How I became so SMART!

Over the past few years, interactive whiteboards have become more and more popular in schools around the world.  Many teachers are finding out how to effectively use this awesome resource while others are using them for glorified projector screens.  Maybe we need to reiterate that these are INTERACTIVE WHITEBOARDS…meaning that they are for interacting.  I cannot say that one board is better than the other because I have only been exposed to using the SMART brand versus the others on the market.

As a 2nd grade teacher, I became very curious when I was introduced to Smartboards and really found that by having my students use this awesome piece of technology that I could engage them like never before.  From there, I became very curious, very focused, and very excited about what this was doing for me as a teacher.  My students were used to having a smartboard, used to managing their personal space around the projector, and used to being engaged.  I shared my passion with those around me and created a culture of learners in my building.

 During my blog posts, I will share resources that I use on a consistent basis and tell stories about how students and teachers are using technology.  One of the first piece of sharing is from a colleague of mine who is veteran teacher with a new passion for integrating technology with her students.  Here is what she said after getting a smarboard in her class:

Good evening,I just wanted to thank you all for the mounted smartboard and projector. The smartboard and the programs we use in school have changed the dynamics of learning in second grade. Mounting the projector and not having shadows on our smartboard or to align it 10 times a day truly allows uninterrupted learning. I am enjoying showing my students audio, visual and kinesthetic ways to learn especially when they don’t know they are learning. These pieces of equipment and the time I am given to learn new technology including the distance learning have allowed me to define my teaching skills and are allowing my students to experience success with technology that increases their self awareness and self esteem.  Thank you 

Wow.  This is what it is all about.  Teachers inspiring students. 

I leave you with one of my favorite sites to share.  The site is called Teachers Love Smartboards. This site has ideas for any interactive board. If you check out this resource, you will find informative websites, video tutorials, and online training opportunities.  Daily takeaway!   BE SMARTER THAN THE BOARD…DON’T BE INTIMIDATED!

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5 on the Fly

Can you name 5 tips that you use daily? Have you ever shared them with anyone, of course you did. We all have little treasures of tips that become our daily habit so here is your chance to share some. Add your 5 tips in the comments to share with the rest of the community. Here are 5 of mine:

  1. Dateline - I just discovered this in May 2009, but it is something I use many times a day. It is a transparent linear calendar. It does not keep appointment, or have an alarm. It is just a simple calendar that floats above your applications.
  2. Keep your bookmarks - I use delicious.com but there are many different FREE online services. I bookmark anything I think I may use, or can recommend to others.
  3. FREE music? -stop in any Starbucks and pick up the card for the”Pick of the Week”. No purchase is necessary.
  4. Photo Sharing - It is so easy to share photos online for FREE. Why not set up an account for your classroom to share only with your parents. Try  Picasa.com  flickr.com shutterfly.com or many others.
  5. Resize ‘Em All - sorry this is a Mac app. You can resize any photo to a smaller size without losing quality. This is currently a FREE application, but might disappear soon. I hear it was purchased by a big computer company.

People in PA - Sarah Beeghley

In an effort to inform you about what is going on across the Keystone state, we will invite you into some classrooms and share some exemplaryPhoto by S. Beeghley: Civil War Sallie with Fr. Corby in Gettysburg projects you may have missed. Our first is Sarah Beeghley the owner of Civil War Sallie. Sarah Beeghley is in sixth grade at St. Joseph School in Mechanicsburg and recently placed first in the PA Middle School Computer Fair in the Web Page Design Category. Her project is called Civil War Sallie. Sallie is a Boyd’s Bear dressed in an American red, white, and blue dress and travels around to various locations connected to the Civil War. Here are the contents of our email interview:

Sarah, where did you get the idea for this project? I got the idea from Mr. Brandon Lutz who is the owner of Morpheus Fortuna and Pax.

What would YOU say is the purpose for Civil War Sallie?
To travel around to different places in order to help people learn more about the Civil War and Web 2.0 technology.

Have you been interested in civil war for a long time?
Yes for 11 years because my parents have been taking me Civil War related places since I was 1 month old.

Who are some of the most interesting Civil War personalities you have learned about? The most interesting person I learned about was Clara Barton.  I find Clara interesting because she did something that no other women would have done at that time.  She stood up to men who said that a battlefield was no place for a woman.

Have you met any other traveling critters along the way? Yes, I have met two. Their names are Morpheus Morpheus Fortuna and Pax. You can learn more about them by clicking on their names.

Where has Sallie been so far? She has been to Gettysburg, Andersonville Prison, the Clara Barton home, and several classrooms.  For her full list please go to http://civilwarsallie.wikispaces.com/SignUp

Do you have a specific place you really want Sallie to visit
? I’m really looking forward to Sallie’s visit to the Clara Barton birthplace museum in Masssachusettes. I am also hoping that she can visit Antietam to meet Ranger Mannie because Clara Barton was there during the battle.

