Blog Junkie

Education Reflections, Research and Musings

Archive for January, 2009


Virtual Classroom – Week 2

OK, week 2 and I’m back in the lab.  Saved, of course at the final second by Super Techieman who fixed the computers.  But for some reason that neither Super Techieman nor TappedIn can figure out, the teacher computers cannot access the chat!  So we adapt.  Put one student computer on the LCD projector. HA!

The project that the students are working on within the virtual classroom is one of multicultural diversity. Something we do not have much of at our school. The students will work independently, then collaboratively and then co-operatively on various tasks. (They’ve been divided into 7 random groups of 4.) The research tasks will start with some independent work.  That work will be used to create a collaborative group discussion post.   Groups will reply to others discussion posts.  The groups will create and upload a short PowerPoint and then the groups will work co-operatively on an art project, creating a world flag to represent their group’s view of multicultural diversity.  Hopefully we can take digital pictures of the flags and upload them into the classroom.

With the assistance of two US teachers who passed information on to me through a Twitter companion I revamped the lesson.  Made it much simpler.  I posted the groups on the whiteboard in the virtual classroom and then posted the assignment.  Independently, the students were to write a post telling what their cultural background is, and what family traditions they have at home.  If they did not have any traditions related to their culture, they could write about any family tradition they had.  Then they had to respond to one or more classmates posts with a positive comment.  After that they were allowed to chat.  SUCCESS!  Thank you, Jeff, at TappedIn for this valuable chat advice – they have to earn the right to chat by completing their work – properly.

Problems?  Of course!  One student could not log on no matter what we did.  Why?  I didn’t figure it out until about 20 minutes after the class ended.  I had misspelled his name.  Jeez!  I logged him on as me so he could still join in.  Tech problems?  None.  Thanks Super Techieman.  Owe you some chocolate chip cookies!

What did I learn?  To keep the lesson simple.  I talked to the students after and asked what they liked about the lesson.  They really enjoyed reading about their classmates cultural backgrounds and traditions.  Several found they had almost the same traditions. I asked what they liked about the virtual classroom. They loved the idea of being able to post replies instantly as it was different than in class because in class you have to raise your hand and wait to be called on, have to listen to others talk too much.  They liked the idea of being heard right away.  A good thing? Well maybe a double-edged thing:  a sign of our high-speed Internet socializing and on-the-other-hand, shy students are willing to venture out and be heard, bouncy ADHD-type students don’t have to wait and lose interest.

We had one MAJOR learning experience that will be looked at next class.  One student replied with an inside joke that was something that should not have been posted. She regretted this and gave me a note to see if I could delete it, ASAP.  I checked the post reply.  It was not hurtful, rude or anything along those lines.  It was a play on words, the word being assassination. The context it was used in would be somewhat similar to jokingly making a bomb comment in an airport.  The other students told this particular student that the FBI would be contacting her and she became deeply upset.  I was unable to delete the comment.  I spoke to her after class and she was in tears over the whole thing.  Told her to ignore the other students, I’ll talk to them, but ask what she learned?  She learned an awful lot about choosing your online words carefully!  She gave permission to have the post put up on the projector and use it for a class discussion next class.  I just cannot believe what pulling back that “teacher power” can do for student learning.

The chat.  Needs more work.  They discussed how people just kept saying Hi when not needed as the chat says who just joined the group. They discussed how the chat moves too fast and how it is hard to get a conversation going with so many people joining in.  I need to show them some of the chat actions such as detatching it, increasing the text size and putting things on the pasteboard if they need to slow it down.  I think we need to have a topic to chat about so the conversation has a purpose.  This time it was just play.  They learned much by just playing!  Time to add a little structure to the play.

Action Research #2 – A Virtual Classroom with TappedIn

This is my last action research project for my Graduate Diploma.  I decided to explore how the use of technology could enhance collaborative learning and create a close, secure online environment where students can learn and explore with confidence.  I chose to use TappedIn as the site which would host my virtual classroom.

I chose TappedIn for a number of important reasons.  First: it is a totally secure environment to bring students into.  They are locked into the classroom and cannot leave to other areas of TappedIn without the teacher’s express permission.  No one can enter the classroom or view it without being invited by the teacher. There is a chat feature which is locked into the classroom so the students are only chatting with their own class.  This can be changed to allow the students to collaborate with other classes via teacher invitation.  All chats are recorded and sent to the teacher’s email, including private chats. This chat can be disabled until the teacher gives permission to use it. You can lock your classroom and students cannot access it from home. How much more secure can you possibly get.  Second: they have amazing support, both tech and teaching. They give scheduled tours of the site that are listed on the calendar so you can see the date/time of the tour.  There is a reception room where there is always someone online to answer your questions or help you join a group if you’re new.  The staff are incredibly welcoming and helpful. Third: They have an incredible array of free professional development on a wide range of topics.  I belong to 4 different professional groups, including one for gaming!  I may be a WoW convert yet!  Actually, I want to learn how to use Quest Atlantis!  Fourth: you can set up your own office space there and create and lead your own professional group if you wish.  Fifth: there is an area secured for students to go to with different “rooms” such as NASA, gaming, one for special ed students….and the list goes on. I cannot say enough about this site.  My tech is even impressed to death!  My principal is happy with everything!  Yeah, I’m afraid I’m raving about this place!

