Friday, July 15, 2011
Miss Nana: Longing to take a Graphic Design Course
Miss Nana: Longing to take a Graphic Design Course: "So... This is strange and unexpected-- I want to learn how to do basic graphic design. I never thought I would say this, but it's true. Eve..."
Longing to take a Graphic Design Course
So... This is strange and unexpected-- I want to learn how to do basic graphic design.
I never thought I would say this, but it's true. Ever since I started working on a PowerPoint math game slide show, I just keep thinking how much more aesthetically pleasing and less frustrating it would be to make one if having the knowledge of basic graphic design.
Let's put it this way, in order to make one slide yesterday, it took a group of 5 of us (teachers/ teachers in training) to figure out basic formatting. 5 of us! For 1 slide! That just doesn't seem right.
If I want to be a creative teacher that can incorporate technology in the classroom and actually have time to make the technology fun and interactive, some basic knowledge of these things must be built.
I loved working on the SmartBoard last year and creating fun math lessons for students. How fun would it be to have interactive quizzes that I can create based off of what I had taught them? I think what has happened is that my standards of what is good keep escalating as I am in my Master's program with constant inspiration coming up left and right from my peers. Now, when I go back to the classroom, my standards will be higher of what I can provide my students. I would really like to be the one who can teach them to be creative with this kind of stuff instead of the other way around.
So, this is the plan: once I get a full-time elementary teaching job, take a Spanish class and a cake decorating class, next on the list is graphic design!
Wednesday, July 6, 2011
Miss Nana: Social Media in the Classroom... Via Google +
Miss Nana: Social Media in the Classroom... Via Google +: "So... About a week ago, I had no idea what Google + was. I don't think I ever heard it mentioned. Then, my mom (Miss Social Media USA-- *Ser..."
Social Media in the Classroom... Via Google +
So... About a week ago, I had no idea what Google + was. I don't think I ever heard it mentioned. Then, my mom (Miss Social Media USA-- *Seriously, if there was a real pageant for this, she would OWN it*) sent me an invite as one of the first groups of people to pilot this new technology. Within seconds of posting this news on Facebook, everyone I knew wanted me to add them to Google +. I got texts from people whose numbers I didn't even have. I got private Facebook messages from those I haven't seen/talked to in years. People started following me around and I had to hire security guards... I was even offered high monetary bribes for an invite. OK-- those last two/three statements were a slight exaggeration...
However, within three days of having it, I had about 30 contacts on this new site that is a lot like Facebook, except with more privacy options. The point is that this is a new technology which I and most of my contacts hadn't even heard of about a week ago, and now, everyone is begging for an invitation. In addition to showing how quickly can change in this social media world and how unpredictable it can be, this could be the beginning of a social media revolution in the classroom. In addition to the platforms it offers, Google + could change student/teacher interactions via social media websites.
Currently, many schools have policies of teachers "friending" their students on Facebook. Some solutions have been to create different websites for classroom questions, Facebook fan pages for the class, or other more complex means of synthesizing the Facebook experience outside the classroom. Google + offers privacy settings that could offer a new solution. When you add someone as a contact on Google +, there are several options. You could have them as a friend, as someone you just want to follow, family member, etc. This means that teachers could use the same Google + account and just share certain information with their students.
Personally, this could also be kind of hard to juggle. Imagine having a conversation with 50 people in one day and remember who you told what to. Although this is my main concern, I feel like it could eventually be something to get used to. Another way Google + makes this more possible is by offering a "View your profile as _______" feature right on your homepage. When in doubt, you can immediately check which information you shared with each group.
I am excited to see how platforms such as Google + will change student/teacher and employee/employer relationships outside the classroom and office these days and how teachers will be able to use these platforms to help bring learning to students when they aren't in the classroom.
Friday, July 1, 2011
Technology Keeps Learning Exciting
In my 3rd grade student teaching assignment, I was lucky enough to work with smartboards in the classroom. I taught all of my math lessons with the smartboard and many of my language arts lessons. It was fun to incorporate videos, games, and graphics into these presentations, as well as using student involvement. However, I tend to wonder how these students will do when they move on to teachers and or/classes that don't have/don't utilize this kind of technology.
This makes me wonder whether or not students are getting desensitized to technology. With all of these new applications and tools coming out, including video games and ipads, will classroom technology always be able to keep up?
The smartboards were new at the school I was student teaching in, and the students were very excited to be using them. They brought instructional efficiency, as each transition could be planned ahead of time and slides were already prepared. They involved students through games, questions, and elements of surprise-- like a random cartoon popping up in the middle of a slide asking a question.
As overall technology develops and students expect more, I wonder how much classroom technology will be able to keep up and advance in ways that still fosters student engagement. When I was an elementary school student, I remember being excited when my school got a whiteboard in the 3rd grade and the joys of computer typing class. Today, these standards are much higher and keep changing. With constant budget cuts and higher expectations, I cannot help but wonder if classroom technology will always be able to bring the level of student engagement as it has in the past.
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