NPK

Another excellent Edublogs.org weblog

Thing 7c

August 6th, 2008 by · No Comments · Uncategorized

Here is something that I had in RSS – goes quite will with the topic discussed in this class

The only problem that I am having with this, in our school (and I am sure not only) kids are not allowed to have any electronic devices on them during class. So the natural question is: are teachers/schools buying these for the classrooms?

All right, the link does not appear to be valid… So here is the article (I have tried a few times to put the link in)

Students and Teachers, From K to 12, Hit the Podcasts

Photographs by Andy Manis for The New York Times

TEACHING TOOL At Longfellow Middle School in La Crosse, Wis., students produce podcasts that are syndicated over Apple’s iTunes music store.


Published: January 25, 2006

THE subjects were typical for a seventh-grade classroom: a summary of a mealworm’s metamorphosis, strategies on improving memory and making studying easier and a story about a classroom candy thief.

Skip to next paragraph

Andy Manis for The New York Times

“Their audience has moved to the entire world,” a teacher said.

But the discussions last fall at Longfellow Middle School in La Crosse, Wis., were not taking place only for their classroom to hear. They were recorded as part of a series of podcasts the students produced and syndicated over Apple’s iTunes music store.

“Their audience has moved to the entire world,” said Jeanne Halderson, one of two seventh-grade teachers at Longfellow who supervise the podcasts. “The students find that exciting. It’s a lot more motivating to write something that the whole world can hear, rather than just something for a teacher to put a grade on.”

Podcasting – posting an audio recording online that can be heard through a computer or downloaded to a mobile device like an iPod – is following blogs and online classes as yet another interactive technology catching on as a teaching tool. Currently, iTunes lists more than 400 podcasts from kindergarten through 12th-grade classes, while Yahoo has nearly 900 education-related podcasts. Some are produced by teachers wanting to reach other educators with teaching tips, while many are created by students, like the La Crosse seventh graders with their podcast, at lacrosseschools.com/longfellow/sc/ck/index.htm.

“A podcast is like few other devices that a teacher can use in advancing a student’s development,” said Daniel J. Schmit, an instructional technology specialist in the college of education at the University of Nebraska at Lincoln and the author of “KidCast: Podcasting in the Classroom.” “It teaches them to do research, to communicate in print, to speak effectively and grab attention with sound.”

One reason podcasting is effective in the classroom, Mr. Schmit says, is that it can be used in every subject. Indeed, “Coulee Kids” is like a weekly variety show, running 7 to 14 minutes, with introductory music. The Nov. 18 podcast included discussions of photosynthesis, the difference between angiosperms and gymnosperms and a segment on adding integers. The Jan. 6 episode featured student interviews about bullying, a follow-up to a report on “20/20.”

Of course, students have been producing audio programs for generations, typically using tape recorders or reel-to-reel machines. What makes podcasts better, educators say, is that they are easier to edit than splicing a tape because they are recorded digitally on a computer. Perhaps the biggest difference, though, is that podcasts are available to a worldwide audience, which can subscribe to them and have them automatically downloaded to their computers when a new installment is posted.

Like other classroom technologies, podcasting requires a learning curve. As a result, teachers already using podcasts in their classes tend to be early adopters of technology. Kathleen B. Schrock, administrator for technology at Nauset Public Schools in Orleans, Mass., said one goal of her podcasts is to persuade teachers “how easy it is to produce one.” Ms. Schrock’s podcasts (nausetschools.org/podcasts.htm) include short interviews with teachers and administrators about things like how they use technology in their classrooms. This spring, she plans workshops to show teachers in her district how to create a podcast.

“Just the word ‘podcast’ scares a lot of teachers away,” Ms. Schrock said. “There are a lot of misconceptions.”

One of the most common is that schools need iPods or other portable audio devices, like MP3 players, to create and listen to a podcast, said David Warlick, who sifts through education-related podcasts and lists good ones for teachers on his Web site, the Education Podcast Network (epnweb.org). “All you need is a computer, access to the Internet and a microphone that you can buy at Toys ‘R’ Us,” Mr. Warlick said. “I listen to podcasts on my computer.”

