Sunday, December 13, 2009

BP15_2009123_OneMinuteMessage2



One minute video message on the benefits of using Flickr in Science class.

Animal photos: User created
Flickr logo: User generated screenshot

BP14_2009123_PeerReviewTK00

Original copied from:

BP12_20091203_Tool#6 (Gaggle)


Gaggle.net is more than just another Web 2.0 tool. It is a software suite for elementary and middle school students that is totally protected from potentially harmful images, suggestive text, and can be monitored by school staff for bullying and other inappropriate behavior. As Gaggle’s slogan states, “Putting student safety before everything else”.

So what makes gaggle.net so great? The software suite includes student email accounts that can be monitored, safe blogs, safe chat rooms, safe profile pages, safe message boards, and safe digital lockers. These make school to home and home to school possible without forgetting your thumb drive. It makes student collaboration and communications easier.

“Gaggle’s new Velocity interface is based on the AJAX (Adobe) framework, giving the appearance similar to Microsoft Outlook, but it is inside a web page. Bother teachers and students can use Gaggle’s web-based interface and get the same productivity they would find in regular POP3 email clients. With Velocity, messages and folders load almost instantly, with significantly faster response time than traditional web based email.” (Gaggle, 2009)

The Gaggle digital lockers allow students to save documents online for use at home and at school. The locker feature allows teachers to share files with students. The locker allows students to collaborate with fellow students and facilitates group projects much like the ones online courses require at higher levels of education. Bottom line, the digital locker prevents viruses, and other malware, from ever having a chance to enter a school system because each document is scanned online before it leaves the digital locker. In addition, Gaggle is CIPA compliant.

The message boards allow for careful and effective differentiated instruction and can also motivate students who do not like to write with pen and paper. The message boards promote collaboration because they are teacher monitored.

Finally, the biggest feature to sell this website to a community is Parent Accounts. Parents can read their children’s email, help facilitate parent-teacher communication and aid in the restrictions established by the school and district.

Each student is allowed 100 megabytes of storage so even large presentation files can be accessed at school and home without purchasing external drives. Gaggle uses a Web 2.0 interface, has attachment filtering and can translate to other languages.

I am recommending this to school districts that require higher levels of student security while allowing each student to learn about Web 2.0 and utilize the educational value and productivity.


1 comments:

Michael McCurdy-EMDT said...

Finally! A tool for schools that's like Google but puts a gag on some things that Google allows through. I plan on researching this more and recommending it to my administration. I'm hoping to see my school move into the 21st century for technology (teachers are still using overhead projectors and writing on transparencies). Gaggle would be an excellent step in the right direction.

BP13_2009123_PeerReviewMarkWest

Original Linkhttp://mwestplace.blogspot.com/2009/12/3-new-tools.html

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2009

BP12_2009123_Tool#4_VoiceThread_Gimp

Art 2.0 web sites are hard to find! We still are locked in a texted based world even on the web but I did find a site for those of you
who are looking for something other than blogs, wikis, photo share, or something along that line.

http://artjunction.org/blog/?page_id=1024

This site gives me hope for the arts on the web. Altho

ugh it still contains

a lot of what the rest have as far as text-based apps. It also gives direction for the web in the classroom.


This site I find is needed because this is something that art teachers deal with everyday. Our students need to understand how important copyright is not only for those published artists but also for them. In this country and through out the world artistic rights are being violated all the time. Some violation are out of indifference to the artist and their product but I would like to think a lot of it is because of ignorance on the part of people. This site gives us a chance to open the eyes of our young people to the harm copyright infringement causes. I would encourage everyone to look at this site as a possible lesson to teach.



Voicethreads

How can a person use this tool in the art classroom? First an understanding of a VoiceThread is. It is an online media album. So how does that apply to an art classroom? First, the art student is creating a portfolio all year long. Each created piece of work must be saved and will to be graded as a complete body of work. The works therefore must stored some where. So this means that an art teacher will have at least one hundred fifty in that year with eight major projects, which equals at least twelve hundred projects to be stored. Wow that’s a lot to be placed some where in a thirty by thirty room where the students work. It can be a real problem because it is not only the space needed but it is the lack of respect an adolescent has toward other peoples work also. With VoiceThread the students can create an album that can be evaluated at the end of the year. Students can finis

h their work and take it home. Major storage problem taken care of.

