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Showing posts with label #1to1. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #1to1. Show all posts

Friday, February 13, 2015

GoPro in the Classroom

As an instructional coach one of the opportunities teachers have with our program's philosophy is the chance to record their own lessons in order for the teacher to identify areas they wish to improve.  I have used Flip cameras in the past but have been given a GoPro Hero4 as a resource for teachers.  I figured this would be a fantastic tool with the wide-angle lens to see students and the teacher in their environment.  I also thought the technology could entice teachers to work with me with a goal of helping students in their classrooms.   One teacher asked if it was possible to use the technology for her to record her experience at the Milwaukee Museum of Art - so in this case, bring to the students different type of classroom that is inaccessible to most students from Palatine, IL.

I think this is a fantastic idea.  The teacher will use the GoPro, the tool I intended to help teachers identify a strategy to improve learning in an indirect manner is becoming the direct method of instruction.  The video will be posted for the students to view - perhaps in Schoology, or perhaps on her own blog.  Either way, it is exciting that teachers are willing to be innovative.  I understand the concept of a flipped class is not brand new, but this method can have potential to be effective.  It is my plan to work on a plan with the teacher to make the strategy work for the students while, at the same time, understand the benefits of using the GoPro in the classroom for instructional coaching purposes or even giving teachers access to it to make more impactful lessons.

A link to the use of the GoPro by our teacher will be provided when she has completed her project.


Saturday, September 21, 2013

Glitches

I knew something was going to happen.  I had a feeling that something detrimental to the confidence I had developed in my first year of my 1 to 1 classroom was going to occur. I had a premonition that it was going to be a big deal.  And it happened.  Either the network had a hiccup or the LMS I was using momentarily went dark, and which it was is still a mystery, but either way it left an impression on me and my students that perhaps this new academic path we are on won't work.

Students in my Advanced Placement United States History class were taking an assessment on their iPads via Schoology.  This is a risky endeavor - I was well aware of that. Maybe a student would take a screenshot of the assessment and share it with someone absent or save it for a sibling who may possibly take my course in the future.  Luckily, I created a variety of test options that could randomize each student's test experience, but on this day my 7th period course all left with a common, shared, confused experience.  The hiccup, or glitch, from whichever end it came, prevented any student taking the exam to submit their responses.  It was a stealthy attack - only one student told me they noticed their device lost a WiFi connection (leading me to believe it was a network issue at the school), but maybe it was an isolated incident for this student.  Perhaps Schoology dropped the ball, or reset the server - I am not a network specialist, but that is a real thing, right?

Regardless of the why, I have to deal with "now what"?  The issue did not occur in my other two sections, yet many questions are going through my head: Do I dare re-test the students?  Is that fair? Do I give an abridged version? Do I completely excuse the exam and submit to the helplessness of the situation?  I don't get that time back, and each unit of study consists of three separate assessments, so maybe I haven't really lost anything by skipping this one.

But, alas, I did lose something. I lost a bit of conviction in my support of all things edtech.  This was a big deal to me.  I knew there were going to be snags and glitches along the way, but these were supposed to happen in the first days or first few weeks of the year - so I thought.  Surely, any issue I was going encounter was going to be while students were trying to figure out an app or how to electronically submit an assignment. I thought by week three the class would be firing on all cylinders. Well, problems will apparently occur at any time and the hard part in this is that they can be completely out of my control. With only 48 minutes to dedicate to a class it gets frustrating knowing that by the time an issue is addressed a lot can be lost. I still have the conviction that what I am doing with a 1 to 1 classroom will be a positive experience, but I just have to be OK with the unknown that I can't control.

Friday, September 13, 2013

10 Days In


It is the third week of school. It is the first week of September and I know that I am typically further in my curriculum than this.  I knew that getting all of my students iPads this year meant it was going to be at least three to five days of digital bumps and bruises, wireless connectivity blunders, and short fuses from our overworked technology department (that of which I cannot fault because the same staff got 1500+ iPads to configure and troubleshoot on top of all the other items on the to-do list to get teachers ready for the year. On that note, they did a fantastic job).

I knew that I was going to have to really work to get students on the same page, but I didn't know there would be so much occurring outside of my control that at some points I had to tell students, "I am not sure why that is happening", or "I don't know why you cannot connect to the network", or "What do you mean it is the third day of school and you still haven't gotten you iPad and put into the system?"  Teachers are so used to controlling their teaching environment that such a transition can definitely make a veteran teacher wonder why they wanted to put these devices in their students' hands.

