Curious about technology in the classroom, but don't know where to start?
Here are few tech tools that are easy to use and have a high impact on student learning.
Wonderopolis
Make wonder and inquiry a part of your weekly routine! Visit Wonderopolis.org and follow along as they ask questions, post a blog and share photo and video resources about a variety of topics. Wonderopolis is a great site for finding short, nonfiction text for readers of all ages. Wonderopolis is also a great site to use as a mentor text for blogging. We use it before we introduce blogs to identify what a blog looks like and sounds like, as well as what comments look like and sound like. If you’re excited to teach students about the power of connection, post a comment or submit a wonder; Wonderopolis almost always responds to students and teachers. You can follow them on Twitter @Wonderopolis.
TodaysMeet
TodaysMeet.com is a free, web-based tool that allows users to backchannel a discussion online. A teacher can create a chat room that is available only to users who have the link (ie, your class). Once students access the website via the link they log on with their name and engage in a collaborative discussion online. Students can view all the responses as they are posted live to the discussion site. Anyone with the link can contribute, so you can invite students to collaborate across classrooms and with others who are not present, provided they have the link. (Think—cross-school, cross-district, cross-continent collaboration!). It's great for staff meetings too!
Croak.it
Croak.it is a free website that allows the user to record 30 second audio clips. The audio recording is then uploaded to a personalized website and available to anyone who has the link. The developers created the site for users to “Push. Speak. Share.” and the simplicity is amazing. Even more unbelievable, Croak.it also has a FREE app available for iPhone and Android! Use Croak.it to create student reflections, share book talks and differentiate with audio instructions. This is a versatile little tool with hundreds of uses. Croak.it!
QR Codes
A QR code, or quick response code, is a matrix barcode that holds information about a tool or product. Using a QR code with a QR scan app provides students quick access to a website without having to type the URL. We use QR codes to distribute websites quickly and easily to students during lessons and create our own QR codes using the website qrstuff.com.
At our school we use QR codes to link to audio book recommendations that we attach to the front of books. As kids “shop” for books in our library, they can scan the QR code to hear a book review created by another student. Inviting students to create book reviews by students, for students empowers them as valuable contributors to our reading community, expands their audience and builds a buzz for books they love.
Songify
Songify is a fun app that converts the words or phrases you speak into a remixed song. Songify scrubs the vocal track and adds preprogrammed beats and background music. The basic touch-to-start and touch-to-stop technology provides ease of use for all ages. This app embraces multi-modal learning and easily differentiates instruction. Students love to create songs to synthesize their learning during an inquiry circle. Oftentimes the songs created in class—including Terra Cotta Warriors and the Nile River—become classroom hits. As we know, kids remember information that is set to music so I use it to create songs for math facts, spelling patterns and comprehension strategies.
Google Form
Google form is a free online tool for gathering information in a streamlined fashion. A Google form can be created easily in Google Drive and shared via a link for others to complete. Each Google form you create collects responses in a spreadsheet stored in Google Drive. The spreadsheet can be sorted and grouped in a variety of ways making the data easy to access and interpret. Google form is handy tool for creating quizzes, surveying parents or gathering feedback regarding inquiry circles and book clubs.
Twitter
Create a classroom Twitter account to connect with other students and teachers. Post this tweet:
“Looking for other (insert grade or subject) classrooms to connect with. Anyone tweeting with their class? #(grade/subject)chat”
People will contact you and then you can follow them. Share your Twitter handle (your Twitter name) with your families and invite them to follow your class. Start by tweeting student reflections one day a week. Ask kids to share something they’ve learned or are wonder. These reflection tweets provide your families a “window” into your classroom and the curriculum. Also use Twitter as a place to crowdsource information. Post mini-inquiry questions and see who answers. Have fun and model connected learning! Twitter.com
You can follow our class @Burley106.
Kidblog
Kidblog.org is an amazing, safe blogging site created for teachers and students. Teachers can create a class for free and develop accounts for students that are not dependent on an email address. This is specifically helpful for younger learners who don't have an email. Once a class is created, students can log on from any device that connects to the internet and post a blog. You can use your blog for a variety of purposes—writing about reading, writer’s workshop, or as a general repository for student thinking. You can view our Kidblog here.