Tell us about some of Sallie’s adventures. Sallie has met Miss. Clara Barton who is portrayed by Miss. Mary Ann Jung. She visited classrooms and learned about Abe Lincoln, got GIMPed into some old photos, and spent some great time with students learning about Civil War. She has visited museums related to the Civil War and met people who were in the Civil War including President Lincoln.  To see more please go to http://civilwarsallie.blogspot.com/

Have there been any memorable moments? Yes, when she went to Clara Barton’s home in Glen Echo, MD


Where can we follow her adventures?
(Twitter @CivilWarSallie)
You can follow her written travels on her blog at http://civilwarsallie.blogspot.com/ and follow pictures of her adventures on her flickr.com account at http://www.flickr.com/photos/civilwarsallie

If someone would like to have Sallie visit, what should they do? First they should go to  http://civilwarsallie.wikispaces.com/SignUp and check the available dates.  Then they e-mail me at civilwarsallie@gmail.com and we add them to the list.

How do you get funds to pay for Sallie’s travels? Right now there are no funds to pay for her travels.  I am going to be starting to raise some money for me to travel to some national conferences and I’d like to get Sallie her own website.

Is there is any other information you would like to tell us about Civil War Sallie ? I would like for Sallie to help people remember those who fought and died during the Civil War.  It is an important time in our history and I hope that people do not forget about why they fought.  Also, this project has been great for me because I have met some very nice people and it helping me to improve my public speaking and my writing.

Thank you to Sarah Beeghley and Civil War Sallie for sharing your story. Congratulations on your first place in the Pennsylvania Computer Fair as well!

Cheers to Brandon Lutz for inspiring this unique project!  Another STAR in action.

You can visit Sarah and Civil War Sallie at a poster session at NECC in Washington, DC. Tuesday, 6/30/2009, 1:00pm–3:00pm WWCC East Registration Lobby, Table: 1

Photos by S. Beeghley: Civil War Sallie with Fr. Corby in Gettysburg and with Clara Barton Other Follow me projects:  https://followme.wikispaces.com/Followmeprojects

Super-extended Access for DEN STARS

Note: Copied from DEN National blog. Check out President/CEO David Zaslav’s message.

We’re celebrating all week, but today is extra special - National Teacher Appreciation Day.  The entire Discovery family really appreciates the DEN community.  Our STARs make our jobs a lot of fun and in return we want to make sure you receive the support you need.  So for today we thought it would be a good idea to equip all STAR Discovery Educators with some extra resources for the summer.

taw boxWhen you log in to the DEN website you will see a Teacher Appreciation Week box in the upper left hand corner (above your profile).  Follow the directions to get an upgrade that will give you 90 days of free access to Discovery Education Health, Discovery Education Science for Elementary and Discovery Education Science for Middle School.  You now have the Discovery suite just in time for your summer planning.

You’ll find lots of ways to use the content, but one that comes to mind immediately is the connection between DE Science and our first-ever DEN Geocaching Day Join us on May 30 for a fun adventure with your fellow STARs.  Never geocached before?  Perfect.  We have series of Geocaching 101 webinars scheduled just for you.  The first one is tomorrow at 7 PM EDT.  Click here to register.

Are you an expert geocacher?  Perfect.  We are looking for more DEN guides to lead local events.  Check out all the details and join us on May 30!

We hope you enjoy the super extended access!

Classroom 2.0: Creating The Schools We Need with Chris Leamann

Note: the following live blog reflects notes from Lehmann’s presentation. You will want to visit the archives (information to follow) to listen to Chris again and again because he truly makes sense.

Chris Lehmann, Principal of SLA, says School 2.0 is progressive schooling and that Dewey is as relevant today as yesterday. Our goal is not 21st century workplace bu 21st century citizenship, preparing them for the lives they will lead. Public education is democracy. We cannot take the measure of a school as a test score. The way to educate students is to ask ourselves what we value and then build to meet those values. The teacher who tries t0 make a difference is not by putting a great teacher in a bad or failing system; we need to fix the system. Our biggest problem is a lack of vision.

Principals often value rows and textbooks; our vision most think deeper. We cannot standardize nor can we measure by standardized tests. If we want kids to learn deeply, then we must understand that the way they demonstrate this is different. We are ahistoric in thinking about education. The problem with data-driven decisions is that the data is good, but good data is expensive. We overlook the work that students do every day. How does their work become less real, less vital than the once a year standardized test.

MIT Media Lab motto is lifelong kindergarden, and these guys get it right. An 8 period day with 42 minute periods is not lifelong kindergarden. So, when was the last time you were engaged in lifelong deep learning? Do we do anything in our schools to let kids learn, discover, and play that way, or do we say, “let’s move on.” Attending today live or virtual is better than forced professional development. We need to give students a reason to care and structure our schools for the passion that we bring as teachers to school.

School today competes with more sensory overload than ever, but the outside world does exist. Stand outside a comprehensive high or middle school; what you see is hands reaching into devices that school bans. And then you see re-engagement with the life they lead. We need to be thoughtful about how we make school relevant by integrating their out/inside lives. What will we learn and unlearn. Do we really need to learn html now; nope, we need to unlearn it.