From day to day during the first week and a half of school I was not sure what I could expect.  As a matter of fact, I could not anticipate what problems needed addressing period to period.  But now, it is about the tenth day of school and I think I can look back on those first several days and accurately reflect on the experience and maybe offer some useful device.

What you plan won't be your plan: 
Your school's network specialist will probably have nightmares on the eve of a massive 1:1 roll-out. Add to the mix that most students in a high school will bring their smart phones that will connect to the open guest wi-fi network.  The routers will be the host of battle for device survival on the school's network.  Until consistent network connections occur you may have to do a lot of showing students what they may have to do when they connect to a network later in the day or when they get home (of course, not all students have wireless internet at home). emphasize flexibility.

It's hard to trust them:
My district seems to have had a couple different policies when it comes to mobile devices in the classroom.  I have run the gamut of upholding policies over the last ten years.  In the last few years, I allowed students to use them for education purposes.  Maybe they used Evernote or I allowed them to use Twitter for class. But now that all students have a device I am finding myself redirecting students - or at least wanting to.  I have to relax.  Most of my students are eager to use the device appropriately for school.  Some of my students would be distracted some other way if they did not have the iPad, and those students may always need that oversight.  I haven't yet had to take one away from a student and doing so would be detrimental to what is trying to be accomplished.  Perhaps it's harder to trust myself.  This is a new experience for all involved and since these are personal learning devices I have to be able to let go of some of the traditional roles as a classroom teacher and allow students to take more control of their education.  Emphasize accountability.

The world in their hands:

I asked a question to a class regarding an an assignment students had done in small groups.  The assignment required the groups to collaborate via a Google spreadsheet and create a chart about British colonization of North America.  This was only the second assignment and it was done largely in class as a way to teach the benefits of using Google Drive.  All the students had their charts available for the discussion and were able to edit them throughout the course of the discussion.  At one point I asked the aforementioned questioned and students stared blankly at me.  After several minutes of empty eyes trying to look through me and not at me, I made the students aware of an observation I had just made.  Not one student thought to use the device in their hands to look up the information.  I allowed students to say "I don't know".  I didn't want to, but I am glad I did and I am glad I made the connection to my observation.  I told them that "I don't know" won't be appropriate anymore.  "I don't know" was the safe way a student that didn't want to participate (for whatever reason) could get passed over by the teacher at the expense of just a few moments of embarrassment   Students know how to use the iPad for Twitter and Facebook and playing the recent hit game, but they cannot break themselves of past classroom habits very easily.  That will be part of the transition too - not just what I create and provide for them, but how they condition themselves to take ownership of their own academic performance. Emphasize possibility.


Tomorrow is Day 10. Emphasis is learning.   


Wednesday, August 28, 2013

The Saga Begins

OK.  It seems a but dramatic - a bit over-the-top - to title my first blog post "The Saga Begins".  I title my first lesson in my Advanced Placement U.S. History class "The Saga Begins" as well.  It insinuates that something important is about to happen; a long, complex journey that cannot be easily understood if one were to just passively observe it.  Like in most classes, students will not completely appreciate the intricacies of a saga until they study it, question it, struggle with it, connect with it, and hopefully enjoy it in the end.  This can be true in the study of the history of the American people, the complexities of Shakespeare, or the wisdom of Thoreau.  Pick your subject and there is a saga to experience somewhere.

My Blog title is The Epic Adventure.  Really, it is just a synonym for a saga, but adventures, sagas, and the like must have a beginning.  Any good adventure worth reading in a novel or watching on film must, once begun have a struggle worthy of our attention and concern.  I suppose that is what I intend this blog to be.  It starts here and from here I have my struggles, triumphs, and side-stories.  The man that hired me about ten years ago, used to call the story of the American people "the ongoing saga, the epic adventure". It was catchy, albeit dramatic, and like my title a bit over-the-top.  But I stole it.  I use it in my class and I will use it here.

I am probably a quarter to a third of the way through my teaching career and I am finding myself at a fantastic transition.  I have adopted a 1:1 program which is, on one hand, an amazing thrill to be part of a movement in education with so much potential to transform learning, and on the other, the most stressful first two weeks of school I can remember. I have doubts and setbacks that make me want to ripoff my ears (I'm bald - there's no hair to rip out), and in the first few days I have seen some small victories - like the one shot on the 18th hole that convinces the golfer to believe enough in himself that he will try it  again someday rather than give up.  So, I consider this transition to be part of my adventure. The one worth reading about and the one I hope with which someone will connect.