Wednesday, February 27, 2008

How could multimedia have assisted my lerning?


When given this weeks blog prompt, "Think back to an educational experience that you had that was NOT well designed. If you now had the chance to re-design that experience using multimedia in your lesson design, what would you do differently and WHY? Remember to include some ideas about assessing multimedia learning in your design."
I remember a pre-calculus course from high school that was terribly ill designed. The teacher would teach us for about 5 minutes at the beginning of the class and the remainder of the time was spent with the students trying to teach themselves the material while the teacher sat at his computer. This class was extremely difficult because the teacher did not really teach, so we had to rely on the poorly designed and confusing book to teach us trigonometry and other important mathematical concepts.
If we as students had had access to some of the open source software that is available now, like The KDE Education Project, I feel that we would have had a better time at teaching ourselves. If the teacher could have used the computer to teach us about sines and cosines I think that we would have had a better time at visualizing the material. Any type of multimedia would have been better than the brief lessons that we got.
Teachers should use multimedia as a resource to help themselves and students in the learning process.

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Thoughts on "After the Bell, Beyond" by Eric Langhorst


While I do feel that this article gives some wonderful suggestions as to how technology can be used outside of the classroom, I feel that it did not focus enough on how technology can be used in the classroom. This article discussed how the author enhanced book discussions and study sessions by using technology like podcasting and blogging. I find it difficult to understand why this educator neglected to discuss how these technologies could be used within the 'limiting' 45 minute time slot.

Forty five minutes can certainly be limiting, however how do we use those 45 minutes to their greatest potential. This educator seems to be neglecting technology use in the classroom, for he states "the brick-and-mortar school, along with teachers should be the core for learning" (p 77). This gives an image of old fashioned classrooms that are not technology based. I feel that students first need to be taught to use technology productively for education in the classroom before exploring the technology on their own time. Yes, certainly many students are technology use experts, however it cannot be assumed that all students are such. We need to properly integrate technology into the classroom before we can properly integrate it into homework.

I feel that this article gave some wonderful suggestions on how to use technology to enhance learning, however some areas were clearly forgotten. We must remember that students need to be educated on how to use technology in their education. Time and effort needs to be spent in teaching students how to properly use, navigate, and explore the numerous technological based education tools.

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Web 2.0: can it enhance the classroom?


I have spent a lot of time over the past week exploring all of the wonderful web based technology that is available to teachers. I have found that every single one of these can be a wonderful asset to any classroom, and any teachers instruction.

The first site I explored was www.gliffy.com. I am fortunate enough to teach in a school that uses the Inspiration program. This is a great program, however if students need to work on a chart at home they cannot access this software. Instead I could give my students an assignment that they could create with gliffy, then they could save it and I could view it right from the internet. This also would allow students to view charts that I have made from home.

The second site I explored was www.wikispaces.com. I think that this is a brilliant idea. This site allows teachers to bring information to the students in their own language, the language of the internet. This also allows students to check work that they may have missed when they were absent as well as post discussion questions or topics.

In general, I think that teachers need to start using sites like these. This would allow us to bring education to the students in a way that they can understand it. This allows teachers to be fast paced so that their audience doesn't become bored or underwhelmed. This is the correct direction for education to be moving, towards the future.

Monday, February 11, 2008

What's in the News?


Christy Rheam

What's in the News?

Due 2/13/2008

Article: "Kids Can't Focus These Days. Then Again, Neither Can I." by Thomas Washington

washingtonpost.com. Sunday, February 3, 2008: pg B02

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-yn/content/article/2008/02/01/AR2008020102825.html

Summary: This article looks into the issue of students reading. It quotes facts like "less than one-third of 13-year-olds are daily readers, a 14 percent decline from 20 years earlier", and states that the percentage of 17 year old non readers has doubled in a 20 year period, from a recent study from the National Endowment for the Arts called "To Read or Not to Read". The author, Thomas Washington, explains, however that students are still doing their business as usual. Washington points out that it is not just the students who are having trouble focusing. We are all accustomed to a technology based world in which information is quick and even librarians (Washington is a librarian) cannot stick with a long novel that does not capture them right away. Because of our technology based world, students have become better and better at picking out the important information and discarding the unimportant. He ends the article with the following questions, "What do we need to know? Why do we need to know it? And, given that by the end of our lives we will have absorbed and converted to knowledge only a sliver of the information available, should we bother knowing it?"

Response: What an interesting perspective, from a librarian, none the less. Washington's article opens a new perspective on why reading scores are low. Students are so accustomed to reading for tests and not for depth. The have become masters at picking out the important information without actually reading entire assignments. The technology based world that our students live in has trained them to multitask, allowing them to text, IM, write papers and read articles all at the same time. According to Washington, this has not caused them to be any less successful in school.

My View: Honestly, I am very much in agreement with this article. The students that I teach are not the strongest readers, however they are still succeeding in my classes. They are quite good at picking out important information from assigned readings. They openly admit to me that they have not read the information completely, however the required summaries that they have to write are generally really good. I feel that this article very much relates to Marc Prensky's idea of Digital Natives (see post from January 22). These students think and learn differently and have adapted the old fashioned assignments to their fast paced world by extracting the important information from assigned readings.

Questions: Do students need to be strong, fluent readers in order to function in the high paced, technology based world? How to we teach students to be fluent readers while still preparing them for the high paced, technology based world? Is it wrong for students to ask 'why do we need to know this'?

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Thoughts on the first two chapters of Multimedia Projects in Education


I found the DDDE model outlined in the first two chapters of the book to be extremely influential. As I was reading through these chapters I thought about all of the multimedia experiences I have had in my education and I wished that my teachers and professors had used the DDDE model. The DDDE model really requires the educator to think thoroughly about the assignment that they are giving. I also think that it requires the educator to experience the multimedia themselves before presenting it to students. This allows for a less flawed lesson and an easier understanding on the part of the student. I also really appreciate how the evaluate section requires the educator to reflect on the activity as well as revise it for the future. I cannot count how many times I hear educators say, I forgot to fix that from last year. How can we as educators learn if we do not reflect and revise our previous work? I feel this is an extremely important aspect of teaching and the DDDE model requires it.