Showing posts with label student voices. Show all posts
Showing posts with label student voices. Show all posts
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Listening to Students
Since the start of this semester, students in my 9th grade West Civ class have been publishing their own blogzine.
The blog is open to the public and the authors and editors take great pride in their work. They've made mistakes along the way and have humbly corrected them, and they've come up against criticism along the way and have admirable engaged with it in debate.
In short: they've learned.
And so have I.
Today, we published a piece by two students. It's a look at how students learn best today and what kind of teaching proved most effective in the past. Mind you, this isn't written by a teacher or an ed school grad. It's just two 15 year-olds thinking about what works for them and taking a look at how folks who were in school in the 60s and 70s had it both differently and similarly. The students talk with a man who in an all-white school in the 1960's encounters his favorite teacher in an African-American woman. They talk to a woman who describes her experience in school and who feels like she missed out on a lot on account of the way the teachers taught. The kids themselves talk about the things that have engaged them; and they candidly describe the sort of teaching that has bored them to death.
It's not a completely polished piece. These kids are busy 9th graders, after all. But it's an honest piece. And it's the kind of piece that we as teachers should be reading closely. There's a lot there between the lines.
Read it for yourself, and please comment. The students would like to listen to what you have to say too.
Tuesday, November 3, 2009
Will the Kids Get to Take Part?
So, as I'm continuing my campaign to get students to speak their minds on the mainstage at ISTE 2010's keynote, I've been getting many bits of advice from throughout my PLN.
Scott McLeod pointed me to a post and a great comment discussion from a 2007 piece on his blog. (I cite parts of it herein in fair use with the interest of furthering the discussion).
The initial post was a response to a blog post by Karl Fisch who had been thinking about the recent NECC 2007:
I'm publishing the whole of McLeod's response here because I don't want there to be any confusion about what he said; I find it both provocative and of a broader concern as to the role of students and student perception in education:
Before I try to explain my opinion on this whole matter, let me share with you a couple of snippets that struck me from the first few comments related to Scott's post.
And this, from only the fourth of over 30 comments:
I'm not going to wade into the whole debate that followed; for that, click here and go ahead and read the original comments for yourselves. I am always excited to read the varied opinions of educators on matters like these, and this conversation proved to be no downer.
But, in this post, I'd like to offer my own perspective as a teacher often surprised, overwhelmed, and humbled by the things that come from out of the mouths of my students.
I think students have a lot to tell us. And I think we need to hear it. And I think it needs to be put directly front and center before all of us on that keynote stage.
Because we spend so much time assessing and looking at student 'production', and so little time actually talking to them as fellow learners. We need a major format in which collectively to hear directly from the learners and be reminded that we ourselves are in the same boat.
Left to our own devices and cordoned off from the reality of students' lives and perceptions, we really don't do a great job at these conferences.
For example, at NECC 2009, I was stunned to see just how self-congratulatory a bunch of educators could be. So much so, that you'd think our school system was actually working.
In one case, an administrator who has blocked student email in his district was given an award for excellence in ed tech integration.
And in the gratuitous keynote, we had a bestselling author rehash a speech he'd given before to the United Way as his way of telling us how unique we are.
Rather than cover any of the serious problems and conflicts-of-interest present both on stage and on the exhibition floor, much of the mainstream media diligently paraphrased corporate press releases available in the press room.
And for all of the energy going on in several of the ed tech and Web 2.0 sessions, there were just as many lame presentations remodeling 20th century ed speek for the 21st century.
In the two spots where kids did get up on the main stage: in the debate and in the 'Electric Co' number, it felt forced and rigid. The debate became a rather meaningless demonstration of rhetorical flourishes led primarily by ed speakers known for their rhetorical flourishes and the production number came across as a paid advertisement. Not to denigrate the work of the kids on the teams, but it was an obvious case of exactly what McLeod argues is so often the case with these sorts of things, namely:
The only time I really felt a connection with anything actually going on in our classrooms was -- like one of the commentators cited above noted -- in the student-teacher workshop room where the folks who actually live the classroom life talked about and demonstrated what it was they were doing in their buildings.
I think these folks deserve a stage.
