Online Calendars for Managing Your Classroom

monday, april 4, 2005 at 1:47:39 PM

As teachers we are constantly looking for tools to help support the home-school connection for learning. The use of an online calendar is one such tool that teachers can use to place classroom events, assignments, and more! Parents and students can access the information posted here, anytime and anywhere for instant access. If you want to create a stronger home-school connection use some of the free online tools. Look at the calendar I have posted for my professional development events and ideas. You can sign up for your own calendar and customize your events, too, at AssignADay 4Teachers or search for a calendar by subject, id or last name of the creator. There are so many examples for you to get ideas. Type "American History" into the subject box to see examples of the calendar use by teachers!
AssignAday was created by The Advanced Learning Technologies in Education Consortia at the University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning. ALTEC utilizes the most advanced and innovative technologies available to improve teaching and learning. Some other great tools for teachers from ALTEC include the popular Rubistar, QuizStar, and NoteStar.

Using Web Notes is Easy!

friday, march 25, 2005 at 3:36:44 AM

I recently came across a tool called Webnote that I think has some great potential for teaching and learning! Virtual notes on the web are going to be my lifesaver for having access to my To Do List any time I have internet access. Visit my webnotes! But as always I am looking for efriendlylearning tools to create learning activities that incorporate meaningful dialogue and writing about learning. Educators, using webnotes is easy. It is time to develop the connections...Here are some topics to get you started!

How can webnotes be used in Professional Development?
How could teachers use web notes for instructional management?
How could administrators distribute information using webnotes?
What can students do with web notes?
How can students using webnotes for writing about learning?
How can webnotes encourage meaningful dialogue about content?


Look for use of this tool in one of my presentations on technology tools for learning! Send me your ideas and I can credit you as the author!

Lesson Plans using Handhelds for Student Learning

monday, march 21, 2005 at 8:41:00 PM

Using handhelds for learning is gaining interest across the nation as technology budgets are slimming down. Teachers looking for student learning activities with handhelds can find over 300 lesson plans that were created by fifth and ninth grade science and social science teachers focusing on embedding reading strategies in content area learning.

More lesson plans can be found at Knox County Schools Handheld Project, some secondary lesson plans from a project at Arkansas State University and from Tony Vincent's graduate class.

Share your lessons with others. Email me!

Another Great Handheld App!

monday, march 7, 2005 at 1:08:02 PM

I came across a Palm OS handheld app the other day that is useful for teachers AND students. The software is called Lesson Plan by Tapperware. Teachers can use this as an instructional management tool to keep track of lesson plans and students could "makeover" the app as a student management tool for tracking assignments. While there is a cost to the commercial version, the trial version allows 20 database entries.

Lesson Plan as an Instructional Management tool:
The software allows all the features of traditional lesson planning software, but everything can be done on the handheld!

Lesson Plan as a Student Management tool:
I know there are other "free" software apps for students to track their assignments but the feature I like about Lesson Plan that helps the struggling learner is its ability to insert a template, where the student only has to enter the data for the specific assignment page numbers, etc. All the heavy text entry can be done through the insert command with a pre-designed template. The only thing better would be a beam command! See what you think...test Lesson Plan with your struggling learners and those would benefit from a little more ease when organizing!

A Big Educational OUCH!

monday, february 14, 2005 at 3:18:32 PM

At a time when educational technology budgets are slim as it is, it looks like there is a possibility that the federal Enhancing Education Through Technology (E2T2) dollars may also feel the squeeze. The Presidents 2006 budget proposal entirely eliminates this state block grant for technology in education. Read more...

But, on a good note...
What does it mean to be literate in the digital age? Well, one non-profit group that brought you the SAT has now created a test for determining student digital literacy. Beta-testing continues until March and then the service will be available to those who need to "know". According to ETS, the creators of the ICT exam, this web-based exam is "a testing program that measures postsecondary students' ability to define, access, manage, integrate, evaluate, create, and communicate information in a technological environment." Read more here.

New National Technology Plan

monday, february 7, 2005 at 12:03:06 AM

I have been involved with technology planning in schools for quite a few years. As the new national educational technology plan emerges it will be exciting to see how more "school" resources and information become available for making learning decisions.

Will textbook information become digital? Will handhelds become the tool for learning? How long will it take for more appropriate learning material to be made digital? Will schools and communities be readied for wireless learning? Will quality professional development be available for all teachers anytime, anywhere? Will teachers as a profession begin to embrace teaching in this electronic and information age? Will teachers develop their technology literacy to manage learning environments, develop the home-school connection, create effective student learning activities, grow professionally, and communicate with their partners in learning?

I look forward to working with educators in these efforts...
Access to Internet resources has been one of the most powerful leaps for professional development. The vast free resources available allow teachers to increase their knowledge and skills for using digital tools for learning without ever leaving home. I will be attempting in the next few weeks to mine some of the best and post them on my website.

Here is one for a start...Innovate, a journal for online education
As educators, we have been using PowerPoint for quite some time now. We are pretty savvy at creating presentations that connect with the learning audience. The critics are definitely not talking about us when they coined the term "PowerPointlessness". That term is reserved for those presenters that read the text from each slide and have inappropriate visuals and transitions that do nothing to enhance the message for learners.

For those of us that have unleashed the power of this "screen for learning", this visual enhancement and organizational tool is an essential tool in the teacher and presenter backpack!

