Thursday, 30 April 2015

who loves to procrastinate?

I think I've come across this before, but I thought I'd blog about it anyway. This website recommendation was sent to me from a teacher that I worked with while on prac. Its called Iprocrastinate. Its a lot like trello, I found, but you can sync it to your iphone. Oh, and its only available on mac. Its procrastinating, but its handy, because its busy work, when procrastinating. So you can plan, write lists, upload documents, do checklists and make planners. I think, as a school diary tool, I would allow it in my classroom, provided all the students have iphones. Or suggest to the students who have iphones to get it. That way they can track how they are going will all of their homework and assessment.  

Saturday, 25 April 2015

Religion in the classroom and ICTs

I was reading this article  about how some people believe that ICTs have no place in the religious education classroom. I completely agree with the article, ICTs and religion are definitely connected. Did you know (now, I can't remember exactly where I read this, but I did) when the first websites were created, religions were the first to create their own websites, because it meant that people could communicate across the world about their beliefs and build global communities of faith. In the past I've used ICTs in my religion classroom mainly for research, but I've also heard on websites that recreate religious rituals, that also create simulations of religious sacred spaces. I know some teachers have also created webquests (something that I have looked into but haven't tried yet). In my time in religion as a student I made imovies. But again, a lot of this is based on research and providing information. I think that is because in RE when it comes to transforming knowledge, there is a lot of application, synthesis and evaluation of knowledge and using ICTs to create new ways of communicating that knowledge. I haven't explored how I can use ICTs to talk to other people from other religions etc, however, that is definitely a possibility.

Lists

As you can see, I have a lot of lists. I use mac stickies. Its simple, but its messy. Trello  is much more effective. I don't think that I'd use it for teaching and collaborative learning, I think Padlet is better. I would recommend the website if there was a student in the class that loves lists as much as I do.

I also want to draw attention to a small icon on my desktop, in the bottom right. Its a program called Paintbrush (mac version of paint). I use it in conjunction with a graphic drawing tool, known as a wacom. I only have a small one, but they can be quite large. I also use a quicktime screen recorder and garageband to record my voice. BOOM using all of those elements, I get videos in which I can record maths and physics working out.

Thursday, 23 April 2015

What I really don't like about twitter

I was scrolling through twitter just before, and when i signed up to twitter I chose to automatically follow a whole bunch of news twitter feeds. This, my fellow teaching colleages, was a huge mistake. 

The thing with twitter is that news companies only get 125 (i think) characters to introduce a story, and oftentimes, they choose to focus on a particular part of a story that .. well really doesn't have anything to do with the story, or at best exaggerates what the real article is about. 

For example, there was a link to an article from a newspaper that said "is it ok to call obese models fabulous?"and it had a picture of a beautiful obese model on there. I clicked and read on the article (maybe that was my mistake) but what I found was actually a medical professional (I think) talking about the negatives of obese and overweight people within the population. It had nothing to do with models, or looking fabulous, or what to call obese models. 

Again, I clicked on another article that talked about how Robert Downey Junior from the avengers walked out from an interview. With this tweet there was a picture of Scarlet Johanson along with it. The article then described how 2 of the members of the avengers cast (not Robert) had made the mistake of commenting in a derogatory way about Scarlet Johanson's CHARACTER the black widow. Then, about halfway down the page it had a video from the interview with Robert. 

In one of my early blogs I was talking about how I thought that twitter would be great in my classroom because it allows for more communication etc. But now rethinking this in regards to how big news corporations can't describe their understanding of things properly within the 125 characters, how can I expect my students to do the same? 

Wednesday, 22 April 2015

differentiating using ICT

I was thinking about something Vicki said in the lecture the other day about using ICT to suit a wide range of students within my unit plan. And I freaked out because I hadn't intentionally designed my ICT learning experiences to cater for different students needs. So I went back through and I thought about the general VAK model and all the learning activities seemed to have elements of each in there somewhere. But then I was thinking about multiple intelligences and I thought, 'wow with ICT its actually quite difficult.' So, I googled it. I found this slideshare that explains things a little clearer. Looking back at my unit plan, I can see now that, without even realising, I've catered to quite a few different types of learners. I thinks its because in the back of my mind, I wanted to provide students with diverse ICT learning experiences, hence the design of my unit, caters for the diverse needs of students.


Monday, 20 April 2015

Visual learners?

While reading Emma's blog  I saw that she mentioned that she loved youtube because she was a visual learner. I understand that completely, I just wanted to come at this from an auditory learners perspective. One of my subjects this semester only consists of readings and NO lecture (and very few other resources). The lecturer posted a Youtube video and said that "if you are a visual learner, I suggest you look at this." I just went ahead and watched it anyway to have a break from the reading (that I wasn't fully comprehending). I learnt so much from that youtube video that he gave us, even through it only went for 5 minutes, and not because I was watching a guy in a video presenting a workshop, it was because I was able to hear a person talking about the topic.

I'm not saying that visual learners won't get anything out of it, but why did he just mention visual? That means that within my classroom, I need to remember that both auditory and visual learners will benefit from youtube videos. However, I would suggest that visual learners would learn more from gifs (or really short silent animations) because they are purely visual stimulation.


Saturday, 18 April 2015

learning another language

Just for fun. 

Yesterday I downloaded this app and just started playing and ... LEARNING FRENCH AT THE SAME TIME! 

I've never really even tried to learn another language, apart from Tetum when I went to east timor, and I only really learnt how to day hello, and yes, and no, and how are you.. that type of thing. 

But this app, is so clever, it really transforms learning. 

It allows you to do several thing functionally- start with the basics, do levels, gain points, go back etc. 
Pedagogically its amazing. In each level, you do several things such as translate, speak phases, match up words and their meaning, write in the language, etc. it also includes pictures so that you can visualise something and understand the meaning. You get to do all these thing, and you learn how the syntax works at the same time through hints and stuff. Its basically just a game. 

I've already learnt words like pomme (apple) robe (dress) noir (black) rouge (red) le/la/'l (the) hoome (male) femme (female) fille (girl) garcon (boy) et (and) calmes (calm) magne/mangez/manges/mangent (eat) livre (book) journal (newspaper) lisons (read) sommes (are) enfant (child) vous (you) nous (we) menu (menu) orange (orange) and a tonne more- and I've only done 2 levels that I completed in about half an hour. 

quicker, easier, more engaging, fun, - what more could you want?