My first few years of teaching, I developed a theory that if I wrote a book by my fourth year I would be famous and have a film made after me (think any major Hollywood film done after a teacher). Cheesy jokes aside, with iAuthor, I knew I had a chance to create an iBook with all of my research and experiments in education and technology. Doing a lot of technology presentations, I wanted to share what I had created as well as show off what this application could do for interactive books. Continue reading
Podcasting Made Easy, Part III : The Interview
5 JulFor one of my first podcasts, I called upon Phil Boyte who lived up in the foothills two hours from where I live. He agreed and I offered to drive up and meet him. We sat and spoke for a bit, and it became clear I did not have a vision of what I wanted the subjects of my podcasts to be. I had ideas, and most of the time I left that idea choosing process up to the person I was interviewing. However, with that much choice, my subjects would often get lost and be unsure of a topic. I lost a few interviews that way, especially from people who are not used to be recorded. Phil and I eventually did a great podcast on ideas you can use for the first days/week of school – but it took a little time to get there. I began to learn – thanks to my conversation with Phil – that I needed to get dialed in to the content I was looking for in the podcast. Continue reading
Video on the iPad and iPhone
22 JunFilm, and a technology, has only been around for about one hundred years, it is still relatively young. Conversely, story telling, has been around for thousands of years and been the backbone of society and culture throughout that time. Film takes story telling to another level and gives people a medium to share their interests, ideas and passions. I recently had a chance to do a lot of work on my iPad as well as my iPhone to record and process video on a mobile platform. My goal is to find what I can use personally and what I can teach my students to make them better story tellers using film.
Cruise Control
21 MayI’m a cruise control driver. With a forty-five minute drive, I like to get on the freeway, set my speed and go. It’s a these time my mind tends to wander, I can prepare for the day on the way to work or reflect on my day as I drive home. It’s a great time for me to decompress, relax, or get ready for what lies ahead. However, I’m often impeded as I have to share the road with many other drivers. The most frustrating, the drivers in the passing lane who are not passing anyone. Remember, I’m using my cruise control, so I’m not speeding up or slowing down, slamming on brakes or randomly accelerating. So, when I begin to come up on a car that does not yield, and I’m forced to slow down, or in some cases go around, I get a little frustrated as I have to engage my brake. I feel the same way about education. When I get in my room I can teach some amazing things and am able to go a long way to motivate and inspire my students. Unfortunately, bureaucracy and outdated policy are often my roadblocks on the passing lane to properly prepare my students for the world beyond high school.
The Tech Savvy Generation
18 AprI recently did a lesson on research projects with my Junior AP English class, Language and Composition. With AP, the school perception that these are the cream of the crop intelligent students who know all their is to know about reading, writing or anything else. At the end of the presentation, I had up a QR image (Quick Read) which the kids could scan with their phone and it would take them to a website at Cornell University that has video and link on how to conduct research. I remember thinking, as I planned this project, how hip am I to use this technology where kids can use their phones to access additional information by scanning my whiteboard. As the moment approached, my giddyness almost uncontrollable, I had one student out of twenty-nine who took out her phone and knew what I was doing. Next class, zero. So, out of sixty students, with my brilliant interactive scheme, pretty much all of my students had no idea about the technology i was using. Conclusion, I need to teach kids the tech skills they will need to compete, learn, share and collaborate in this world.
If I Only Had a Brain
12 AprThe sweater was a light green argyle, nice color, great for spring. It was made from a light material, very fine cotton, perfect for warmer weather, but not too warm, and it wreaked of my personal style elegance. I got a coupon in my email, forty percent off one item. I went to the website and ordered my perfect sweater. It arrived, I opened the box, the sweater had a hole. Rather than wait the five to ten business days to send it back and wait for the return, I drove one hour to Banana Republic to make an exchange. Thankfully, they had what I wanted in my size, beautiful. I went to exchange it, the clerk looked at me and said, “That will be $22.43.” I looked back at him, “It’s the same sweater,” I said, somewhat confused, “it’s just an exchange.” “I know,” said the clerk, “but it’s ringing up at a different price. The difference is $22.43.” That’s when it hit me, more heavily in my classroom, work, or anywhere else in my life at that point. Thinking is hard.
My First Prezi
12 AprGreat teaching tells you that along with verbal/auditory instruction, you should also use kinesthetic and visual instruction. So, from day one I have been using PowerPoint. What a great program that I can use to add effects, images, bullets, videos and all kinds of groovy things. I used it for Jeopardy, Family Feud, Who Wants to be a Millionaire and all other kinds of reviews. However, over time, I began to see PowerPoint abuse – slides with no pictures and too many bullets. Slides with repeated format, each slide had a picture on the same side with writing on the same side. Too much info, not enough info, poor color choices, bad video … the list goes on. That led me to Prezi. With some prompting from my friend MJ – thank you – I created my first Prezi.
iPad 2 or Laptop?
11 AprThe debate is thick as to the type of niche that iPad fits in the technology world. I love my laptop, I love my desktop at work, and I love my iPad. So, which device is the correct one for a majority of my personal use? That all depends on what I will use the device for, and iPad keeps blurring that line every day. Continue reading
Voice, Google Voice
3 AprWhen I was four years old I remember my family – with great interest – sitting around the kitchen table and teaching me the home phone number. It took a while, or felt like it did, as we went over and over again the seven digits that would connect me to our house phone. At the time we had a rotary phone and one of those new age push button phones, a gift from grandma and grandpa. Now, with hundreds of numbers stored in my iPhone and on my computer, I have the option to create another new phone number using Google Voice. Continue reading
Blogging for English
12 MarIn every classroom in the United States that teaches writing – good writing – the goals are the same: write often, get feedback, make improvements, write again. As an English teacher, my issue has always been, and will always be, managing the comments and feedback on every piece of student writing. It’s laborious, time-consuming and leaves me carting papers all over the place, from work to Starbucks to home and back again. After thinking, reading, asking questions, and researching late at night, there was only one thing to do, start a blog in my English class. Continue reading