What do we teach and how do we teach it? We can do more and take our kids further, yet we are holding them back more than ever before. We need to be held to responsibility that is internal not external. WE have left others determine our accountability, and we need to reframe that. How did we forget that we are robbing students of tomorrow if we teach the way we did yesterday. If the white board only replaces the black board, are we teaching differently.

What should our schoold be about and what stands in our way. Students must be thougful, wise, passionate, and kind. Do you teach physics, or do you teach kids physics. The language we use matters. We teach kids, not subjects; so how do you structure that.

At SLA, you have an advisor for 4 years to 20 students. The curriculum of advisory is the community of advisory. Students have an academic, social, and emotional advocate. Parents know that. It’s a powerful thing, and it has to be more than homeroom. Teacher advocates must help get their students through as a whole person. That changes the fundamental sturcture of the school.

Learning is inquiry-driven. How will they learn, reflect what they have learned. What are the questions we can ask together? Let’s get kids asking good questions. We need to be student-centered. It’s about kids, not us. We need to be teacher-mentored; teachers matter and kids need adults because kids do not necessarily have constant mentors. It does take a village, and often that village is the teachers. Learning must be community-based; ustream to different comunities, law firms, car shops, architects, finding an adult that can help you learn.

Schools must be collaborative; synthesis works. Schools have to be passionate; it has to matter. The work that they do now must be real, vital, and matter. Teachers must be passionate…a constant flow process that problem solves (the biodiesel project w/2 patents pending). What if we said to kids, high school is real life and it matters. School is integrated; the day has to make sense. Block, with 5 periods for meaningful inquiry. Students travel together for electives and core, and the core is 3 subjects. Technology is integrated throughout. We can make the day make sense. School must be meta-cognitive; we need to think about thinking. We learn subjects that should make us logical systemic people in the world; we learn to write to communicate; we learn to frame logical arguments, and all of this makes us functioning members of our world.

But we need a better answer to why we learn this? How did we change the way students think about thinking. Learning must be authentic from head, heart, and hands. Learning must be understanding-driven and project-based. What can kids design and develop when they are asked to create? What does that look like? At the end of the unit, when you really want to know what the students have learned, if your answer is “I give a test,” then you are not doing PBL; you are doing a project to keep kids interested but are more interested in testing; it’s a dipstick, not PBL!

What we gain from our kids is engagement. What we lose is that we can measure everything they know. If you get 30 same projects, you did not let kids unleash creativity; they just followed directions. What about tech? It should be like oxygen; it is ubiquitous, necessary, and invisible. Do teachers share their laptops with 6 other teachers? Why do we ask kids to do the same.

What must go away is banning their tools. We deny access. We need to use these tools in cool ways that make sense and are relevant. Why do kids use cell phones badly in school? Because they have not been taught how to do it well. Certain technologies are not additive; they are transformative. Tech tools should enable kids to research, collaborate, create, present, and network with the world. We should not be content masters; any kid with a google phone has more access than we have knowledge. We need to leverage that use. We need to invite the world into our schools. It can be a/synchronous, but the world needs to see it. And learning must be about something that matters to them. And it needs to be transparent. Google makes learning transparent, and it can make it better.

What is the role of the teacher in the age of Google? WISDOM.

FETC: On-Demand At Your Convenience From Your Desktop!

We know that DEN pioneers firsts, and today brought yet another. If you missed FETCs Virtual Conference, now you can view it on demand, at your convenience. Let’s give a virtual applause to the Florida DEN/LC for creating two firsts: first LC virtual conference and first on-demand viewing. Bravo!

If you missed attending, you can “attend” by clicking here. The virtual conference offers incredible resources to download, all free and available to qualified registrants until July 23, 2009, 5:00 p.m. ET. You will find virtual events exploring the most pressing issues related to 21st Century Skills, from your desktop—at your convenience! Check out the on-demand sessions, excellent speakers, networking and product demos—at NO CHARGE!
And there you have it: fast, free, fun firsts–the cutting edge that only DEN delivers.






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Calling All Whiz Kids: Discovery Education/3M Young Scientist Challenge

Note: Copied from the Discovery Education Newsletter.

Now’s the time for students to enter the nation’s premier science competition for grades 5 through 8. The deadline for the Discovery Education/3M Young Scientist Challenge is May 20, 2009. Over the summer, judges will choose up to 51 semifinalists: one from each state and the District of Columbia. Ten finalists will be selected to receive an all-expenses-paid trip to New York City to compete in the final challenge in October. The winner will receive $50,000 in U.S. Savings Bonds ($25,000 cash value) and the title of “America’s Top Young Scientist.” All finalists receive amazing once-in-a-lifetime trips.

Nominate your students today!

Also, one teacher will be selected to win an all-expenses-paid trip to NYC to participate in the final competition as an honorary judge or host.For more information on the Discovery Education/3M Young Scientist Challenge go to www.youngscientistchallenge.com.




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Websites for Educators 04/20/2009

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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