Second is that the student must critique each of these projects. This is where they will explain how and why they did what they did. VoiceThread has 5 different ways for the student the student can comment on their art work. By using voice (with a microphone or telephone), text, audio file, or video the y can describe, analyze, interpret, and judge their work inside the program. This program also allows classmates to also give feedback on the artwork and the comments.

The third thing that I like about it is that the teacher can place historical works of art for the students to go in and share their critiques of the masters to then be graded. All in all some great applications.


GIMP


The first art web site that I would like to share with you is a site called GIMP. One of the problems in education is having the budget to provide e-tools for the classroom. Licensure for products can run into the thousands and thousands of dollars. Adobe Photoshop costs approximately $700.00 per copy. When you multiply that by 35 copies, the number of student quite often in an art classroom, you have an expenditure of over $24,000.00. In a typical school budget the administration would laugh and tell you to find a grant. Well hope is on the web! This program, although not as powerful or sophisticated as Adobe, has the ability for the classroom teacher to teach a very strong web based tool. It in many ways mimics Adobe Photoshop. The tools are very similar and even have some useful tools that PS does not have. This would be good for private schools considering their budgets are even smaller than public schools.

The Art teacher can use this tool for any computer generated drawing project. The additional tool that I find exciting is the perspective tool. This tool allows you to manipulate the image plane into plane that fit the desired lines of angle. What else is nice is that any image that is on that plain also changes with that plane. This will be a great asset in perspective units.



2 COMMENTS:

[1st post removed for privacy]

Michael McCurdy-EMDT said...

Mark,

Voicethread is an awesome resource. Your explanation on how storage problems can be relieved puts images of thousands of art teachers standing next to empty racks and smiling (because of those empty racks). I really enjoy reading that Voicethread allows students to critique each others artwork. Having students begin constructive critiques at a young age allows them to develop interpersonal skills that will benefit them throughout life. Thank you again, Sir!

BP12_2009123_Tool#4(GameClassroom.com)




For this blog entry, I am researching the Web 2.0 tool, GameClassroom.com. “Game Classroom is a one-stop web destination for accessing high-quality educational games, and homework help for K-6 students” (GameClassroom.com)


I have taught music at the elementary school level for 10 years as of this post. Because my initial undergraduate major was electric engineering, I have always stressed the importance of learning core subjects to my students. There would be many times where I would integrate my music curriculum with the subject material being taught in the homerooms. So GameClassroom.com seemed like a resource I would like to research in order to share with the core subject teachers.


GameClassroom.com is not directly collaborative as many other Web 2.0 tools, such as Flickr, Blogger, Wikia, etc. It is, however, very INTERACTIVE. Students who go to GameClassroom.com are not passive participants in their learning. Because the content is based on educational games, GameClassroom.com students are active participants in their learning.


GameClassroom.com allows students to select from two main categories: Language Arts and Math (as of this posting there is not a section for Science. Each category is separate skills for each grade. And each skill has a specific topic. Suggested games in the GameClassroom.com can be found in each skill level. The games give instantaneous feedback to the student. Games for lower grades have excellent demonstrations and are designed for the beginner learner. Games for older students have visual instructions and are designed for the older learner. The game engines do not frustrate the learner, so he or she is able to focus on answering the questions by whatever means the games use. Interestingly enough, I found it rather insightful to practice my skills on games for all ages. I realized that my teaching skills would benefit from occasionally playing these games. I found it interesting to compare how I present content to how the games found on GameClassroom.com present content.

There is so much good content on GameClassroom.com (except for the lack of a science section) that this is a highly recommended Web 2.0 tool for all elementary school teachers.

References:

GameClassroom.com (2009) Retrieved December 13, 2009, from http://www.gameclassroom.com/

Images:

All images are user-generated screenshots from http://www.gameclassroom.com/

"Thounds"...another great music collaboration tool!



http://thounds.com/

Sunday, December 6, 2009

BP8_2009122_Tool#3(IndabMusic.com)

User created screenshot

http://www.indabamusic.com/

Indabamusic is a Web 2.0 tool that allows musicians to collaborate on music projects. A musician records his or her audio tracks. He or she then invites friends or even complete strangers to submit additional tracks that have been recorded to this composition.

As an teaching tool this would be a great asset. Students can safely create in the privacy of their home or a practice room before submitting their part of a whole composition. I say safely because composing is a very personal process and many times unwanted constructive criticism would hamper the flow of creativity. Most creative efforts are works in progress.