The sound can be edited, and music and other audio elements can be added easily, Mr. Warlick said, using software like Acid Music Studio, GarageBand or open-source Audacity. “Learning the software is the most difficult part,” he said.

Ms. Halderson, the teacher at Longfellow Middle School, said she practiced using the podcast software in August, and her students produced their first show the second week of school. “We laugh at that one now,” she said. To improve their show, the students listened to podcasts from other schools, including “Room 208″ from Wells Elementary School in Wells, Me., and “Radio WillowWeb” from Willowdale Elementary School in Omaha.

Those shows motivated the Longfellow students to perfect their own podcasts, said Megan Wichelt, a seventh grader there. “It’s better than learning out of a textbook because you’re actually doing something with what you learn,” she said. Moreover, the potential audience for a podcast, she added, is so much larger than just the teachers and parents who usually read her essays. “I know other people are listening, so it’s very fun to do.”

This month, Ms. Halderson got 14 new video iPods for her students, bought from donations and the sale of greeting cards, butterfly houses and birdhouses that were all made by the students.

While she and other educators agree that the technology will never replace a live teacher, there are exceptions. Ms. Schrock of Nauset Public Schools says that teachers could record lessons for absent students.

Thing 18

August 6th, 2008 by · No Comments · Uncategorized

Ok, I’m walking backwards, finding breaches and here is the podcast. It was extremely easy to make this audio podcast. In it however I’m talking about my students doing (as I am planning) video podcasting. For that I will have to do a little research, as I am not sure what kind of hardware the kids will have at their disposal.

But anyway, for the sake of the exercise

Thing 22

August 5th, 2008 by · No Comments · Uncategorized

This is quite overwhelming. I have just gotten (more or less) used to blogs, then volunteer work got me into livejournal community (quite a neat thing, I should say, I have grown so attached to it, that I am looking forward to new posts of some kids there!), then pageflakes and now Ning. The main thing on my mind right now is that my day has just shrunk considerably to some VERY SHORT 24 hours in which there is no possible physical opportunity to as much as just glance at everything there is on the Internet.

Prioritize, prioritize, prioritize – I will have to really choose what is worth looking at / getting into and what is … less worth it. And that is a challenge.

Minor thought – most of the NING (not educational – just random) seem to be 1 to 3 persons communities. Lots of those I wanted to look at were invitation only. So right now, unfortunately, I can’t say I’m quite into Ning, but I will explore it later down the road.

Thing 21

August 4th, 2008 by · No Comments · Uncategorized

I have never heard of, let alone used Pageflakes before. The idea of adding all kinds of neat components to your page with a drag and drop is quite convenient. What I really like is that you can have different pages for different purposes.  You can have a daily planner with all the necessary notes, CNN news for your cup of coffee, calendar, sticky notes. You can create one for your class with tasks for the kids to perform, a blog and a message board where they can make posts and work on things together. The can also upload podcasts and youtube clips which can later be viewed by all the participants.

Thing 19

July 25th, 2008 by · No Comments · Uncategorized

WOW!

MANY-MANY-MANY THANKS FOR THIS COURSE.

I’ve never heard of TeachTube before. There are SO MANY!!! great videos professionally done, with CORRECT comments (unfortunately some educational videos do come with mistakes in explanations of phenomena).

I will definitely include links to such videos for my kids as we study light and energy

Now, the “How to…” – this is a very instructional video, necessary for any cat lover… or cat owner for that matter. All right, it’s funny, but we’re supposed to have fun with this, right. Thus, “HOW TO WASH A CAT”

And the last one – officially for fun.
This is for fun. Pardon the language barrier – this video has a little bit of Russian in the background (well, we were offered to find something nostalgic). This is an alternative to Dancing with the Stars. In this TV show professional figure skaters were assigned a partner from media / show business who had no skating training before. This pair won the competition. The gent is an Olympic champion (in Torino) and the lady – an actress and a charity activist.

