, September 1, 2012
Classroom Blogging
Updated to add link to article: http://www.educause.edu/ero/article/educational-blogging
*****
In doing some research on blogging in the classroom, I've been reading an (admittedly outdated) article by S. Downes titled "Educational Blogging" (2004). This reading reminded me of the original meaning of blogging which sets it apart from on-line journaling; a blog was originally a log of one's web research, including links to and passages from information found on the web. Personal comments on these links and passages were intended as inferential observations of the research. Purely personal observations are not the same as blogging. I had forgotten this.
One passage of note:
A blog, therefore, is and has always been more than the online equivalent of a personal journal. Though consisting of regular (and often dated) updates, the blog adds to the form of the diary by incorporating the best features of hypertext: the capacity to link to new and useful resources. But a blog is also characterized by its reflection of a personal style, and this style may be reflected in either the writing or the selection of links passed along to readers. Blogs are, in their purest form, the core of what has come to be called personal publishing.
In the hands of teachers and students, blogs become something more again.
The article goes on to describe five major uses for blogs in the classroom, as described by Henry Farrell from the website (?) Crooked Timber.
First, teachers use blogs to replace the standard class Web page. Instructors post class times and rules, assignment notifications, suggested readings, and exercises. Aside from the ordering of material by date, students would find nothing unusual in this use of the blog. The instructor, however, finds that the use of blogging software makes this previously odious chore much simpler.
Second, and often accompanying the first, instructors begin to link to Internet items that relate to their course. Mesa Community College’s Rick Effland, for example, maintains a blog to pass along links and comments about topics in archaeology.15 Though Mesa’s archaeology Web pages have been around since 1995, blogging allows Effland to write what are in essence short essays directed specifically toward his students. Effland’s entries are not mere annotations of interesting links. They effectively model his approach and interest in archaeology for his students.
Third, blogs are used to organize in-class discussions. At the State University of New York at Buffalo, for example, Alexander Halavais added a blog to his media law class of about 180 students. Course credit was awarded for online discussion, with topics ranging from the First Amendment to libel to Irish law reform. As the course wound down with a discussion of nude bikers, Halavais questioned whether he would continue the blog the following year because of the workload, but students were enthusiastic in their comments.16
Mireille Guay, an instructor at St-Joseph, notes: "The conversation possible on the weblog is also an amazing tool to develop our community of learners. The students get to know each other better by visiting and reading blogs from other students. They discover, in a non-threatening way, their similarities and differences. The student who usually talks very loud in the classroom and the student who is very timid have the same writing space to voice their opinion. It puts students in a situation of equity."17
Fourth, some instructors are using blogs to organize class seminars and to provide summaries of readings. Used in this way, the blogs become "group blogs"—that is, individual blogs authored by a group of people. Farrell notes: "It becomes much easier for the professor and students to access the readings for a particular week—and if you make sure that people are organized about how they do it, the summaries will effectively file themselves."18
Finally, fifth, students may be asked to write their own blogs as part of their course grade. Educational Technologist Lane Dunlop wrote about one class at Cornell College: "Each day the students read a chunk of a book and post two paragraphs of their thoughts on the reading." In another class, French 304, students were given a similar exercise. Using a French-language blogging service called Monblogue, Molly, a business student, posted a few paragraphs every day.
All of this is, again, eight years old. I need to do more research into how teachers have implemented blogs effectively and what the stumbling blocks may be. But this has been a good start.
*****
In doing some research on blogging in the classroom, I've been reading an (admittedly outdated) article by S. Downes titled "Educational Blogging" (2004). This reading reminded me of the original meaning of blogging which sets it apart from on-line journaling; a blog was originally a log of one's web research, including links to and passages from information found on the web. Personal comments on these links and passages were intended as inferential observations of the research. Purely personal observations are not the same as blogging. I had forgotten this.
One passage of note:
A blog, therefore, is and has always been more than the online equivalent of a personal journal. Though consisting of regular (and often dated) updates, the blog adds to the form of the diary by incorporating the best features of hypertext: the capacity to link to new and useful resources. But a blog is also characterized by its reflection of a personal style, and this style may be reflected in either the writing or the selection of links passed along to readers. Blogs are, in their purest form, the core of what has come to be called personal publishing.
In the hands of teachers and students, blogs become something more again.
The article goes on to describe five major uses for blogs in the classroom, as described by Henry Farrell from the website (?) Crooked Timber.
First, teachers use blogs to replace the standard class Web page. Instructors post class times and rules, assignment notifications, suggested readings, and exercises. Aside from the ordering of material by date, students would find nothing unusual in this use of the blog. The instructor, however, finds that the use of blogging software makes this previously odious chore much simpler.
Second, and often accompanying the first, instructors begin to link to Internet items that relate to their course. Mesa Community College’s Rick Effland, for example, maintains a blog to pass along links and comments about topics in archaeology.15 Though Mesa’s archaeology Web pages have been around since 1995, blogging allows Effland to write what are in essence short essays directed specifically toward his students. Effland’s entries are not mere annotations of interesting links. They effectively model his approach and interest in archaeology for his students.
Third, blogs are used to organize in-class discussions. At the State University of New York at Buffalo, for example, Alexander Halavais added a blog to his media law class of about 180 students. Course credit was awarded for online discussion, with topics ranging from the First Amendment to libel to Irish law reform. As the course wound down with a discussion of nude bikers, Halavais questioned whether he would continue the blog the following year because of the workload, but students were enthusiastic in their comments.16
Mireille Guay, an instructor at St-Joseph, notes: "The conversation possible on the weblog is also an amazing tool to develop our community of learners. The students get to know each other better by visiting and reading blogs from other students. They discover, in a non-threatening way, their similarities and differences. The student who usually talks very loud in the classroom and the student who is very timid have the same writing space to voice their opinion. It puts students in a situation of equity."17
Fourth, some instructors are using blogs to organize class seminars and to provide summaries of readings. Used in this way, the blogs become "group blogs"—that is, individual blogs authored by a group of people. Farrell notes: "It becomes much easier for the professor and students to access the readings for a particular week—and if you make sure that people are organized about how they do it, the summaries will effectively file themselves."18
Finally, fifth, students may be asked to write their own blogs as part of their course grade. Educational Technologist Lane Dunlop wrote about one class at Cornell College: "Each day the students read a chunk of a book and post two paragraphs of their thoughts on the reading." In another class, French 304, students were given a similar exercise. Using a French-language blogging service called Monblogue, Molly, a business student, posted a few paragraphs every day.
All of this is, again, eight years old. I need to do more research into how teachers have implemented blogs effectively and what the stumbling blocks may be. But this has been a good start.
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