That being said, once a student submits their work. The other students would give helpful constructive criticism using a composition Rubric. Students would be able revamp their own parts a total of three times before the piece is “done”.

The networking aspect of Indabamusic would allow the student compositions to be shared with college-level composition majors, as well as professional composers and arrangers. Being able to get feedback from various viewpoints that extend into the working world would be a great asset to the students.

The main hindrance would be the acquisition of audio recording technology for the student. It’s not expensive, however, it would require an investment on the part of the parent or the student.

I would’ve loved to known about this tool months ago. A music student who is a senior in the advanced group, headed up by a different director, came to me to write an arrangement for her song. (The other director and I are friends, and we work with each other’s students, allowing each of us to use our strengths.). She recorded herself singing and sent me the file. I wrote the arrangement and delivered it to her. She said that there were some changes. And I went back… you see the process.

Indabamusic would’ve allowed her to record her track, have me write the arrangement to and line it up with her singing. And then we would’ve been able to collaborate with almost instantaneous feedback, versus burning CDs and such.

I’m looking forward to referring my composition students to music collaboration tools such as Web 2.0 tools such as Indabamusic.

BP11_2009122_OneMinuteMessage1


My "commercial" for TubeRadio.fm for my additional line of work as a church choir director. This can also be used by school music directors.

BP10_2009122_PeerReview(VandySchneidt)

BP4_2009121_Web2.0Tools

"Research Web 2.0 Tools Learn how to use the tool through the site or tutorials and use it to create an assignment you might use in a learning situation or use it to create some product."

Candy Shop

Snickers, Reeses, Almond Joy, Three Musketeers, Mars, M&M's, PayDay...got your taste buds' attention yet? Yes, I have used this analogy before… but it must be shared again. I am like a kid in a candy store, sampling these digital confections. Doesn’t this photo look like the traditional candy display? I think so…hundreds of brightly colored icons wrapping these delicious (pun intended) digital morsels. Difficult to stop the tasting to savor one flavor….








However, I have determined that I will not consume empty calories as I continue on this cyber sampling feast. Therefore, I kept my Action Research, Digital Immigrant students, and their iPhones in mind as I sampled the Web 2.0 tools. Voila – one distinct taste stood out among the rest: Apptism.



“Apptism indexes all iPhone apps from the iTunes App Store and aggregates all of the latest news, reviews, and media related to the iPhone apps. Apptism's focus is to also provide extensive searching, sorting, and filtering capabilities to help the iPhone community find and track apps within the constantly growing App Store” (Apptism, 2009). Talk about one gigantic candy mall. Did you know that Apptism is currently tracking 103,434 applications available for the iPhone? What a smorgasbord …now I am more convinced than ever that an iPhone education is worthy of research.Who can keep up?

How will I create an assignment / get others to try out this new flavor? I immediately e-mailed the link to my managers at AT&T and sent it to all the sales associates who sell the iPhone everyday to people who are hungry for more information. Daily, I give out free samples as a part of my sales presentation and then will formally serve it as an appetizer as I start my AR cycles in January.

Kid in a candy shop, that’s me. And what kid wouldn’t want to share their new candy favorite with all their buds, that’s you.

Yummy!

Retrieved November 30, 2009, from http://www.apptism.com/

Retrieved November 30, 2009, from http://www.go2web20.net/

4 comments:

Michael McCurdy-EMDT said...

Very nice post Vandy. Now, I have something to get my wife for Christmas in addition to her iPhone. I like that fact that this Web 2.0 tool will allow me to recommend iPhone apps to my music students. Not just music players, but Tuners, Metronomes, and even Guitar Chord makers.

BP7_2009122_Tool#2(iSchoolBand)

User created graphic from screenshot

My Web 2.0 tool for this posting is iSchoolBand found at http://www.ischoolband.com/.

“iSchoolBand.com helps students communicate, directors coordinate, and parents participate.” (iSchoolBand)

iSchoolBand 101 from iSchoolBand on Vimeo.

iSchoolBand is a social networking site specifically for Band Directors. It has a FaceBook/Ning.com feel to it.

