Thursday, April 24, 2014

ASSESSING MEANINGFUL LEARING

         In this unit, I’ve learned about several different assessment tools that benefit both teachers and students. The first time I heard the word ‘rubric’ was from my son’s fourth grade teacher. I thought it was brilliant! The teacher was basically showing the students exactly what to do to earn their best possible grade; it was like a little contract. I don’t recall ever being given rubrics when I was growing up, and as a result, there were a lot of times when I had to guess at what my teacher wanted. Rubric Gallery is an extremely comprehensive site, where the user can tailor a rubric by filtering grade level, subject, type, and specialize the details of an assignment. The end result is a ready-to-use rubric, complete with a breakdown of the percentage of the grade allocated for each section. With Quizdom, using any web-enabled device, students are able to build confidence by preparing more effectively for state mandated testing. Students post-test scores increased by an average of 42% by using Quizdom’s online tools, including quizzes, instant feedback on errors, and information on how to correct them. Quizdom also helped teachers assess the overall knowledge base of their students to determine areas that needed more emphasis. Software programs available through Inspiration allow users to integrate visual learning into the curriculum by mapping, graphing, or diagraming their topics, while the program simultaneously creates an outline that will subsequently guide students in their writing assignments, or provide them with a PowerPoint ready outline to help them verbally explain their thought process and ideas.
       
      Over the course of this semester, I have learned about quite a few valuable tools for my own classroom. Some of them I’d never heard of before, and I learned some new ways to use those tools I already knew about. Webquests were new for me. My focus is on teaching high school English, and Webquests will be very instrumental for students’ research and writing assignments. MS Office will be beneficial in creating assignments using Word and Publisher, and I will undoubtedly use Excel for keeping track of students’ assignments and grades. The Multiple Intelligences Lesson Plan was less of a technology lesson, and more of a teaching lesson. It provided a necessary reminder that students learn differently, and their needs should be accommodated through the use of multiple learning formats. Blogs are a really great way for students to demonstrate their knowledge and express themselves creatively. The student composing the blog has a sense of working individually and can personalize a lot of aspects of it, but the ability for a teacher and student peers to critique and comment on blog posts makes it a collaborative effort, allowing for the sharing and assessing of knowledge. I intend to use Screencasting to eliminate the cumbersome process of shuffling papers back and forth by grading students assignments online and providing them with instant, personalized online feedback both in writing and with verbal recordings. I have used PowerPoint in the past, but I was able to refine my skills with it and learn some new tricks. The program will come in useful as a visual aid for classroom lectures to help keep students engaged. Prezi was fun to use and play with, but since I’d never used it before, it took me a really long time, and the constant moving of everything on the screen drove me a little crazy. I may try it again, but at this point I don’t think it would be my first choice, especially in front of an audience full of high school students. And finally, the e-Porfolio we created on Google Sites was new for me. It was a little complicated getting it set up initially, but I can certainly see the benefits. Being able to organize and store all of a students work in one place, and having it there to refer back to has some real benefits for the teacher and the student. Although it will take some time to get it going initially, I think the e-Portfolio is definitely worth the effort. 

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

TECHNOLOGY APPLICATION STANDARDS

My concentration is teaching English and Language Arts at the High School level.  The following information was obtained from Chapter 110 of the Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills for English, Language Arts, and Reading, Subchapter C.

§110.31(1) Introduction:  The English Language Arts and Reading Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS) are organized into the following strands: Reading, where students read and understand a wide variety of literary and informational texts; Writing, where students compose a variety of written texts with a clear controlling idea, coherent organization, and sufficient detail; Research, where students are expected to know how to locate a range of relevant sources and evaluate, synthesize, and present ideas and information; Listening and Speaking, where students listen and respond to the ideas of others while contributing their own ideas in conversations and in groups; and Oral and Written Conventions, where students learn how to use the oral and written conventions of the English language in speaking and writing. The standards are cumulative--students will continue to address earlier standards as needed while they attend to standards for their grade. In English I, students will engage in activities that build on their prior knowledge and skills in order to strengthen their reading, writing, and oral language skills. Students should read and write on a daily basis.

According to the Technology Applications Standards for All Beginning Teachers, technological terms, concepts and applications are to be incorporated into lessons and integrated with the TEKS standards into the curriculum for English and Language Arts. Technological skills are clearly required for research and locating sources. As an English teacher, it is my intention not only to instruct my students on how to locate sources with a multitude of online search options, but also how to identify the origin and reliability of those sources. The Texas Education Agency’s English, Language Arts, and Reading Standards indicate that teachers will provide students will opportunities to develop skills in the areas of producing visual images and messages in various media forms. Reading and writing are required for internet research, as well as the creation of multi-media presentations to exhibit the student’s acquired knowledge. I think that allowing students to create these types of technological presentations, individually or in groups, can enhance the learning process, while also providing them with the opportunity to simultaneously hone both their technological and Language Arts skills.

The most important TEKS in the introductory section shown above actually jumped out at me. The last line specifically states that “students should read and write on a daily basis”.  Most notable is the word ‘and’, not ‘or’.  Teachers are directed to provide their students with instruction and lessons that incorporate both reading and writing, every single day.  By following this simple but direct guideline, it will take care of nearly all of the rest of the directives. By assigning students to read and a wide variety of texts, organize their ideas, and write them out clearly and concisely each day, they will have already complied with over half of the standards listed. “The standards are cumulative” is an indication that the students’ knowledge, with regard to reading and writing, is an ongoing process, meant to be continuously worked on and improved upon, with no conclusion noted.


http://vizedhtmlcontent.next.ecollege.com/CurrentCourse/Files%20Management/Tech%20apps                     %20for%20beginning%20teachers.pdf