The main stage.
As for criticism that previous student-led presentations have been lame -- well, then I guess the challenge is to find students who aren't lame. (I think in a nation of tens of millions of students, we might be able to find a few).
Anyway, really now, you don't want me to start naming names as to which adults gave lame presentations.
To generalize that student presentations are weak and unreflective and incapable of presenting a perspective that teachers can learn from and be engaged and energized by just points towards an arrogance of the sort that so many of us despised back when we were students ourselves.
I'm not suggesting that we put students up on stage to make them feel good.
I'm not suggesting that we put students up on stage to make ourselves feel good.
I'm suggesting that we put students up on stage to hear what they have to say.
I want them to tell us that we suck at certain things.
I want them to tell us about the hypocrisies they see in our classrooms.
I want them to compare the ways they use tech in the classroom to the ways they use it in their cars.
I want them to give their impressions of what tech-savvy teachers are really like.
I want them to define 21st century skills.
I want them to frustrate us and remind us that we as teachers are only part of and not the center of the field of education.
I want them to stand up there without any of us holding their hands and tell it like it is, not as we'd like it to be.
There are plenty of exceptional kids out there. And I'm not talking about kids who 'do well' in school or have obvious artistic or athletic talents. I'm talking about the kids who are exceptional in the sense that they have the confidence to speak their minds, even if they aren't able to do so with precise academic tone and debate-team panache.
I want to see the kids who aren't prepped for the main stage take the main stage.
They might be perfects students. They may be trouble-makers. They may be student leaders. They may be total slackers.
But they are all students.
21st century students.
21st century students who speak their minds.
They're exactly who I'm not hearing from in this whole discussion of the new paradigm.
And they're exactly the ones who deserve to keynote ISTE 2010.
I think McLeod points out the real problem when he says:
The problem is us.
You, me, and the next guy.
Us and our collective inflated ego.
I'm glad that Scott and many of the folks who left comments on his original blogpost cited problems with student presentations, but expressed a desire to really hear what they had to say. Because the other point-of-view, that is to say the point-of-view that students fundamentally have nothing to say and can't change education -- or anything, for that matter -- is a totally cynical statement. Indeed, if our students can't effect change, then we haven't really educated them.
I want to thank Scott for sending over this discussion from years back. Looks like the discussion continues. I hope that this time, the kids get to take part in a meaningful way.
Scott McLeod pointed me to a post and a great comment discussion from a 2007 piece on his blog. (I cite parts of it herein in fair use with the interest of furthering the discussion).
The initial post was a response to a blog post by Karl Fisch who had been thinking about the recent NECC 2007:
I can’t help but wonder how much more powerful it would be to have students involved in these discussions as well.
I'm publishing the whole of McLeod's response here because I don't want there to be any confusion about what he said; I find it both provocative and of a broader concern as to the role of students and student perception in education:
I've generally been frustrated with student presentations at conferences. Folks trot a few students out, pat them on their heads for being there and sharing their voices, and then go back to doing whatever they were doing beforehand, giving themselves self-congratulations along the way for 'including the students.' I haven't seen many impactful student presentations in the sense that adults take the students SERIOUSLY and maybe actually change their mindset / practice as a result (of course I haven't seen too many adult-delivered presentations that do this either, but the level of condescension isn't the same). So... I like the idea of including student voices very much but would encourage some very creative thinking about how to do that to best effect. I'm sure the Generation Yes folks, among others, would be glad to help...
Before I try to explain my opinion on this whole matter, let me share with you a couple of snippets that struck me from the first few comments related to Scott's post.
Most of the time students present things we've already gathered. Students lack one thing that is all important: The ability of hindsight, or the experience of retrospectivity which may lift a student presentation from the average to the interesting.
Testimonially speaking, I'd rather hear a student talk about what she's liked and disliked about her learning experiences. But analytically? Adults, far more often than kids, have the historical perspective and cognitive skills to talk about education. Generally speaking, I don't think kids have enough perspective to talk about kids. In sum this feels like a tribute to school-change ideals in, kind of ironically, a forum where they don't fit.
