Thursday, February 10, 2011
It's Been Awhile!
My first Glog post is done! I was finally able to put something together from my trip to Paris with my oldest daughter, Erica. (Institute Day is coming up soon and I have a presentation to deliver on Literacy in the 21st Century...motivation enough!) I am going to share it with you here. Glogster is a multimedia publishing site for both students AND their teachers. There is a free EDU account that teachers can access, sign in your students, and off you go. Happy Glogging!
http://jnewport.edu.glogster.com/paris/
Monday, July 5, 2010
It's a Clue!
Monday, May 31, 2010
Explaining Things
"Grown-ups never understand anything by themselves, and it is tiresome for children to be always and forever explaining things to them."The Little Prince, Antoine de Saint-Exupery
I have had the awesome privilege of working with and beside teachers of writing this year. It continually amazed me at what they are willing to do for their students to bring out the writer wrapped up inside each of them. Imagine my joy at hearing my name being called out by Mrs. Bronson's second graders, papers waving in the air, anxious to share what they had done since my last visit with their poetry writing. Or the fifth grader in Mrs. Kalantzis's class who asked on the last day of school if I had received his poem and did I like it (I did and I do!). Still, while I know that this is the true test of a teacher of writing, to create a love for writing with their students, we will all - students and teachers alike - be assessed on our success as it is determined by the writing portion of the state's standardized test, the ISAT.
While I wait for the scores to arrive, I am going to remind myself that children often know more than we adults do when it comes to writing.
Jack, the Kindergarten son of a colleague of mine, said it best. He continued his love of writing into his first digital story. He recently started a new a notebook on the birds he sees in his yard initiated for him by a grown-up neighbor. Jack and his mom will also keep a digital writing notebook this summer. I would say that this writer is well on his way.
Do you think students will ever write; "In November, my favorite Kindergarten activity was ISAT Prep"? No...I didn't think so.
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
Badger Babies




Thursday, May 13, 2010
Someone in Iraq loves me...
Saturday, May 1, 2010
Lessons Learned
- I saw this video on my blog, and I just loved it. Here is a student who taught herself to create a blog related to those things she is very much interested in. And it was done on her own time outside of the school day. Our students are doing most,if not all, of their digital communication on their own. In school, there remains a flow of information to our students but not from them. Lesson Learned: I need to be an agent of change. Teachers need to be supported in their efforts to integrate current practice/curriculum with technology so that students can contribute information rather than remain consumers.
- My teacher also liked it a lot. I learned more about myself as a writer through the digital storytelling process than I had in many of the classes that I have taken! The images, music, and narration added to the story I have been waiting to tell about the influence my grandparents had on my life. Lesson Learned: Digital storytelling can help writers to focus, narrow down their topic, revise well, edit for content, think critically, gain a better sense of audience, and learn something about themselves in the process.
- I think it is really cool that you can make a movie. Ah! This student's interest is piqued. Lesson Learned: When students, like myself, are shown the possibilities that content and technology can create they naturally want to know more, do more. I have learned that it is important to share what I have done, to continue to learn more, and to advocate for these opportunities.
- I have no idea how. We are missing an opportunity here. This student will be in middle school next year. I can only imagine what she might be able to communicate if this tool were at her disposal. Lesson Learned: 21st Century Learning is about more than technology, it is about providing students with the critical thinking skills they need in order to be successful. Technology is a powerful tool used by students to effectively communicate their thinking, learning, ideas.
There is much more for me to learn...I am still getting my thinking around Google Docs! Digital Writing Workshop is my new passion and focus for learning. Wish me luck as I take this "on the road" in the district with the teachers I am fortunate enough to work with.
Friday, April 30, 2010
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