Sunday, May 1, 2011
week 15 assistive tech
This time we went over assistive technology, technology meant to assist students with exceptionalities. We were responsible for finding technology for three students, one only had one arm, one couldn't speak, and the third was blind. There were a great number of technologies which could be used for assisting these students, and each was a fairly interesting insight into what a school administrator has to do, between balancing a budget, and ensuring that students are able to get their comprehensive education.
weeks 13 and 14 double the fun
This was a roller coaster pair of weeks, the first week I had found out a major assignment from a different class wasn't going to work, so i was majorly displeases, to say the least. the next week, I found out that it would work on a different computer, so I was joyous, and able to help a classmate. the assignment, or at least the major assignment, was to make a video using some not so complex editing tools, and it was fun.
week 12, free stuff
This week, we went over copyright and fair use guidelines. class was canceled and we made a brochure based on fair use guidelines and copyright laws. There's not much more I could write about this class, as there wasn't a class.
week 11, spreadsheets
In today's class we made a grade book using Microsoft excel, and explored some other functionality within excel, making an activity based off of it. The activity I chose to do was something I experienced as part of my Field Experience class, a Battleship style game, where students learn the terms horizontal, vertical, and cell, then put them to practice by trying to sink my ships.
Sunday, April 3, 2011
fun stuff, week 10
this past week, we used microsoft excel to create a grade book, while this isn't a new concept to me, i think it's cool that excel can be used in such a way. our second activity was to create a second spreadsheet based activity, for which i chose to make a battleship based game, it was a fun little activity
catching up, week 9
this week we used graphic organizers to create a newsletter, i based my newsletter around my hobby, making chainmail. i think that the fact that technology comparable to inspiration exists for free on the internet is fairly useful.besides that there's not a whole lot i can say about the activities tonight, as neither of them is really a new concept to me, as i've been using inspiration, and graphical organizers for most of my life, and have been exposed to newsletters for almost all of my student career.
Thursday, March 3, 2011
caught up: week seven
this will mark the end of my starting late series of blog posts, and usher in the period of time when (hopefully) i can stay caught up with the monster blogs, and not have to stay up late to crunch five or so blogs in one night to relieve my stress...in any case, this past week (yesterday) we went over using iGoogle...my first response on seeing this last semester was "Oh god, Apple corrupted Google..." which isn't actually the case (as i understand it) iGoogle is a useful tool that allows all kinds of useful (or distracting) Widgets to be applied and checked regularly. as a starter to iGoogle, our assignment was to find a few widgets to add to our hoard. we HAD to get Gmail, Google reader, Google Docs, and two more widgets of our choice...i chose a few widgets last year to use as well...my current widgets (at the time of writing) include a stock ticker where I keep track of Goggle stock, for entertainment value, and Disney stock, because I own [a piece of] Disney, i also have a few fun widgets, a pair of eyes that follow my mouse, a hamster that does the same thing, but can also run on his/her hamster wheel, i also have a family of penguins that can interact with the mouse and be dragged across the widget, these three are fairly distracting...i also have a simulation of newtons cradle...wicked fun stuff...we also reviewed a few google tools, the entire class got a crash course on Google Docs, and I chose to review Google Earth and Google Sketchup...bot are useful applications, and i forgot to mention, as part of my review, that google earth and google Sketchup can be interconnected, allowing you to import buildings from google earth, and edit them in sketchup, seeing dimensions and size comparisons. Spelling mistakes be cursed, i'm ending this here
Goodnight and good luck,
Neil
Goodnight and good luck,
Neil
Continuing Late: Week Six: Week Five: Part 2
as promised here is week five, part two. During this class, a continuation of using the internet as a teaching tool, we learned a few great things. we learned the process of making a webquest, and the process of making a portaportal. Both were surprisingly easy, intuitive, and disappointingly anticlimactic, considering the hype I'd heard about them in the previous semester. In any case, i teamed up with a classmate as we ventured into a webquest covering the battle of Hastings in 1066. Doing the webquest, i learned a few things besides how to make a webquest and a portaportal: i learned that the Battle of Hastings was fought in 1066 C.E, between the British and Normans, with the Normans ending up as the victors. in any case, we had a lot of fun, and i was able to learn something. I learned that not only could doing a webquest making learning more entertaining, but creating one was a fun time, and was doable inside of an hour, and the portaportal I created makes a neat, if convenient, repository for my miscellaneous links. Portaportal can be used as a good resource for teachers and students alike, where teachers can put websites with a wide variety of informational coverage, allowing the students the experience of sifting through resources, but at the same time allowing the students to stay safe out on the big internet.
Big thanks to all (one or two) readers,
Neil
Big thanks to all (one or two) readers,
Neil
continuing a bit late, week five reflection
I've let the information from week five stew, and sink in...this was an interesting class based mostly on an activity, and practice that I already performed: Vetting your resources. the material covered in this class was about making sure that your internet resources were as reliable as most people consider text based resources to be. the internet is a great places to start any research, as long as the material is viable. to quote one of my favorite video bloggers on Earth: "with the advent of the internet, information has been liberated" this quote, to me, means that where once, one would have to go to a library, search through the 2 ton catalog of books, the go find their desired book among every other book in that same category. while this system worked for a couple hundred years, since Ben Franklin decided to make the first public libraries in America, you no longer need to do that. this sounds powerful, but like all things powerful, one has to be careful or it will backfire, we need to not only be teaching students the old methods, involving that two ton catalog, but also, how to appropriately use Google, or similar search engines. many teachers have a small list of pre-approved websites that their students can use, which sadly doesn't teach students how to do research, though it's a safe method for getting the information to their students. I seem to be drawling...alot...so i'm going to end the post here for now, and pick up next post, with: continuing late: Week six: week five:part 2
starting late, with week four
I remember week four like it was yesterday, despite it being a few weeks ago, we were discussing podcasts, blogs and wikis as the subject matter of that class. As a part of this class, being on the above matters, I did a few things for the FIRST TIME: i used a mac for the first time, performed my first podcast, and as a direct result of Ithat i'm doing a (hopefully regular) blog. I've done blogs in the past, but they...ended up failing after a few posts, mostly due to lack of interest from my end...as to the results of the above firsts: first use of a mac, I don't recommend it, the controls were annoying, and I found myself losing patience, were it not the schools computer, there would probably be one less macbook in the world, and I would have been out a couple hundred dollars. as to podcasts, I look forward to making them a regular part of my classes.
keep on keeping on,
Neil
keep on keeping on,
Neil
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