Friday, June 11, 2010

Adventures in Safari

The time has finally arrived for our district to put away the 32" Zenith monster TV's that have been hanging lifeless in the corners of classrooms for the last 20 years...we're onto bigger and better things with Safari Montage!

Safari Montage is a video distribution and creation system. In addition to the continually updated bank of videos Safari offers, we have the Creation Station piece which will allow us to upload videos we create, documents, and SMART Notebook files to share with one another...on our own campus and across the district!

Any material a teacher uploads through Creation Station can be selected to be available on Home Access, meaning that students can access these creations at home. Home Access automatically makes Safari video content available.

Safari has an Online Community (Safari Montage HD Network) where teachers can share content, get ideas, seek assistance from teachers all over the country, and win awesome prizes (hello, iPad!) for submission ideas.

Many of the videos include Teacher guides, Blackline Masters, and Quizzes (around 5 questions) that complement the video content. Many of the videos have English and Spanish language tracks as well as Closed Captioning which is great for ELLs.

All videos are broken into "Chapters" that are around 2-7 minutes. Safari encourages teachers to use these Chapters to cover only what is needed out of the videos to meet the immediate objective of the current lesson. Each Chapter is further divided into "key concepts" that are typically less than 1 minute long!

Teachers can create Playlists to help organize their classes, content areas, and lesson objectives. Safari playlists can consist of Chapters from various videos for a particular lesson. Playlists can be shared within a campus or within the district. If sharing a playlist, discussion about naming the playlists needs to take place(including the TEKS, grade level, subject, etc.). Playlists can be played in "automatic" (plays all videos, in order, back to back) or "manual" mode. Manual plays the video, then at the end of that video it will stop and show a "next" button, so that when the teacher is ready to proceed with the next video, they can move on at their own pace of instruction. Playlists can also be connected to Eduphoria (Forethought) through the "permanent link" button. Using the "copy" feature can help teachers differentiate by adding or taking out clips for a particular group of students. Teachers can add a quiz to a particular Playlist.

http://www.safari.coppellisd.com/ is the intra-site address. Teachers in CISD can use their network username and password.

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Don't You Hate It When...

...you feel like the cheese standing alone...stupid cheese at that?? I couldn't figure out the surge protector today. I even had to get hands-on help because apparently verbal directions weren't enough for my limited capacity.

I'd love to say I just wanted to experience what some of our less-tech savvy teachers experience.

I'd love to say that, but I'd be lying.

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Give a Hand for Handhelds!

I happen to work with 2 campuses that do not currently have iTouches or iPods for student use. We are, however, chomping at the bit to join the other campuses in our district in the world of handhelds in education!

No handhelds? No problem: you can use anything that has an Internet connection!

Use student cell phones and texting to take a poll on a site like PollEverywhere or Poll4.
Wiffiti can be used as a brainstorming tool that would show the free flow of ideas from the class.

Gabcast (beta) is used for podcasting through cell phones. When you register, you are given a Channel number. The channel used to place each of your recordings (up to 20 minutes each) in the correct place. Each recording is an "episode". When you finish your "episode" press # for options. You can select to make it private or public, to publish it immediately, or to moderate. What a great idea for a Field Trip journal! Or have students assume the identity of a historical figure and create a "Sorry I missed your call" message!

Use camera phones to have the class work on a collective project (Public Service Announcement) by uploading their pictures to a group photo album such as one you create on PhotoBucket. When you set up a Photobucket account, in Account Settings, you get your mobile settings (address) you post to have the photos sent to you.

Its important to note that teachers need to model what is "formal" and "informal" language when using texting in the classroom. Also important is working with students who don't always know the difference between "cheating" and "sharing" to have concrete examples.

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Glogster: Alternative to the Almighty PowerPoint

Glogster is a great alternative to PowerPoint! You can insert graphics, video, and audio easily. A great idea for classroom management is to have students "storyboard" their Glog before attacking it online. They can gather online images, write scripts for audio narration, and select an appropriate theme prior to logging on to Glogster. Teachers can use Glogster to introduce concepts, review material, post agendas, and share websites for a webquest.

Using Social Networking to Influence

Research shows teachers are most influenced by 3 things: Administrators, assessments and data, and other teachers...the greatest of these is OTHER TEACHERS!

So, can we use social networking (FB, Ning, Twitter, blogs, wikis, Skype) to develop and expand traditional in-house/district professional learning?

YES!!

  • Use social bookmarking, such as Diigo, to share websites of interest with your PLN (Professional Learning Network).
  • Use Skype to hold meetings across the globe.
  • Use Slideshare to share presentations with your PLN.
  • Use YouTube to post/comment lessons or vodcasts re: your PLN's focus
  • Twitter is INVALUABLE for professional learning, whether in a PLN or flying solo.

Find a balance between the resources that work for you and for inspiring your teaching...don't try to do it all, but at least try a few different approaches.

Monday, June 7, 2010

VoiceThread'ing

A lil' summin' summin' I came up with using VoiceThread:


VoiceThread Resources:

Classroom Uses for Blogs

  • On-going lesson summary as a log for absent students, review, and reflection
  • Individual student reflection on concepts
  • Students can create a blog for other students to use that contains content relevant to TEKS
  • In Math, students can embed the Problem of the Day/Week and then the explanation or how to for the problem
  • For writing, teacher can post a picture as a story starter...each blog post can be a continuation of the same story
  • Teacher can use a broad concept (ie: "Freedom", "Measurement") and ask students to post pictures or video as illustration of that concept
  • Gathering data (polls, posting observations, posting pictures)
  • Teacher posts a statement and students can debate the issue
  • Students can use their own Blog to "journal" as a main character of a novel, or a historical figure to demonstrate research they have done about the time period, novel, setting, etc.
  • Using sites like gabcast, VoiceThread, or Vocaroo students can record audio and post on their own Blog, or on the class Blog, depending on the objective

Trying Out Some Embedding


Can she embed some classy video? We shall see:



And what about pictures? More class?

Nothing says "class" like cake...this we know.

Be Careful What You Wish For...

Almost 2 years ago I embarked on a new direction in my educational career. I had been in the classroom for 8 years and wanted "new challenges". Famous last words.

This is a blog of how I'm trying to keep my head above water in the sea of technology integration. Maybe you'll be entertained. Maybe you'll commiserate with me. And maybe, just maybe, we'll stay afloat together.