Follow along as a public elementary school in Chicago integrates the iPad into its first through fifth grade classrooms.
Showing posts with label language arts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label language arts. Show all posts
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Friday, October 26, 2012
Making Book Trailers
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Image created on the iPad using Snapseed, PS Express, and Keynote. |
One of the issues that we had last year is that we didn't have any student created examples to look at. While the professional ones are nice to get a feel for the genre it helps to have examples that are within the students' reach. This also gave us the opportunity to examine them and notice which elements we thought worked well and which elements needed improvement. Once we spent some time immersing ourselves in the genre we began planning. I ask students to consider what things they would explicitly and implicitly share with their audience, how they would build the mood and tone of the trailers, and what types of images they would use to accomplish this.
We also addressed copyright issues. As fifth graders, they are ready to think about intellectual property and what that means. Students were asked to create all of their own images or they could use stock images that I found through Photopin and give credit to the artist. (I pulled appropriate images to share with them through Dropbox and organized them by the search term I used so that I could locate the links to give credit later.)
Before students started I did a quick tour of some of the apps they might use to create or edit images. These included Drawing Pad, Snapseed, PS Express, Scribblify, Magnetic Letters, and Keynote. We spent several days just creating images for the trailers before students even began with iMovie. Once students had several images I did a quick tour of iMovie, showing them some basics on how to get started. Over the next few days I or a student periodically introduced small things like how to lengthen or change transitions and how to add sound effects. This workshop model enabled students to experiment as they worked and internalize how to use iMovie to achieve the desired effect. I also gave students a checklist to use as they worked to help them reflect on the images, music, and overall feel of their book trailer. To see our final products please visit our 302 Book Trailers Vimeo Channel!

Thursday, February 2, 2012
Active Literacy With the iPad: Part 1
When I’m teaching reading, I’m teaching students how to be active readers. That means that they need to engage with what they are reading. They need to think, talk, and write. They need to leave tracks of their thinking. Students do this by writing post-it’s and annotating the text they are reading. (Depending on they type of text.)
When I first began exploring the iPad I was thrilled to learn that iBooks allows students to write notes and highlight things. Now they could have virtual post-it’s! What was even more exciting to me was that they could e-mail me these comments to me. Here’s an example of what one of these comment pages might look like.
I find this format really revealing and easy to look at as well as assess. I have enough rag tag stacks of paper and this document is a quick assessment glance at the thinking my student did during the day’s lesson. I also think that when these comments are listed out like this it makes it easy to look for patterns in thinking.
In the example above I see the student is demonstrating an emotional connection with the text, they are questioning, and they are linking to their background knowledge. The comment about Pandora reveals that the student is probably connecting to their background knowledge of the mythological person Pandora and when the article refers to Pandora as a place he is attempting to reconcile this information. This would be my opening point in a conference about the text.
So what’s the catch?
Well, the catch is that this only works with iBooks that you purchase…which I have no money for, and ePUBs. The good news is that there is a way to turn any internet article into an ePUB for students to use. Thanks to Bruce “Awesomeness” Ahlborn for this tip. dotEPUB is a site that will do this dirty work for you. All you have to do is install their bookmarklet on your computer or iPad and a few simple clicks will send the article to your device.
Bam! Presto! Any internet article becomes a tool for practicing active literacy.
Management Issues
I would suggest that you, the teacher, use dotePUB on your computer and then drop it into ibooks to sync to the devices. You can install this on student iPads easily so that they can do it themselves. However, itunes will sync all of the student articles off the devices and back on to all the other devices. Which means that you now get every single article that each student Epubbed. (Is that a verb? If not you heard it here first!) It's not a huge issue but a minor headache that you can avoid.
Sunday, January 29, 2012
Using Edmodo in Writer's Workshop
I suppose I should give a quick introduction since this is my first post on this blog! Hi, I'm Katie Muhtaris. I teach fifth grade and this year I have been lucky enough to have a one-to-one iPad program in my classroom. Although this is my first official post on the iPads at Burley blog I have been blogging for several years as a way to reflect on my teaching, share resources and effective practices, and celebrate this amazing profession. The post below is a repost from my other blog and is from the fall.