So what happened when I actually brought the students in?  Well of course things went wrong!  This is me in the lab we’re talking about!  (4 computers and 1 mouse died!) The first time there was some concern about the chat not being enabled.  My Super Techieman had problems getting the chat through the filters and thought it wasn’t working.  SURPRISE! It was (which is why he is Super Techieman) and the kids jumped all over that like bees on honey!  Had to disable it quick as we had not discussed that yet.  Also the lesson, which I thought was just fine, was too big and too overwhelming for the students in this environment. When I disabled the chat, they turned the whiteboard into one, just sort of naturally, not on purpose to disregard instructions.

The chat on the whiteboard was very, very interesting. These students have never been in an online environment like this and appear to have only limited experience with texting, MSN…They stuck to a given topic, wandered off, self-policed back on topic again. Was fascinating to read – too long to paste into this post.  One student posted a comment to which another replied that the comment was rude.  I held back with a rapid heart rate – keeping with my vow to stop controlling things with my “teacher power” (as I did with disabling the chat) and waited to see what would happen.  The student with the “rude” comment (it was somewhat rude) apologized stating he/she hadn’t meant to be rude.  The conversation carried on.  No teacher power needed or given.  Was awesome! But the lesson was still off.  I’m not used to teaching in this environment any more than the students are used to learning in it. With some discussion with the TappedIn folks and with some help from a PLN member from Twitter, I went back in and fixed things.  I also added the principal as a moderator so she could also log in and join in anytime she felt like it.  I liked that idea as both security in helping the kids understand the responsiblity they have been given and that she would experience this with us.  A great way to collaborate.

Last thing to go slightly south was the issue of off-school access to the site, thus the chat.  I was asked by a student if they could log in from home.  YIKES!  I had no answer so I hedged the question. TappedIn staff informed me that I could lock the class and the students would be denied access.  At 3:03pm the first student attempted to access the classroom, was denied and informed that I would be emailed.  I had the email in my inbox complete with student username, time of attempt.  I have no issue with them going in the classroom, except for one:  who is supervising them at home, if anyone?  So the room remains locked and we had a class discussion on the rules of use and I held up printed email copies of chat transcripts and access notifications.  Rules understood.

It was a great learning experience all way around.  We’ve earned each others trust.  I’ve learned some lessons on teaching online.  The students are learning some netiquette and how to learn online. Very cool.

My Favorite Web 2.0 Tools

What tools/sites do I use frequently, occasionally and which would I like to learn to use more proficiently?

I have “borrowed”, well stolen actually, this blog idea from Claire Thompson of Clarify Me.  I thought it was a great idea as a January reflection. Thanks Claire! Mimicking is the highest form of flattery! Really, a published Canadian author told me this!

I first heard about Web 2.0 one year ago, January 2008.  Betty, our Simon Fraser University Faculty Associate came up to give us TLITE students a workshop/introduction to Web 2.0.  I had to look up Web 2.0 in Wikipedia! After the workshop I got a little excited.  Prior to the workshop the tools I could/did use were:

  • MS Word
  • hotmail – I actually had to be shown how to add an attachment!
  • tablet – some drawing on my daughter’s tablet
  • Google Search – very, very basic

I never do things in a small way.  It’s the full monty or not at all!  See what happened in 12 months!

Now I frequently use these tools/sites for Social Networking

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • Classroom 2.0

I frequently use these tools/sites on a regular basis:

  • Google Reader
  • Google Search
  • iGoogle
  • gmail
  • MS Word
  • MS PowerPoint
  • Firefox
  • Edublogs – learned how to put in one of my own pictures!
  • Bibme – great online site for creating a bibliography
  • hotmail
  • Inspiration Software
  • Booktagger

Tools/sites I have used occasionally:

  • Elluminate
  • WizIQ
  • Yugma
  • Blogger – I started my first PLE blog there, but moved over to Edublogs
  • YouTube
  • TeacherTube
  • PBWiki
  • Google Docs
  • Google Presentation
  • Google Calendar
  • coComment
  • Technorati
  • LIveJournal

Some tools I would like to learn more about and use more proficiently are:

  • Google Notebook
  • SKype
  • Diigo
  • PBWiki
  • Wink – a totally cool tutorial creating tool!