In general, you are right. Most student presentations are patronizing and lack substance. I've seen a few exceptions though. The best was one in which ONLY students presented. The teachers accompanying them didn't say a word after the introduction.
And this, from only the fourth of over 30 comments:
It is completely true that most student presentations are patronizing them. It's not fair that we trot them out once in a while, ask them about things they have no knowledge or control over, and then wonder why miracles didn't happen.
Asking a student, "how would you change education" is crazy. They can't change education, and wouldn't know what to do if they could. As Dan commented, they don't have the perspective. In this sense, student showcases are a more real representation of student voice in action, but are often segregated away from the main conference sessions or exhibit halls.
Including student voice MUST be an ongoing process about real issues that impact their lives in real ways. There has to be adults involved in the process long term committed to making it happen.
I can also tell you from personal experience that any session at a conference with students presenting will not draw a large audience, no matter how fabulous it is. People go to conferences for lots of reasons, and I guess one of those reasons is to get away from their everyday job of interacting with students.
I'm not going to wade into the whole debate that followed; for that, click here and go ahead and read the original comments for yourselves. I am always excited to read the varied opinions of educators on matters like these, and this conversation proved to be no downer.
But, in this post, I'd like to offer my own perspective as a teacher often surprised, overwhelmed, and humbled by the things that come from out of the mouths of my students.
I think students have a lot to tell us. And I think we need to hear it. And I think it needs to be put directly front and center before all of us on that keynote stage.
Because we spend so much time assessing and looking at student 'production', and so little time actually talking to them as fellow learners. We need a major format in which collectively to hear directly from the learners and be reminded that we ourselves are in the same boat.
Left to our own devices and cordoned off from the reality of students' lives and perceptions, we really don't do a great job at these conferences.
For example, at NECC 2009, I was stunned to see just how self-congratulatory a bunch of educators could be. So much so, that you'd think our school system was actually working.
In one case, an administrator who has blocked student email in his district was given an award for excellence in ed tech integration.
And in the gratuitous keynote, we had a bestselling author rehash a speech he'd given before to the United Way as his way of telling us how unique we are.
Rather than cover any of the serious problems and conflicts-of-interest present both on stage and on the exhibition floor, much of the mainstream media diligently paraphrased corporate press releases available in the press room.
And for all of the energy going on in several of the ed tech and Web 2.0 sessions, there were just as many lame presentations remodeling 20th century ed speek for the 21st century.
In the two spots where kids did get up on the main stage: in the debate and in the 'Electric Co' number, it felt forced and rigid. The debate became a rather meaningless demonstration of rhetorical flourishes led primarily by ed speakers known for their rhetorical flourishes and the production number came across as a paid advertisement. Not to denigrate the work of the kids on the teams, but it was an obvious case of exactly what McLeod argues is so often the case with these sorts of things, namely:
Thanks, kids... now off the stage.
The only time I really felt a connection with anything actually going on in our classrooms was -- like one of the commentators cited above noted -- in the student-teacher workshop room where the folks who actually live the classroom life talked about and demonstrated what it was they were doing in their buildings.
I think these folks deserve a stage.
The main stage.
As for criticism that previous student-led presentations have been lame -- well, then I guess the challenge is to find students who aren't lame. (I think in a nation of tens of millions of students, we might be able to find a few).
Anyway, really now, you don't want me to start naming names as to which adults gave lame presentations.
To generalize that student presentations are weak and unreflective and incapable of presenting a perspective that teachers can learn from and be engaged and energized by just points towards an arrogance of the sort that so many of us despised back when we were students ourselves.
I'm not suggesting that we put students up on stage to make them feel good.
I'm not suggesting that we put students up on stage to make ourselves feel good.
I'm suggesting that we put students up on stage to hear what they have to say.
I want them to tell us that we suck at certain things.
I want them to tell us about the hypocrisies they see in our classrooms.
I want them to compare the ways they use tech in the classroom to the ways they use it in their cars.
I want them to give their impressions of what tech-savvy teachers are really like.
I want them to define 21st century skills.
I want them to frustrate us and remind us that we as teachers are only part of and not the center of the field of education.