Director’s point of view, I could use this to make an online library of downloadable sheet music for my bands and music classes. Any music I upload can be assigned to a specific class, band, or instrument groups. The phrase, “I forgot to bring my music home with me” would no longer be an excuse. Since I use only original arrangements of songs for my Senior High Music classes, no copyright laws would be broken. I can use it to communicate with parents and students about upcoming concerts, field trips, etc. I can broadcast to any number or groups of students that I need to. While I can set up as many different groups as I need to, iSchoolBand comes with the standard band sections preset for the user. And like FaceBook I can post a “what’s on my mind”. This comes in handy for sending out a broadcast, “Great Job at the last concert!”

Students: Students are able to post comments are each other’s walls and send communications to the director. This is handy for student’s who may have forgotten about a performance, who may need to carpool, or simply exchange ideas they have for making rehearsals better, or for thoughts on new songs. iSchoolBand has filtering software for comments. Directors can add custom words to comments in case students find another way of saying something inappropriate.

Parents: Parents can communicate to each other or director. This allows Booster organizations to have a common forum where communication is ongoing and not hindered by the unavailability of one person. Parents also are the only ones who can register their students, since the student pass codes are emailed to the parents.

iSchoolBand offers a free 1-year membership if you register before December 25, 2009. I, of course, registered. I like the feel of iSchoolBand. It’s still in the beta version but it feels really solid. I did email iSchoolBand with a question on setting up custom instrument groups. I received an immediate response and a workaround. The feature I wanted isn’t currently available, but they said that they would seriously consider adding it.

Since many students have some type of social networking account, iSchoolBand will feel right at home. While bands can setup a FaceBook Group page, iSchoolBand gives a more secure way of networking because the director/school administrator has the final say about what is posted and who can join.

iSchoolBand (2009). Retrieved on December 6, 2009, from http://twitter.com/iSchoolBand

BP9_2009122_FlickrLesson

user created graphic from Screenshots of Flicker and Microsoft Words Clipart Gallery

Okay Science Teachers this is as an awesome lesson!

http://www.wikiteach.org/index.php/wikiteach/action/lessonplan/?WTSESSID=0e92a7c24f1a09ca4bb5c29fab2ee548&/1/iVar/279

The creator of the lesson uses digital camera to take photos of cells and tissue samples as seen under a microscope.

The students are taught how to properly use a microscope.

The students are taught how digitally photograph the microscope samples.

Students then upload the photos to Flickr and tagged the photos with the appropriate descriptions.

Lastly, the students compare similar tissue samples for looking for photos with matching tags.

This lesson could be easily adapted for almost any subject area.

Physical Education - students upload photos of various callisthenic exercises (push-ups, pull-ups, etc). These photos are tagged with the targeted muscle groups for each exercise. Student would then have a resource to use when tested on which exercise develops a specific muscle group.

Music – Students upload photos of various instruments. The photos would be tagged according to instrument type (brass, woodwind, percussion, string), instrument range (bass, tenor, alto, soprano), uses in music genres (jazz, classical, rock, etc.), etc.

Art – Photos could be uploaded of various art techniques (tessellations, perspectives, etc.), tagged with those techniques, and used for comparison and contrast.

Math (Geometry/Trigonometry) - Students upload photos/jpeg graphics of formulas. Students upload photos of graphs. Students would tag both sets of photos with the name of the graph (parabola, hyperbola, etc.). Students would be able to develop an Online Flash card system.

English – Students upload photos/jpeg graphics of sentence types/writing errors (imperatives, declaratives, exclamatory, interrogatives, fragments, active voice, passive voice, double-negatives, proper/improper subject-verb agreement. Students tag photos/graphics with correct type of sentence/writing error, and compare similarities.

NOTE ON TAGGING: If you use double-quotation marks around two words, Flickr records it as one tag. Blue Moon = 2 tags blue, moon, but “Blue Moon” = 1 tag, Blue Moon.

As a part-time photographer, I used to simply think of Flickr as a nice online sharing network for photographers, after this week’s reading and this Blog post, I really beginning to see the versatility in so many Web 2.0 tools.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

BP6_2009121_Anti-Teaching

User created graphic in http://www.wordle.net/


I believe that the current educational systems do not work for the vast majority of students.

When I listen to the conversations that the students in my yearbook class have with each other concerning school, most of the focus is on grades. Rarely, do I hear conversations that pertain to the knowledge that the students gained in their classes. It validates the statement “education has become a relatively meaningless game of grades rather than an important and meaningful exploration of the world in which we live and co-create” (Wesch, 2009). Though I teach a yearbook class, the majority of my time is teaching music. I mention this because I am often questioned by students who are not in my music classes as to what they can expect to learn if they were to enroll in my music classes. Additionally, I hear conversations between my music students and non-music students about what is being learned in their music class. Music classes are normally performance based and results oriented. The class is focused on the students, and the students realize that their involvement gives meaning to (or takes meaning away from) the class.

