My application to the Discovery Educator STAR Educator was just approved. Here we go!!
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Promote 21st Century Skills with your SMARTBoard and Spongelab
Ed Compass, SmartTech, Oct 2012
Promote 21st century skills with your SMART Board and Spongelab
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Tech and Treat DEN Virtual Conference
Drove up to Fredericton in TERRIBLE RAIN (Thanks Marcel) to attend a virtual conference, face to face. Virtual is good. Face to face is better!! Had I attended virtually, I probably would have interacted with Bryan Facey and Jeff Whipple. But I would not have sat beside Heather Hallett and talked about Partners In Learning and I would not have met a great BBT teacher to design a collaborative Chemistry Google Sketchup project!!
Tech is cool, but face to face is CRUCIAL!!
Featured by David Warlick at MAINEducation 2012
My work was featured by name in David Warlick’s Keynote at the MAINEducation 2012 conference. Thanks so much. I have many more things since we last talked.
CyberBullying
Just finished the SMART Technology Free course on Cyberbullying.
It was short, sweet, useful and productive. They talked about practical things on how you can prevent cyberbullying. I knew about e=mail and filters. What I had never considered was setting the ring tones of the bullies to silent. I also did not know that there was an app for that so that calls and texts from individuals are never received except to put them in a folder to be used as evidence. I like it!!
History of Biology From Spongelab Combined with SMARTBoards
Last year, I downloaded the HISTORY of BIOLOGY from SPONGELABS. It was great!! I loved the game itself. The graphics were wonderful and the tasks were stimulating. Students worked away at the puzzles learning seemingly unconnected topics in biology by solving puzzles. It is sort of a scavenger hunt, meets National Treasure and AP Biology. However, as you get further into the game, you start to see how all the pieces fit together. This is analogous to learning science. You do not always know why something will be useful and then at some point in time later, it is the crucial piece of the puzzle. It is a nice analogy to science.
Particularly interesting was the combination of the HISTORY of BIOLOGY with a SMARTBoard. Half of the class worked on the game as individuals on laptops while the other half of the class worked in small teams of 3 and 4 at SMARTBoards. It was fascinating to watch the teams work together to solve the game. Although the students at 1:1 laptops were in close proximity and gathered around tables, their interactions were very limited. Just because students are arranged in a collaborative shape, each with their own tech, working on the same problem does not mean that they will actually COLLABRATE. However, the students gathered around the boards were talking, discussing, in some cases arguing, and working as a team. The SMARTboards improved the communication and the social constructivism. The SMARTBoards turned an activity that uses technology into a 21st Century Learning activity by encouraging all those 21C skills such as communication, critical thinking, media literacy and the like.
Some educators have been looking at SMARTBoards as TPR’s- Traditional Pedagogy Replicators. Combining the HISTORY of BIOLOGY game from Spongelabs, with SMARTBoards is a wonderful example of how the boards can transform STUDENT learning. The key is having students using the boards with wonderful resources like the HISTORY of BIOLOGY.
SMART Flash Animations
Completed SMART Flash Animations course. It dealt with how to use Notebook to make animations and embed animations. It was more about what makes a good animation for educational purposes and what is distracting. Thanks again SMART!!
SMART Interactive Teacher Certification
I just completed the “SMART Interactive Teacher Certification”. There is some real synergy between the products at SMART for Education. Each little piece may not seem that valuable at first glance, with the exception of the SMART Boards and Notebook, but when they are all pieced together they are more than the sum of their parts. It has been fun getting outside of my own rut. Thanks!!
Smart Exchange Widget
Growing Brains, not Doing Programs
In the last two weeks, I have received 2 very important emails from previous students. Today I received this email from a previous student, now in her 3rd year at a prestigious university BSc Chemistry Degree.
- “Anyways, I spent my entiiiire day Sunday working on an assignment at the library. I expected it to take an hour or two tops, but got stuck on some questions with a bunch of calculus work I had apparently blocked out after first year..
I was really really tempted to give up and ask one of my friends in the class for an explanation and some answers, but kept hearing your lectures about “growing our brains” in my head, so I couldn’t…
I stayed there all afternoon, got really frustrated, whined about how nice it was outside, and eventually I worked out all the problems. I’m SO happy I took the time to do it on my own. I really understand the material now, and I know I wouldn’t have learned anything by taking the easy way out and asking for the answers. It was much more rewarding to staple the pages together at the end too.
So, I just thought I’d let you know I was thinking about you and your lessons, and say thank you. Even if your words kind of ruined my Sunday afternoon this week, you really made me a better student, and I still appreciate it.”
Our school has not ranked near the top where we believe it to be based on reports from our university friends and scholarship money. One of the reasons is that we offer few AP courses and no IB courses. We believe that growing brains requires flexibility, has little to do with the amount of content and programs are too confining.
The second email comes from another previous student now in her first year at a nationally renowned university in the center of the continent full of AP and IB graduates.
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“But now to the real reason I was going to email you! I just wanted to first of all thank you, so so so much, for making us do all those full formal labs. no one here knows how to write one, let alone how long it takes to write one well, so they are all scrambling trying to buy old labs from upper year students while i can sit back and relax. It sucked at the time, but its so worth it now. Also, even though it wasnt my favourite subject, i opted to take the harder of the 2 physics courses here. I’ve had 2 lectures now, and its easier than anything we did with you or mr ryan. We aren’t even expected to derive the formulas that we had to know for gr 12 physics, it seems incredibly easy. all in all, i just feel very prepared for my classes here even around all these people who did IB and all AP classes. So even though most of your students are going to dislike physics (at least I know most of us did last year!) keep teaching it the way you do because its effective! I also had a prof today that reminded me a lot of your teaching style, because we are using iClickers for quizzes and on the very first day he went on a little schpiel about how he would like to change the education system and how unfair it was that they had to give us marks based on lectures…just reminded me a bit of our first day in chem 11. anyways, Ill keep you posted throughout the year on some general stuff that i’m doing, hope the year goes well for you too! “