I want them to stand up there without any of us holding their hands and tell it like it is, not as we'd like it to be.
There are plenty of exceptional kids out there. And I'm not talking about kids who 'do well' in school or have obvious artistic or athletic talents. I'm talking about the kids who are exceptional in the sense that they have the confidence to speak their minds, even if they aren't able to do so with precise academic tone and debate-team panache.
I want to see the kids who aren't prepped for the main stage take the main stage.
They might be perfects students. They may be trouble-makers. They may be student leaders. They may be total slackers.
But they are all students.
21st century students.
21st century students who speak their minds.
They're exactly who I'm not hearing from in this whole discussion of the new paradigm.
And they're exactly the ones who deserve to keynote ISTE 2010.
I think McLeod points out the real problem when he says:
I haven't seen many impactful student presentations in the sense that adults take the students SERIOUSLY and maybe actually change their mindset / practice as a result (of course I haven't seen too many adult-delivered presentations that do this either, but the level of condescension isn't the same).
The problem is us.
You, me, and the next guy.
Us and our collective inflated ego.
I'm glad that Scott and many of the folks who left comments on his original blogpost cited problems with student presentations, but expressed a desire to really hear what they had to say. Because the other point-of-view, that is to say the point-of-view that students fundamentally have nothing to say and can't change education -- or anything, for that matter -- is a totally cynical statement. Indeed, if our students can't effect change, then we haven't really educated them.
I want to thank Scott for sending over this discussion from years back. Looks like the discussion continues. I hope that this time, the kids get to take part in a meaningful way.
Friday, June 5, 2009
Your Students Write Alot? Apparently, Mine Don't.
This morning, during our last class of the year, I asked my Latin I students to blog about their experience learning in a paperless classroom. This was my favorite response:
I cut-and-pasted this student's blog into a Word doc.
And it turned out to be 156 pages long.
Entirely written by the student.
Not even counting comments.
No writing.
Indeed.
Another case of using technology in such a way that the students don't even realize that they are working and learning.
I love using the internet. It is very easy and requires no writing.
I cut-and-pasted this student's blog into a Word doc.
And it turned out to be 156 pages long.
Entirely written by the student.
Not even counting comments.
No writing.
Indeed.
Another case of using technology in such a way that the students don't even realize that they are working and learning.
Friday, May 22, 2009
Friday Chat: Partial Transcript of 'Listening to Students about Tech'
Interesting Friday Chat today. This is a new tradition here at TP. Each Friday at 1PM EST, I open up a chat at Today's Meet. You are welcome to join in.
This week, the topic was 'Talking to Students About Technology'. We covered everything from the ways in which students perceive the uses of technology to the ways in which blocking student use of technology can actually be harmful.
Here are some highlights. I haven't corrected any spelling, but I have moved a couple of things around to make sense in this post-chat format. The original chat will be archived at Today's Meet for 12 hours if you want to scour the whole thing.
The chat started with a discussion of using Twitter in the Classroom. In my own experience running Twitter-enhanced high school classes for the last month or so, I've seen the students respond in tremendous ways.
Discussion then turned to the day's topic:
Conversation turned to the results of students' use of technology.
As ed tech discussions often go when talking about students and social media, ours turned to blocking and filtering. I think it's really important to understand filtering from the student's point of view and think about what kind of message filtering sends. After all, it's sort of cruel to sit a kid in front of the most powerful tool humanity has ever produced and tell the student how great it is and then not let the student use it.
Thanks to the participants in the chat and I hope to see more of you each Friday at 1PM EST.
This week, the topic was 'Talking to Students About Technology'. We covered everything from the ways in which students perceive the uses of technology to the ways in which blocking student use of technology can actually be harmful.
Here are some highlights. I haven't corrected any spelling, but I have moved a couple of things around to make sense in this post-chat format. The original chat will be archived at Today's Meet for 12 hours if you want to scour the whole thing.
The chat started with a discussion of using Twitter in the Classroom. In my own experience running Twitter-enhanced high school classes for the last month or so, I've seen the students respond in tremendous ways.