Thing 17

July 23rd, 2008 by · No Comments · Uncategorized

I have been using Podcasting for over a year now. I am subscribed to NY Times through Audible.com and every morning about 5 am there is a new issue delivered into my Itunes, then transferred into my Ipod and I listen to it on the way to school and while setting the class up for the new day. On week-ends I have Science News also podcasted – I listen through to get an idea what would be interesting to look at in the next issue of SN.

The podcasts I’m used to are audio files. And it was interesting to experiment with video podcasts. I have looked at Education section in iTunes, through the iTune store. Amusing, but hardly the level I would use for the students.

And so I chose the suggested list of podcasts that are specifically Educational, put ‘Physics’ into the search window and  found a number of very nice video clips that I would definitely use in my classroom.

I made a website for my students at the end of this (last) school year to help them get ready for the final. On that site the students could find the material we have studied through the semester with suggested problems from homework assignments that they needed to review. And there were also flash files that I have used in PowerPoint presentations in class throughout the course.

This year I am planning to maintain a site like that from day one and put links to interesting / necessary podcasts that the students would benefit from listening to. I would also like to put audio files / podcasts – even if I have to make them / have the students make them – depending on their computer skills – about scientists and specific discoveries. I believe that would add to the in-class activities and make their studies more fun, and therefore more productive.

Thing 16

July 21st, 2008 by · No Comments · Uncategorized

Library thing is a nice tool for readers. Traditional-way readers. You can search for books based on keywords, author name, ISBN, etc. Right there you can also see how many members have that book (in case you wanted to borrow it or swap the book, quite useful, by the way!), how popular it is, read reviews of it and find stores where you could buy it (the link takes you right to the page of one of the leading book stores, you see the prices. As far as I could see, you are also able to get suggestions and recommendations based on your interest and the books in your library.

Unfortunately, I have been too drawn into ebook and audiobooks that I do not read many ‘traditional’ books. But it would be a nice tool for English / Literature teachers, school book clubs, etc.

Thing 15

July 21st, 2008 by · No Comments · Uncategorized

Delicious is a very powerful tool, especially if you are using more than one computer (work home) or if for one reason or another your computer crashes and you have to start anew. But more than just saving you copying your favorites and transfering them everywhere you go, Delicious offers you an option to share your bookmarks with other people. Or – not.

Here is just a few of mine. Help yourselves.

Thing 7b

July 21st, 2008 by · No Comments · Uncategorized

Since our RSS assignment I have noticed that when visiting a new website one of the first things I check out is whether they have an RSS or podsact option. More often than not they do, and more often than not I add them to my list (just in case – what if there is something I wouldn’t want to miss).

I can’t say that I’m reading all of the new information – there is only so many hours in a day, and even less those you can spend on line. But I do look through them. One feed however, I read religiously. Every day. It comes from Dictionary.com – a word a day. They give you words you’ve never heard of (all right, I’ve never heard of).

Three other interesting feeds come from Answers.com

I have subscribed to Quote of the Day, Today in History, and Today’s Birthday.

Highly recommend – takes you places, introduces interesting facts.

There is another bunch of feeds I have, most of which I only look through. Yes, it may seem overwhelming when you see news piling up and you don’t have time to read all of them. But glancing through them and finding something that might be of particular interest to you – that’s priceless. And one particular news that you don’t miss is worth taking time to look through numerous titles that get delivered to your… whichever agent you use for RSS.

On a personal note – I wish there were 72 hours in a day… think how much more one could find out about the world and people around.

Thing 14

July 21st, 2008 by · No Comments · Uncategorized

I think that Quizlet would be a very useful tool for my students. Using it would help them organize the material for each chapter / phenomenon that is being studied in class. Instead of creating a quiz guide or a test guide myself, I am planning to have them work on a list of facts/formulae/terms that they can share / add to / comments on, etc.