Feb 11 2009

Catie Wooten

Inservice Day: Wiki presentation

Filed under Uncategorized

Wikis and Collaboration: Using Wikispaces as a platform for your classes and other strategies for effective teacher to teacher collaboration

1.75 hours
Presented during Inservice Day February 13, 2009 by Amy Sanders and Catie Wooten

Explore wikis being used in the school – 15 minutes – Catie
Find at least 2 purposes that could be met by a wiki for your class – 15 minutes

yhs-wooten
US History
Chinese
WorldHistoryatYHS
Middle East Studies
Art
Share with a partner: What do you think would be useful to you?

Collaboration: Strategies that work – 15 minutes – Amy

Time to work  – 1 hour
Break up into groups: find common purposes (5 minutes)
ex: setting up a wiki for my class
Educator’s link
embedding presentations into a wiki
calendars/assignments in wikis
Using Google forms in wikis
Using wikis for student contributions
other

Summary/ Conclusions – 15 minutes – Catie

Share something you were able to do with your first partner.
What is something you’ll continue to use? What support do you need to be able to be successful?

Evaluation:

Please fill out Google Form – Engagement, usefulness, my presentation/helpfulness

No responses yet

Apr 12 2008

Catie Wooten

Our tech class: final presentations

Filed under Assignments, Goals

I wanted to post the final presentations for the class.  We recorded them at ustream.tv.

(FYI: If you’re particularly interested in my section, you can fast-forward to 1:09.  My section runs until about 1:27. )

Thanks to Alice, Cathy and the other members of the class!  I was thinking the other night, “What kind of teacher would I be if I had gone to teach somewhere else?”  I have to think I would be completely different.  I consider it to be a great boon that I get to teach in a collaborative environment and in a 1:1 school.   But, neither would be as successful without the other!  When I think about how much I have been learning since the beginning of the year and how that is manifested in the student experiences in my class, it boggles my mind to think that some teachers do the exact same thing year after year.

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Apr 12 2008

Catie Wooten

Immune system powerpoint (from previous post)

Filed under Assignments, Goals

Embedded

Here’s the link.

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Apr 12 2008

Catie Wooten

Goal: Revisit part 2

Filed under Assignments, Goals

Immune system – Animations

We used 5 forms of “critical input experiences” for this content.

  • Guided notes with a PowerPoint
  • A set of flowcharts (innate and adaptive)
  • Animations (linked from the powerpoint)/Youtube video
  • Role play – the students generated this in groups and acted it out in class with props they brought from home

Student feedback

I used a GoogleForm as a formative assessment and a way for students to self-report the usefulness of the tools. Here are the results.

immune-helpful-tools-graph.png

What stands out here for me is that students reported animations as useful, but not the most useful way of learning the immune system. There is a wealth of new questions that comes from this data, but when I have 28 hours in my day, I’ll be able to dive into some of those.

Summary

I have found this course to help me develop my use of technological tools. I’ve approached aspects of my goal, but by no means met it. It’s something I’ll be working on, perhaps indefinitely!

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Apr 12 2008

Catie Wooten

Goal: Revisiting projects

Filed under Assignments, Goals

To work on my goal for improving the use of technology in Biology, we have embarked in a variety of projects over the past 4 months. I’m going to focus on three of the project and some of the evidence from students.

Cells Parts and Functions Webquest

Overview

  • Innerlife of cells video
  • Cells parts and function webquest:
    • collected sites for them to visit
    • used a form to draw and list function of cell part

Student’s feedback

smengage.png

Engagement: this was a little surprising to me. From anecdotes, students said they were tired of webquests, having seen them in so many other classes.

smrateact.png

Here are some quotes student reported in survey monkey to the question, ” What other ideas or thoughts do you have to share about this activity?”

“I learn better from direct teaching, but it was a good starting point. I am really glad we went over it in class and get a completed web quest to refer to.”