I ran a twitter-based review session today for our final exam and the students responded very well. I'll definitely do that more next year. Nate at 1:10 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
I've been using Twitter daily in class for about a month. Been using for general back-channel as well as primary assessment. Shelly at 1:10 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
Like to hear a little more about the twitter-based review Joanne at 1:11 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
I'd say 95% of my students are 100% crazy about using Twitter in class. Skype also for review and collab work. Shelly at 1:11 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
Twitter-based review: two styles... 1) students in Latin class parsing verbs can use TW as a 'lifeline' to their peers. 2) Collab assesmnt. Shelly at 1:14 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
In collab, we use Twitter and Twitter Search to facilitate making wikis and online bibliographies. Shelly at 1:15 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
I primarily used Twitter today for the students to get feedback on potential essay questions. They posed their question and peers responded Nate at 1:16 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
We used hashtags today to run a feed of each class's discussion. If you're interested they're #WHDP and #WHEP Nate at 1:18 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
Nate, good thinking. I've had them do a similar, but they were required to cite sources in the feed. Then we collected the hashtaged sources Shelly at 1:17 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
Most of the critiques were very constructive and on point. Hopefully the students saw how they needed to improve/refine their questions. Nate at 1:16 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
One of my colleagues followed along and even interjected a few comments about the students' progress. Nate at 1:18 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
Discussion then turned to the day's topic:
Now, to the purpose of today's chat. What are some things that you've learned from your students about tech? Shelly at 1:19 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
That they're quite receptive to it, are fast learners, and certainly prefer communicating via it than other means. Nate at 1:20 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
I had a student yesterday during student interviews who told a funny story about a party where all 30 kids there at one point were texting.. Shelly at 1:20 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
.. kids who weren't. Shelly at 1:20 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
Gives a bit of insight into the idea of 'presence' our kids understand. Shelly at 1:20 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
Tech in general. They liked Twitter today (and realized its utility), but they also like Edmodo and Wikis. Nate at 1:23 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
I think the kids break down tech into three areas: instant communication / grouping; search; and visual/audio. Basically all forms... Shelly at 1:23 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
... fit into those three. Shelly at 1:24 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
I think we'd be wise to understand the implications in terms of what they then think is important and worth 'keeping' from classtime. Shelly at 1:24 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
I don't remember if you said what Edmodo is. Ann at 1:24 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
It's a self-contained micro-blogging, social network designed specifically for education (e.g. privacy of students) http://www.edmodo.com Nate at 1:24 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
Thanks. Ann at 1:25 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
In terms of IM: kids now are perhaps more accepting of collaboration. It's not an 'auxilary' form of learning. It's a way of life. Shelly at 1:25 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
IM itself has become, esp SKYPE, collab conferencing. Shelly at 1:26 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
In terms of search, with Wolfram and Twitter Search -- that is computational organizing and real-time info, we're into new territory. Shelly at 1:26 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
I also think its important for students to understand the nuance between acceptable collaboration and plagiarism/copying. Nate at 1:26 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
I've actually had less plagiarism the more I have students online. Shelly at 1:27 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
When I started teaching it was a real problem. But now, in the right classroom approach to tech, students are more apt to take ownership. Shelly at 1:28 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
Plagiarism becomes lame. Shelly at 1:28 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
And that fits into their views on multimedia Web 2.0. Shelly at 1:28 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
Like Pixton, xTranormal... Shelly at 1:28 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
That's a really interesting finding. I think many educators fear that the exact opposite will happen (largely due to underlying technophobia Nate at 1:28 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
Web 2.0 is all about 'ownership' and 'customization'. These are kids growing up on MySpace and WoW. They understand the value of identity. Shelly at 1:29 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
They might look like we did back in school, but they are experiencing culture in a fundamentally different way. Shelly at 1:30 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
Conversation turned to the results of students' use of technology.