Some sites I use for Professional Development are:

  • Classroom 2.0 – they have great on-line presentations using Elluminate
  • TappedIn – absolutely LOVE this site.  I will be bringing my 2 upper intermediate classes here in a virtual classroom
  • Knowschools – have taught me everything from tagging to blogging to wikis to Everything Google!

I also attempted to try the 31 Day Comment Challenge.  Crashed and burned. Failure.  I also gave up on the tablet thingy too as well as digital scrapbooking.  There definitely is something to be said about hands-on art!  I even joined Oprah’s book club for Eckhart Tolle’s A New Earth, just to see what that was like. Don’t even ask!  There’s a limit even for flakey Liberal Arts folks. Yeesh.  Oh yes, I also managed to embed a YouTube video into a PowerPoint presentation with the direct help of my daughter’s friend and a techie from Future Shop! Haven’t a clue how we did that.  Something about using an FLV converter and Divx. Huh?  I even made a slide show for a school I was temporarily working at using an IMac! Ha, I hate Macs, but have you seen the whole Mac Goes Green thing!  I so want a new Mac!  Just saying…you know, putting it out there.

I figure the learning curve was pretty steep.  Learned a huge amount.  Also discovered the true meaning of “Information Overload”! Now I try to stick to learning ONE thing at a time!

In all seriousness, I pushed hard to come out of my comfort zone, stressed myself out, slid into a funk or two, all because of an absolute belief in the value of using technology to enhance curriculum.

So, what tools to you use?

7 Things Meme

I’ve never heard of a meme before.  It’s some sort of cultural thing that, at times, goes around the blogsphere.  I am to write 7 things about me that you do not know. I was tagged by Jan Smith who wrote 7 things about herself on her blog.  She sailed a boat around the world! Check out her 7 things.  They are fascinating.

So here goes:

1.  I was born and lived for 6 years in Churchill, Manitoba.  Churchill is home to the polar bears as it is directly in their migration route.  Yes, I’ve seen polar bears.  We used to be driven from house to house for Halloween because it was really cold and snowing and it was bear season!  I have worn sealskin mukaluks that were traditionally made by an Inuit elder who chewed the skin used for the bottom of the boots!  I’ve worn a real arctic parka, complete with fox fur around the hood and listened to iceburgs “explode” on the Hudson’s Bay.  They didn’t really explode, they just cracked apart and it sounded like they exploded.  I missed the sound of the fog horn for years after we moved.

2.  I love fishing and grew up in the outdoors camping and fishing.  I do not hunt and cannot kill anything except for a bug or two.  Our family did this because my father was a trapper before he was married, complete with dog teams!  I plan on writing his stories this summer.

3.  I have been chased by a sow black bear with cubs.  I had an Irish Setter dog who treed the cubs and when a very, very vexed sow came after him, he decided that hiding behind me was a grand idea!  I hold the record for the fastest .5mile on record!  I was 15 and was….fishing!

4.  I am an insomniac.

5.  I’ve travelled to Poland (Warsaw) and the Ukraine.  My grandfather left behind a family in the Ukraine and in the late 90’s a man who grew up with my mom, a retired teacher, was teaching technology in a small village when a hunched over old lady with a cane asked him if he knew my grandfather.  It turns out that old lady was my mom’s half-sister. Can you believe this!  What are the odds!  It was like an Oprah moment.  So we had to go over and meet all the cousins etc… It was like going through a time-warp back to the 1930’s or 40’s.  In the city they shut the water off between 10am and 6pm.  People fill buckets and bathtubs with water.  You’re lucky to find a place with a flush toilet!  Like camping! :)   I laughed a lot while I was there.  I would go back in a heartbeat.

6.  I love to cook and am a Food TV junkie.  I own tons of cookbooks.  I have lemons preserving on the counter that will be ready next week.  Moroccan cuisine is coming up – tagine to be sure.

7. I never learned to crawl.  My mom wouldn’t put me on the floor in Churchill because she thought it was too cold. Result: I have very underdeveloped bi-lateral co-ordination.  Means:  I’m the clumsiest person you’ve ever met.  I am not allowed to play baseball as my husband says I’m a 911 call.  I tripped over the mutt, landed in the open dishwasher and had to have my face glued back together in the ER. Good news:  I do not scar. The dog died 4 months later.  Karma?!

I tag:  Betty Gilgoff, Chris Lehmann, Kim Cofino and Phil Macoun.

Please link back to me so I can read your 7 things!  Can’t wait….