1. How can
technology tools encourage students to be reflective and evaluate their own
strengths:
Technology tools such as Blogs
offer students a way to self-reflect about what they are learning over time,
such as our self-reflections on our chapters or communicating with our team
members about our projects. Profiler PRO
is a way to self-assess our learning characteristics as well as others within a
group, and help identify interests, strengths, and weaknesses of team members
or the students in your class. This
program allows you to write your own surveys based on the classes or students’
needs and allows us to reassess their profile to monitor their learning
progress. Survey Monkey and Zoomerang
are also online surveys that can be used to track results of students’
self-assessments and compare them to a larger group, such as the entire
class.
2. How can you
get students’ minds ready for a project:
The main thing for a good project
is to tap students’ prior knowledge to generate interest and promote inquiry. This can be done in several ways, such as by
using K-W-L activities, or invite students to think about the possibilities of
a topic by posing a question after showing a visual, bringing the topic up
daily, invite experts that are mystery guests to spark students’ interests
which leaves them eager to learn. For
our project, we are inviting students to think about the job of a meteorologist
and the weather components he/she needs to understand in order to make weather
predictions. We will let them ponder about
this idea and invite a meteorologist who will spark their interest about how
their job relates to their everyday lives, as well as agriculture and tourism
in Michigan. Other ideas are discrepant
events, such as investigations which arouse curiosity and prepare students to
think about what is to come, or role-playing predictions where students act out
what their prior knowledge of the project’s topic. I like the idea of recording students so they
can see where their understanding broke down during a discussion as a way to
find out what they don’t know to start a K-W-L activity, where the next step is
to figure out what they need to learn or find out. Another way to get students’ minds ready is to
connect them with experts of the field explored by students, such as a library
media specialist. When school personnel are not available, I agree that the
internet is a great way to meet and communicate with experts. Flickr, which is a social networking photo
sharing site where students can view other peoples work on similar projects and
write comments that go back to the submitters.
I believe that the best way to tap students’ prior knowledge is when
they are allowed to connect their initial inquiry to the real world, where they
are allowed to connect with the project on a personal level to find out what
they do or do not know.
3. Elements of
teaching fundamentals first:
I agree that when launching a
project, we need to think about teaching the prerequisite knowledge or skills
(fundamentals) students need to know in order to be independent learners. For our project, we are teaching students
about all the weather components important to a meteorologist’s job in order
for them to explorer them during the unit and create a weekly weather
broadcast. When equipped with the
essential knowledge of the components of a meteorologist’s job, such as knowing
about weather conditions, severe weather and weather safety, weather
instruments, weather information and data collection from maps, Doppler radar,
weather charts, etc., a prediction model, and the process of creating a weekly
weather forecast, students will be directed in the right direction when
starting their investigations for the project that are student driven. By creating a weather word wall, concept map,
or making a weather question board our students are learning the necessary
vocabulary and background knowledge necessary to tackle their own
investigations/projects that uses the latest technology. We should also teach students the necessary
background knowledge for the technology used in order to prepare them. I agree that when students are aware of what
they know and don’t know their learning takes on a sense of purpose and once
that is accomplished we can take them a step further by prompting them with
“why,” “should,” and “how” questions. I
believe that an assessment rubric is vital in giving students an understanding
of what is expected of them by addressing what good performance looks like
through qualitative descriptions of each rating.
4.
The important
steps in preparing students for using technology in a project:
To get students ready for using
technology in a project, we need to plan efficient ways for students to learn
them. The first step is to set up a
technology playground where students teach each other to solve problems, such
as simply learning about the technology.
The second step is to tap student’s expertise by immersing them in
technology where technically able students teach other with the help of
computer stations each with one tool that will be used in the project. It is important to discuss the purpose of
each tool and set expectations for its use and build on student’s
understanding. The third step is to
introduce project-management tools, such as a project log, a check list or
journal to track student’s progress toward goals and help with their
self-reflection. This allows us to
assess why students are falling behind.
The fourth step is to be comfortable enough with tools that we want
students to use and help demonstrate their use to our students. If we are not, we can ask technology
specialists or skilled students to help with a screencast that students can
watch from anywhere about how to use the technical process of tools necessary
for a project. It allows for tutorials
about the tools, narrated slideshows, and feedback on student’ work. The fifth step is to collaborate with
technology specialists to match and teach learning objectives with technologies
that help students meet them. The sixth
step is to think about the usefulness of the technical skill.
5. Ways to promote inquiry and deep learning:
We need to guide students to
choose the right questions, plan investigations, and begin to put their plan
into action. We need to let students
wonder about class displays, posters, etc., have them ask questions and ask
them questions to encourage inquiry and research. We need to provide collaborative activities
for investigations that are challenging.
We need to guide them past the superficial and factual to meaningful
inquiry based research by thinking like scientists. We need to encourage students to come up with
more challenging questions that guide meaningful inquiry by guiding them with
question starters. Allow students to
think about the project further by allowing them to work on the web for
teaching about information literacy.
Offer credible electronic resources and narrow information we want
students to use by distributing a list of selected sites with their web
addresses to limit the attention to credible sources that were evaluated by
us. Explain these sources, look at
organization, examine index pages, discuss search parameters, and read from
sites together before expecting them to be independent learners. Have students explorer search engines for
reliable and accurate search engines, such as ask for kids, kidsclick,
yahookids, or nettrecker. When students
understand all this, we can teach them about the “Big 6,” that offers students
strategies to help find, organize, and evaluate information.
6. How concepts
in this chapter relate to our topic/project:
This chapter is guiding us in
understanding how we can set the stage for students to learn by inquiry using
technology tools. We have used Blogs and
Profiler Pro to self-reflect and self-assess our knowledge and background
knowledge. To get students’ minds ready
in our project we are using a similar project-launching method as did the
project of the fantastical settlement on Mars, where we will use a visual or a
prompting question to tap student’s prior knowledge and invite a mystery
guest. This prior knowledge will be
collected in the form of a K-W-L activity, such as a weather word wall or
question board that allows us to see what terms students are already familiar
with when it comes to weather and the job of a meteorologist. To teach students the fundamentals of the
project, we are teaching students about the weather components to direct them
properly for possible investigations in the project. For our concept map, we have already been
considering an assessment rubric as important aspects of presenting a weekly
weather forecast/broadcast which will guide our students. Several of our lessons include experts or
media specialists to teach students important background knowledge about the
technological tools they will be using for their lessons as choices for their
projects. We will try to guide students
in order to provide rich inquiry lessons that are meaningful to them and help
them to become independent 21-st century literate learners.
Your reflection was very detailed. KWL's are great ways to have students be involved. I thought you summarized and explained everything in good depth. Also your reflection sounded very clear and was supper descriptive. Good reflection!
ReplyDeleteWow! A lot of great details in your response. I enjoyed reading how this chapter relates to your in class group topic/project. Technology is becoming a major part of our everyday life, especially education.
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