I had a student tell me a while back that studying for 'vocab quizzes' was impossible until he was introduced to Pixton.com. Shelly at 1:31 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
Now he studies by making short comic-book stories using the vocab words. Shelly at 1:32 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
An he trades them with friends and they remix them. Shelly at 1:32 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
In real-time. Shelly at 1:32 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
That's pretty cool. Ann at 1:32 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
I have another student who didn't start to bloom until we got his class on Skype. Now he's studying with friends and isn't scared of quizzes Shelly at 1:33 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
As ed tech discussions often go when talking about students and social media, ours turned to blocking and filtering. I think it's really important to understand filtering from the student's point of view and think about what kind of message filtering sends. After all, it's sort of cruel to sit a kid in front of the most powerful tool humanity has ever produced and tell the student how great it is and then not let the student use it.
I got stuck in a techless space this yr. and that's what's making me realize how much I wanted more tech integration into my class... butwait at 1:38 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
Starting working with Glogster.com/edu, but was blocked after first week. John at 1:38 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
Hmm. We've talked about this before, but what were the reasons you were given for blocks? Shelly at 1:39 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
I had a situation when we started using Twitter in class where a student said her mother would be angry if she knew we were using TW... Shelly at 1:39 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
Only then to find out mom used Twitter and was hugely supportive. Shelly at 1:40 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
But I think Twitter and social media in general is actually going to quickly become as common (and at times as much a bother) as the phone. Shelly at 1:41 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
Comes down to the 'use' of the technology and not the technology itself. Shelly at 1:42 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
I had one student, as I've been doing student interviews, who said she was 'shocked' when she found out Twitter was not an 'education' site Shelly at 1:43 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
Because the only place she'd used it up to that point was in my classroom for Latin. Shelly at 1:43 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
Shelly - Is your school progressive in terms of using technology? John at 1:46 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
John, that's a loaded question isn't it! Ha! Shelly at 1:47 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
Let me put it this way: our admin fully supports our use of Twitter and Web 2.0 in a 1:1 setting. Shelly at 1:48 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
That said, let's just say that keeping on top of getting sites 'unblocked' can be work intensive. Shelly at 1:49 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
Our tech folks have been very very helpful in unblocking sites. I'm lucky to have them on my side. My biggest problem is just how many... Shelly at 1:54 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
...sites the filtering software automatically blocks. Shelly at 1:54 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
But, it's been a process over the last four or so years. And I really can't complain. Shelly at 1:54 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
I know. For a long time anything categorized as a blog was out of reach. John at 1:55 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
Funny... blogging is my primary form of assessment. Without blogs, I wouldn't be able to function. Shelly at 1:56 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
Even had one student who swore her college admission was in direct relation to her blogging. Shelly at 1:57 PM, 22 May 2009 via web
Thanks to the participants in the chat and I hope to see more of you each Friday at 1PM EST.
Thursday, May 21, 2009
Chatting About Students Chatting About Technology
Just a reminder that The Friday Chat (a new tradition here on TeachPaperless) goes live tomorrow Friday, May 22nd, at 1PM EST on http://todaysmeet.com/teachpaperless.
Our topic for discussion is: Listening to Students About Technology
Chat with you then...
Our topic for discussion is: Listening to Students About Technology
Chat with you then...
A Student's Voice
This was a random comment I found while reading through my students' blogs this morning:
We adults often think about digital technology in terms of fear. But for the kids, as demonstrated here, it's often technology that removes fear from the equation.
The Caesar test we just took made me very worried at first. But, as a class, we all learned a lot. Using Twitter really helped with this test, and it turned out to not be as bad as I thought it would be. Everyone did a great job - keep up the good work : )
We adults often think about digital technology in terms of fear. But for the kids, as demonstrated here, it's often technology that removes fear from the equation.
Wednesday, May 20, 2009
Friday Chat: Listening to Students about Technology
The Friday Chat (a new tradition here on TeachPaperless) goes live this Friday, May 22nd, at 1PM EST on http://todaysmeet.com/teachpaperless. Make it an end-of-the-week habit to stop by and join in the discussion. The discussions are archived on Today's Meet for 12 hours after the chat closes, and you are welcome to check out those archived editions and share.
This week's topic will be: Listening to Students about Technology.
Here's a link to a short video my students and I made related to their feelings and my observations about working in a paperless classroom. Might be a good starting point for discussion.
See you there!
This week's topic will be: Listening to Students about Technology.
Here's a link to a short video my students and I made related to their feelings and my observations about working in a paperless classroom. Might be a good starting point for discussion.