I truly believe that our current education system does not engage our students in a two-way dialogue that allows our students to find their education meaningful. “Students…are struggling to find meaning and significance in their education” (Wesch, 2009). I think that with our current condition of teaching to the test and using Embedded Assessments as in a local Florida school district, we as educators do not readily engage our students into developing meaningful involvement into their education. Implementing a Personal Learning Environment (PLE) would do much to give students a sense of meaningfulness to their education. Students desire to express their individuality and to showcase their talent. Students involved in Art, Music, Culinary, Drama, Shop, etc. enjoy those classes because their individual contributions are recognized and valued. PLEs and Web 2.0 tools such as a Weblog (blog) give students an environment that is theirs to showcase, an environment that they can put their unique identity on.

I have recently thought that students should be able to use a variety of tools and methods to deliver their assignments in a 21st century school. For example an English class report could be delivered using the traditional expository/narrative paper, or it could be a digital story, or it could be PowerPoint presentation, or it could be a Podcast. As long as the student shows an understanding of the content the specific delivery method should be left up to the student, or at the very least the student should have a number of acceptable delivery methods from which to choose. This would support many of the findings and theories found in Brain-Based education or Gardner’s Multiple Intelligence Theory.

Schools need to make a shift from the Industrial Age teaching style to the Information Age teaching style. And that shift is not difficult. It simply boils down to allowing students to make a meaningful contribution to their own classes (as modeled by arts or “fun” classes for decades) using the tools (PLEs, Web 2.0, etc.) that are readily and, oftentimes, freely available.

References

Wesch, M. (2008, May) Anti-teaching: Confronting the crisis of significance. Canadian Education Association. 48(2) 4-7. Retrieved December 2, 2009, from, http://www.cea-ace.ca/media/en/AntiTeaching_Spring08.pdf

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

BP5_2009121_SocialBookmarking

User created screen shot. Create on 2009 December 1.

My del.icio.us username is http://delicious.com/m1mccurdy

Julie-Ann Amos’ article, “Top 10 social bookmarking tools for educators”, lists 10 tools that educators can use for social bookmarking. “Social bookmarking is a highly useful tool for educators since it allows specific categorization of websites for easy access and sharing.” (Amos, 2009). I found the idea of a bookmarking tool such as Scuttle “a specialized social bookmarking program that can be run right on a school’s server [where] data is held in the server and not through a third party site, giving schools maximum control over content” (Amos, 2009) would be a great asset for a teacher to propose to administrators who are concerned with Internet safety.

Brian Alexander’s article, “Web 2.0: A new wave of innovation for teaching and learning?” describes a number of Web 2.0 tools. His discussion of the social bookmarking tool “del.icio.us” highlights its implementation of tags. The social bookmarking innovator del.icio.us automatically reminds users of previously deployed tags, suggests some tags, and notes tags used by others” (Alexander, 2009). Tags are a great way of focusing specifically on those areas that you want to find. They save valuable time by keeping users from searching through unrelated sites.

Lorrie Jackson’s article, “Sites to see:
Social bookmarking”, shows a clear benefit to using a social bookmarking site over a browser with saved bookmarks. “Instead of individually saving the site in a variety of folders, you just type a few keywords called tags (Langston Hughes, alliteration, Black History, metaphor, rubric, and so on.), and your sites are organized automatically with sites saved by other users, using those same keywords” (Jackson, 2009).

References

Alexander, B. (2006, March/April). Web 2.0: A new wave of innovation for teaching and learning? EDUCAUSE Review, 41(2), 32-44. Retrieved December 1, 2009 from http://www.middlebury.edu/NR/rdonlyres/2C9EFFFC-00B4-46E9-9CE5-32D63A0FE9B5/0/UNBOUND_02_02_Web2.pdf

Amos, Julie-Ann (2009, August 5). Top 10 social bookmarking tools for educators. Philhosting.net. Retrieved December 1, 2009, from http://www.philhosting.net/articles/top-10-social-bookmarking-tools-for-educators.html

Jackson, L. (2009). Sites to see:
Social bookmarking. Education World. Retrieved December 1, 2009, from http://www.education-world.com/a_tech/sites/sites080.shtml