Monday, October 4, 2010

Conversations about Ed Reform

I've been reading and listening to podcasts this week about the buzz on Education Reform brought about by NBC and Oprah. The opening of the movie Waiting for Superman has brought on a flurry of conversations and opinions. The President's speech on the State of Education only added to the pot. Charter schools. Bill Gates. Will this/he reform Education? Are teachers motivated by these conversations? Are teachers inspired by Oprah's interviews? Are teachers walking out of the movie pumped up for Monday morning? Probably not, because in a movie about education, we actually hear very little about reforming teaching and learning. You can throw money at it, change the name, bring in truck loads of technology, but if we're still teaching the same way we did 10, 20, 50 years ago.... nothing will change. Loved the inspiring article on changing the entire program with a new design model by Diana Rhoten at Startl. It's not the teacher's it the system.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Reflections on State of Education Interview

On Sept. 27, 2010, Matt Lauer interviewed President Obama on the state of Education in the Nation. There were many generalizations but the larger issues talked about were; removal of poor teachers, charter schools, math and science scores, longer school year, quality and preparation of teachers, parent accountability and more. See transcript- http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/39378576/ns/today-parenting/ Are we seeing true reform in any of these areas? I'm encouraged when I hear the President speak on education, but I want to see examples. Where are the charter schools making a difference? Why can't we model that? Why don't we remove poor performaing teachers? This is a complicated answer, I know. How about teacher's salaries? Good teachers don't stay because they are often tempted with a better paying job and can we really raise a family on a teacher's salary? I believe President Obama does have a good perspective on the state of education in our nation. Of course he doesn't have all the answers, but in the end he continues to talk about it and bring attention to the needs. Keep the conversations going.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Plants are Perfect!


Spring! What teacher doesn't love it? Days are getting warmer, flowers are blooming, we're getting closer to summer break....I especially love this time of year for teaching science. Get the kids outside and be environmentalists and biologists. I will admit, life cycles are my favorite units to teach. Here are some great interactive websites for teaching plant parts and plant life cycles.

  1. BBC- Bitesize interactives- Parts of a Flower
  2. University of Illinois- Trees are Terrific
  3. WI.gov Environmental Education- Eek! Dichotomous Tree Key
  4. For Interactive Whiteboards- Life Cycle of Plants
image- http://creativecommons.org/ http://www.flickr.com/photos/jenessalynn/990650008/

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Digital Natives and Immigrants...Again!

In preparing for my M/AT, ED 5210 Educational Technology, I'm reading some articles and blog posts related to this discussion topic. After candidates read Marc Prensky's article that defined this issue, they investigate into other's opinions in the teaching/technology field. We look at Jamie McKenzie article "Digital Nativism" and find quite a contrast in thinking. I do this exercise with both undergraduate and graduate students. As you can imagine, the "older" group is typically highly agitated by Prensky's comments. I find myself agreeing with principal, Chris Lehmann, who responded in 2007, but is still applicable. How do we engage students to do hard work and think deeply? These are the questions good teachers should be asking.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Keeping Wordle Safe in the Classroom

After sharing Wordle.net with teachers in my preservice courses and at ICE 2010 conference, I've had several primary teachers ask how to make wordle safe and appropriate for their students. Here's a link to the blog of the creator of wordle.net, Jonathan Feinberg, where he answers that question.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

iPad in the Classroom

http://tinyurl.com/yjgl9rk

I'm starting to see the benefits in a classroom. I'd love it alone for all the Apple Apps that can be downloaded. Many of the apps are free. I'm looking forward to how teachers will use them in the classrooms. Lots of possibilities!

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Etherpad...brought to you by Google






http://etherpad.com
Love it. Google owns it. I will be using it in my classes live and virtually. No account necessary. Similar in nature to Twiddla.com . I observed a spanish class at Caruso Middle School in Deerfield, IL, where students were communicating in spanish on their netbooks to others. They didn't know who they were chatting with, but they had to ask and answer questions, in spanish.