See you there!
Wednesday, May 6, 2009
Paperless Students on Digital Nation
Short video mostly of a couple of my students talking about their feelings about being in a paperless classroom: now viewable on PBS's Digital Nation site. Look for the black and gold circle.
My favorite part of the video:
My favorite part of the video:
Me: So do you think if someone came into this room they'd think there was teaching and learning going on?
First Student: Um... no...
Second Student: It's more of a conversation.
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Students Speak Out on Technology in the Classroom
There's been a lot of talk recently about 21st Century Skills. But most of this talk has been between folks who stand to make a lot of money off the use of tech on the one side and folks who are suspicious of -- if not fundamentally opposed to -- tech on the other. Like most discussions in education, the voice missing in the debate is that of the students themselves.
So, I asked students in one of my paperless high school Latin classes to tell me how things were going for them. I wanted to know whether or not they felt like the tech we use in class was actually helping them. Here are a few of the responses. These are unedited and range from the top student in the class to a student facing a serious uphill climb marching into fourth quarter. They've all got something to say.
Student:
Student:
Student:
Student:
So, I asked students in one of my paperless high school Latin classes to tell me how things were going for them. I wanted to know whether or not they felt like the tech we use in class was actually helping them. Here are a few of the responses. These are unedited and range from the top student in the class to a student facing a serious uphill climb marching into fourth quarter. They've all got something to say.
Student:
I think the paperless classroom is great. I like the blogs because I can keep everything straight knowing what I turned in and what I need to finish. I also like Pixton. It's very fun and easy to use.
One thing I definitely don't like is the Google Docs. They take too much time to work on I feel like because sometimes it deletes your work if another person is editing at the same time. They do work as far as putting work together for you to see, but for a class to use, it doesn't work out.
Student:
So all in all, I really like the idea of a paperless classroom; it makes doing work at home and in class much easier.
I love using blogger as a place to keep all my work in class. It makes organization and being able to access my work on another computer so much easier.
For the most part, I think I really like Pixton. It helps me get the translations in my head. I can guarantee that if any of those translations were to come up on an exam or something, I would remember them because of the comics. The only thing I don't like about it is that it freezes up too much. Now maybe it's just my computer or maybe it's not, I'm not entirely sure, but it definitely makes a six slide comic about two hours to make. I think if it could respond a little faster, the comics would be so much easier to make and not half as frustrating as they can be now.
The only thing I absolutely hate above all things computer-related is Google Docs. I seriously just want to murder it. Whenever we're all working on a document at the same time, it will suddenly refresh without saving my work and scroll me all the way back up to the top of the document. This makes work that should last maybe a half an hour tops take and hour and half! I think the problem might be that all of us can't work on it at once. I don't really know how much group work you could get accomplished that way but I really don't think Google Docs is working for us.
Student:
I think Blogger is a really good website to use and it's really easy to use. I like how it keeps everything organized. It is also very easy to find past assignments. It will be a nice portfolio after we graduate. Blogger sometimes doesn’t load at school though. It only works at my house.
I like Pixton but I think it is only effective for short translations. If the paragraph is really long, I find Pixton to be tedious . Plus if the text is really long, it takes up a lot of space on the panel, leaving no room for the animation.
Google Docs does have potential but it is kind of annoying right now. Our group for the radio show is actually using it to write the script .
I love Whitaker's Words [an online Latin-English dictionary]. I find it very resourceful! I don’t even use other dictionaries anymore.
Student:
The use of the computer helps very much in Latin class. In most classes we just listen to the teacher talk for 40 minutes, so most of the information doesn't sink in. In Latin we learn with interactive programs, such as Pixton and Blogger. Learning is much easier and more fun when there is visual aids and class participation included. Also we do many interesting and different projects about once every two weeks. Each project is unique and fun, and range from making a Google Doc, to making your own radio show. These projects are much more entertaining and productive then doing worksheets and getting lectures every class. The only downside to the computer is the technical issues, like when blogger is down, or if you have a hardware issue. Overall I enjoy the use of the computer in class and I think I have learned a great deal more because it.
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