I've been experimenting with how to use the iPads in my fifth grade writer's workshop. I decided to try it out by launching a unit of study using my document camera, student iPads, and Edmodo. Usually we study a wide variety of mentor texts so that we can understand what the genre is and students can begin to notice good things that they want to include in their writing.
I showed projected articles and talked through them while students responded on Edmodo. I gave them one question and asked them to put their thoughts in the reply section. As the students typed their comments in I told them to post a comment and then go back and see what their classmates had written. I also told them that they could participate verbally at any time, so we had a bit of a mix of talking and typing going on.
Plus: Everyone was participating
Minus: I wasn’t really getting the quality of responses that I was looking for…yet. Twenty-nine kids on one discussion…too much!
Here is the first part of our discussion, with student names removed. You can see that they start picking up on some of the elements such as title and illustrations.
As I monitored what comments the students were making I began to ask questions and respond to them verbally in order to prompt them to go deeper. Here are some other comments from that discussion.
This went on for awhile, with me prompting students to compare and contrast the articles and notice new or different characteristics as I shared various examples. Some students got tired of trying to type so they just jumped in and shared verbally while others seemed to prefer the rapid fire conversation on Edmodo.
What I liked about this was that it provided a way for everyone to be engaged and participate. Although they might have been too engaged and I’m wondering if they were really able to attend to the most important parts of the conversation. I think a debrief where we use the work we did to create a class chart would help summarize the most important elements of the genre.
One thing I did at the end of class was to post a question about topics. I asked everyone to toss out some thoughts on what they might write about because I know generating ideas is a huge struggle for many students They put together a huge list of things and I think this might have been the best part of the lesson because at the end of the day it will be the most helpful.
I've been experimenting with how to use the iPads in my fifth grade writer's workshop. I decided to try it out by launching a unit of study using my document camera, student iPads, and Edmodo. Usually we study a wide variety of mentor texts so that we can understand what the genre is and students can begin to notice good things that they want to include in their writing.
I showed projected articles and talked through them while students responded on Edmodo. I gave them one question and asked them to put their thoughts in the reply section. As the students typed their comments in I told them to post a comment and then go back and see what their classmates had written. I also told them that they could participate verbally at any time, so we had a bit of a mix of talking and typing going on.
Plus: Everyone was participating
Minus: I wasn’t really getting the quality of responses that I was looking for…yet. Twenty-nine kids on one discussion…too much!
Here is the first part of our discussion, with student names removed. You can see that they start picking up on some of the elements such as title and illustrations.
As I monitored what comments the students were making I began to ask questions and respond to them verbally in order to prompt them to go deeper. Here are some other comments from that discussion.
I notice that there is a lot of little text boxes and not one big one.Students began to see that the article was visually and graphically organized as well as organized in the writing. This was one of the reasons we chose this genre, to help students learn to organize.
For 12345 i see paw prints
Yeah wait why is it called high five?They began to look at the creative details such as creative title. High Five is a feature in Faces Magazine every month.
I like the author’s use of alliterations : five fascinating factsThey weren’t noticing much of the writing style so I made the above comment to get them thinking of it.
Started a little intro saying what your gonna learn. =]
The writer was bringing the reader inWhen the conversation got too big I started adding new questions to help them focus more.
This went on for awhile, with me prompting students to compare and contrast the articles and notice new or different characteristics as I shared various examples. Some students got tired of trying to type so they just jumped in and shared verbally while others seemed to prefer the rapid fire conversation on Edmodo.
What I liked about this was that it provided a way for everyone to be engaged and participate. Although they might have been too engaged and I’m wondering if they were really able to attend to the most important parts of the conversation. I think a debrief where we use the work we did to create a class chart would help summarize the most important elements of the genre.
One thing I did at the end of class was to post a question about topics. I asked everyone to toss out some thoughts on what they might write about because I know generating ideas is a huge struggle for many students They put together a huge list of things and I think this might have been the best part of the lesson because at the end of the day it will be the most helpful.
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