  • “It allow you to learn the cell parts and functions quick and efficiently”
  • “It wasn’t that fun, but it gives you good study notes”
  • “i think that sence(sic) you are seeing the actual part you are learning not just mentally but also vishually (sic)”
  • “The online activities helped me but I found myself struggling to pay attention. It didn’t really stimulate my brain at all.”
  • “It was fun, cool to see the differnat(sic) cells and what they did.”

So, those mixed responses were helpful. I think we’ll reconsider how we use this activity next time. Perhaps we can find another “hook” for students to find this information worthwhile to learn.

Cellular transport – Molecular Workbench

For this project, we used a variety of animations, along with a diffusion lab as the “critical input experiences” for the content. As a way to check for student’s understanding we used Molecular Workbench. This works best if students download the software, rather than using the online version (for our use of Macs, anyway).

workbench.png

We can see student reports like this:

mwbstudent.png

We found some pros and cons of this program

Pros

  • Independent – students were able to do this for homework
  • We did not have to invent this assessment
  • Student reports are created – allows me to check for understanding

Cons

  • Glitches with reporting – we could not access all of the student’s reports (we’re still working on this problem)
  • Student reported frustration – with repetition in the activity and inability to send report to me

Continued in next post

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Apr 12 2008

Catie Wooten

Student work: Astronomy papers

Filed under Assignments, Worth Sharing

These are some examples of the summary papers students wrote on the Astronomy topics.

Life on Mars

Halley’s comet

Big bang

Life of the sun

Planet formation

Fate of the universe

Life on Mars

Wormholes

Europa

Star cycle

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Apr 11 2008

Catie Wooten

Assignment 4: Classroom 2.0

Filed under Assignments

As I watched Clarence Fisher in his talk about Classroom 2.0, I did have an “aha” moment when he talked about classrooms as a studio. This has sort of been the case in my Physical Science classroom for the past couple weeks as we worked on our Astronomy unit. This is not a major unit in the course, but we do want kids to get as much as possible from it. Students presented their research to us, and wow, was there a lot of variety and creativity in the presentations! This video shows some of that.

Download Video: Posted by CWoot at TeacherTube.com.

But the connection to the assignment for me was to really push myself in Biology to get us to this type of environment. Right now we have students to a disease project–it’s detailed and really a traditional research paper. While, those are important (Clarence talks of shifting our entire view of classrooms–some places I think some resembling of a traditional classroom is okay), I do think that we can move toward what he describes. How can we prepare them to have the skills they will need in their world? Not our old world.

How can I connect this to my everyday work? I think I’m doing this a lot already. I really don’t see the classroom as a place for students to come learn from me. I don’t think the way we have our Biology class set up, that we construct ways for students to be the experts and “prosumers” of information very often, but I’d love to improve that. To me a prosumer would be someone who can interact with the content for a purpose. Sometimes, we are just providing the content. But, everyday I do think about changing attitudes toward education and reshaping my thinking of what my classroom should look like. I am improving this slowly.

3 responses so far

Apr 10 2008

Catie Wooten

Astronomy Project: Making craters

Filed under Worth Sharing

Some video I uploaded to Teacher Tube of my students making craters.



2 responses so far

Mar 25 2008

Catie Wooten

Video: sharing with students

Filed under Worth Sharing

This week, my 9th grade students are preparing for a student-led conference with their parents. They are reflecting on their learning in each class. I’m asking students to do a comparison of two recent labs (one on light, one on sound) and the gains they have made in analyzing and writing scientifically about data. It occurred to me while they were working on the sound lab that it would be great if they could link to a video of them actually taking the data!

So, I whipped out my camera and took some short digital video clips. I uploaded them to Teacher Tube, and from there I was able to embed them on my wikispace! What an exciting way for them to show their parents what they can do in science!

A few students asked to embed them directly into their platforms (iWeb, blogs, powerpoint) . For that, I just emailed the video clips. Does anyone know other ways to share video files?

One response so far

Mar 08 2008

Catie Wooten

Using Jing: screencasting

Filed under Worth Sharing

Here is a screencast I made (one of several) for my Biology class. I used Jing to do this.

One response so far

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