Monday, April 26, 2010

Final Blog Reflection

I think that the ideas from the lesson plan we created for the IIC competition will be most beneficial for engaging my future students in active learning. Although I'm not sure if I would use the exact same approach, I have already been thinking of ways I could use Diigo to help my students keep better track of internet research they will be doing next year. I also think MindMeister or a similar program could really be helpful because of the flexibility it offers students and the visual way it represents the organization of one's thoughts.

Both of these technologies engage students in active learning because they require the students themselves to interact with the texts and technologies and take ownership for their own learning. This class has opened my mind to many new ideas for using the resources available online and other programs to support the learning objectives I want to achieve in the classroom.

Wiki Contributions

Here is the link for my lesson plan and materials about using Diigo and MindMeister to teach persuasive essays. And here is the link to where I posted the most useful blog from this semester; I chose The Book Whisperer because I have been interested in ideas about independent reading for my future students.

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Internet Safety Assignment

Blogging:

For this assignment, I read Elder Bednar's talk "Thing as They Really Are," watched the Frontline documentary "Growing Up Online," and looked at a couple of the resources on iKeepSafe.org. I thought both Elder Bednar's talk and the Frontline documentary were particularly interesting. I feel like I am right of the cusp of the generation gap. Social networking sites started to become popular right around the time I graduated from high school. When I was single, I used to spend a lot of time talking to friends through instant messaging, myspace, or facebook. I used to think it was pretty funny when news report would try and explain myspace or facebook to parents. In the "Growing Up Online" documentary, most of the kids interviewed said they know not to meet up with a stranger and other dangerous activities. I think it is true that most kids won't have problems with predators unless they go looking for trouble. However, I think the sense of sharing too much personal information online is a big problem. I know I have been shocked by what some of my friends have posted onto their profiles on social networking sites. Although most of my friends are adults now and can make their own decisions, I think some of their parents would be surprised to find out about what is really going on in their childrens' lives, and it probably wouldn't reflect well to future employers. One thing I hadn't thought much about before was cyberbullying. The story of the boy who killed himself after being bullied online and receiving encouragement from a "friend" was heartbreaking. I think the main idea I took away from this assignment as a future teacher and parents was the need to teach kids that they should follow the same rules they have been taught to follow in the "real world" on the internet. It goes back to having integrity and always treating others with respect.

Doing:

For the teaching part of this assignment I talked to my mom and my three siblings (ages 19, 17, & 15). My siblings have actually been taught a lot about internet safety already at school, which is a good thing. My mom is also a teacher and she has used social networking sites before so she was already pretty informed as well. However, I shared some of the stories from both the documentary I watched and the talk I read, and we discussed how it is important to have face-to-face interactions and not just live through the internet. We also talked about how you should be careful with your information and how you should you always be kind to others even if you don't have to face them in person. It was an interesting conversation.

Monday, April 19, 2010

Copyright Assignment



I found this first video in the Diigo group as an example of a student project about The Giver. It seemed that most of the video was their original footage, except perhaps for the pictures at the end. All of the clips would have been short enough to use anyway, but would have needed a citation if they weren't original. The only problem area seems to be the music, as it played for about a minute and a half, which is over the 30 second limit. They did cite the artist in the description of the video, but maybe they should have also included a citation within the video itself (and used clips from a couple different songs so they wouldn't exceed the length requirement.)




This is another student movie trailer for The Giver. I really like the idea for this project! The students did a great job. Again, it seemed that they filmed most of the images themselves. I wasn't not sure about the music; I couldn't tell if it was clips from different songs or all one track that kept changing tempo. When I looked through the comments, I saw that the student posted the sources in response to a question: "1st part was titanic, 2nd was pirates of the carribean 3 and last was harry potter 5" The music should have been cited and probably the clips were still a little too long. I think this would be the biggest potential problem for student multimedia, so I will need to inform my students about the 30 second guideline if I have them make multimedia projects in my class.