But, wouldn't you just like to control that slide show from anywhere in the room? I know you can use the remote mouse or a device like my Presenter Plus USB device, but did you ever think you'd be able to control your presentation from your handheld! Forget that linear forward or back button, a product called SlideShow Commander developed out of the Carnegie Mellon Pebbles Project and now available commercially at Handango $49.95 (PalmOS) or Installigent (PocketPC)can do so much more.

While your slide show is showing on the screen, your handheld can view a Scribble Panel, Notes Panel, Titles Panel and Timer Panel. This means if you ever forget what the next slide is in your show, you can look ahead on your handheld without interrupting what the audience is seeing. And now you can do all of that without being tethered to your PC!

SlideShow Commander allows a Microsoft PowerPoint presentation to be managed from a PDA, freeing the presenters to convey their message from anywhere in the room. More than just a remote mouse, the software application enables the presenter to navigate to any slide, see their notes and slides on the handheld computer, write on the slide by writing on the handheld screen, and use a built in timer to track and record the length of the presentation -- all from the palm of their hand. Slide Show Commander also allows other attendees who using PebblesPC (See my earlier blog entry, Handheld Software for Student Collaboration) to annotate on the current slide.


Selected academic researchers, and also employees of the US government and Microsoft can get the research version of SlideShow Commander. Contact us for more information.

Mmmm......now if I could have only found it when it was still "freeware"!! You know how the teacher's budget is!

Handheld Software for Student Collaboration

friday, january 21, 2005 at 1:38:56 PM

The other day I came across software that allows a handheld to remotely control a computer on a network. While the software takes a little getting used to, I am intrigued at how this application might be used in the classroom to promote student dialogue, discussions about learning, and reflective writing strategies for active learning.

Pebbles was created as a part of the Pittsburgh Pebbles PDA Project's at Carnegie Mellon University. While the current focus of the project include the use of handhelds for people with disabilities, including the new EdgeWrite input technique, and the use of handhelds as "personal universal controllers" for appliances, I always like to explore ways emerging technologies might be used in the classroom with students to foster what works in learning.

Basically, three applications that make up Pebbles, the Remote Commander, Scribble, and Shortcutter on the handheld provide all of the navigation capabilities of the computer mouse and keyboard. All you need to enter on the handheld is the IP Address of the remote computer. As I write this piece I am using Remote Commander to input my text. I can pause in my writing and use the stylus on the handheld to click on Internet Explorer in my QuickLaunch bar and navigate to my favorites to go to the Pebbles Project web page.

To browse Pebbles Internet information I switch to Shortcutter on my handheld and with previously created "panels" I can click on links, go back or forward, scroll and page up and down. All typical browsing functions that I perform with the computer mouse and keyboard are controlled with the handheld. Switching to Scribble, with the stylus I can annotate anything on the computer screen. (This works like the Pen tool in Microsoft PowerPoint slide shows) The cool thing is, though, that any handheld connected to the network through Pebbles can "scribble" on the computer screen at the same time!! Each handheld is identified with a different color line and cursor style!

One other application I especially like in an earlier version of Pebbles is PebblesChat where handhelds connected via the network to the computer could "instant message" with just the other handhelds. The developers did not bring this app into the newest version of Pebbles 6.0 but the 5.0 version is still available for download.

Now, what about those classroom uses?? With an LCD projector connected to the computer the possibilities are endless! Students can work together to co-write; teachers can get exit slips for student understanding of content instantaneously; students can explicitly mark a text source to reveal understanding; teachers can receive instantaneous feedback from students through quizzes that they created in Microsoft Word.

With more than one computer in the classroom, groups of handhelds could be connected to different computers so that students could co-author PowerPoint slides or work together in a graphic organizer from Inspiration. Each student handheld can control what happens on the screen!

While the interface feels a little clunky to start with (as with all freeware before it becomes a commercial product) with just a little investigation and training the possibilities are endless with this software in the creative teacher's classroom to get kids to talk and be more than passive learners!!

Let me hear what you are doing with Pebbles in your classroom!

View the demo for SlideShow Commander, the Pebbles Project application that went commerical. Using this you can control your PowerPoint presentations with your handheld!

Christine's Wishful New Year's Resolutions for Teachers

tuesday, january 4, 2005 at 11:57:04 PM

It is that time of year again when everyone looks within to create personal resolutions for the New Year. After hanging around many kids during the school break and listening to views about teachers, classes and school, I am posting my best wishes for a teacher's New Year Resolutions and I pledge in my professional development sessions to help teachers keep on track for these resolutions!

New Year Resolutions
1. Create learning activities and classroom environments that make the students eager to return rather than counting the minutes or dreading the experience.

2. Develop content learning activities that are more than the kids reading the text, the teacher clarifying or lecturing, students taking notes and being assessed through periodic homework assignments, quizzes and tests.

3. Organize a professional development plan for increasing technology literacy and instructional practices with digital tools.

4. Deploy more active learning strategies in student learning activities.

5. Understand the difference between constructing new knowledge and knowledge management when designing student learning.

6. Incorporate more student learning activities that promote meaningful dialogue and student interaction in the learning process.

7. Design instruction beginning with assessment.

8. Diagnose where students are in relation to the learning standard and then create multiple and varied assessments that will provide the evidence necessary to measure student progress toward the standard. Then begin to design the learning activities which help the students meet the content or skill that will be assessed.

9. Pause during the learning process and provide opportunities for student reflection.

10. Provide access to the electronic tools that help students organize their learning.

11. Before using technology for learning, determine the value the digital tool will add to the learning experience. Make it worth it!

12. Find that instant messaging tools are powerful in learning!

13. That every teacher creates an instructional environment with a primary focus on teaching students not content.

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