Thursday, September 20, 2007

Being an Anthropologist




You may find my final report about the Technology Culture at Sitka High at...
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=df347m4x_0ffvt5k

For this report, I joined forces with the four other MAT students here at Sitka High School:
  • Kate Coseo - Science

  • Jeff Glase - English

  • Ike Kahler - Math

  • Hillary Seeland - English

We scouted the school and tracked down pertinent information and illustrious persons with knowledge about the technological culture at our school. It seems that many students are tech savvy. In fact, 70-80% of students have a computer and Internet connection at home.

This project really made me open my eyes and look around at just how intertwined digital equipment has become in our daily lives. When I read articles and hear lectures about embracing technology, I find myself resist. It feels like the world as we know it is about to end and an new digital wasteland will soon emerge... However when I just relax, look around, and realize how easily these digital tools fit into life, it seems all right.




Sunday, September 16, 2007

Listen to the Natives

Shanna Rounds
shannarounds@yahoo.com
September 16, 2007

Listen to the Natives
by Marc Prensky

In his article, Mr. Prensky refers to today's students as Digital Natives. The rest of us, not born into the digital world, he refers to as digital immigrants. Mr. Prensky points out the because many teachers are so behind our students in the digital world, we can never really catch up. As a remedy, he suggests that we take the initiative to make our classrooms more like video games, or gameplay. He also insists that we need to not only listen to our students opinions about instruction, but that we should adapt it to suit every student. Further, Mr. Prensky suggests using the students as actual teachers. He goes on to suggest that teachers use cell phones as tools, that schools incorporate programming into the curriculum, and that school should be as engaging as the after school activities in which our students involve themselves.

Top Points in the Article
  • Students could learn algebra far more quickly and effectively if instruction were available in game format
  • Teachers must put engagement before content when teaching
  • Teachers can encourage students to form study groups outside of school, according to who has the best access to technology
  • Outside school, students are fully engaged by their 21st century digital lives
  • Cell phones have enormous capabilities these days
  • The real reason that we ban cell phones is that students would "vote with their attention"...
As a teacher, this article makes me reflect on the kinds of technology I have already experienced during my first few weeks at Sitka High...a young French singer projected from the Internet onto the overhead screen, students at a school dance taking pictures with camera phones and dancing to music played from an i pod connected to a sound system, a DVD of children in Northern Ireland talking about "the troubles." These are just a few examples.

Students are definitely out there in the digital world, programming it, playing in it, and communicating with it. I live in a larger city in Alaska where many families have money to buy cell phones and computers for their children. What about students in villages who do not have cell phones, or cell phone service for that matter? What about students who live in rural Montana who do not have Internet access at home or the means to get to a friend's house to use digital equipment? What about children in inner cities and the rural south who do not have i pods and do not attend schools with digital equipment? Should Africans be spending money on re-charge cards for their cell phones instead of buying food, clothing, and books for their children? Because that is what is happening.

It is wonderful that games can be educational, but games are not the real world. Are our students playing games on their computers instead of getting outside to exercise? Are they sending text messages to a friend down the street instead of walking over to say hi? Have our students become so lazy that we must not only treat them for obesity, but learn to entertain them in the classroom in order to teach them?

I agree with Mr. Prensky on several points. I think we are seeing some definite benefits in the classroom with technological enhancements. We all need to learn to use these resources, which is why I am grateful for this class. However, I will not be convinced that the digital world is the end-all-be-it to bettering our children's education. I like to think that I can and will be one of those inspirational, dynamic teachers to whom children respond well. I also take pride in getting to know students and interacting with them face to face. The day I test a student via text messaging will be a sad one for me.

Tuesday, September 4, 2007

Futuring

Assessment:

Fox Becomes a Better Person

This performance showed a tremendous amount of work from Hannah. It is obvious that she worked hard to memorize the story about Fox. She drew pictures to illustrate her story and learned some Tlingit words. I would, of course, need a rubric before giving Hannah a grade.

Hannah gets a four in creativity. The story was a bit confusing as Fox transitioned into a better person. She could also work on having better eye contact. However, are these items on the rubric? I think that overall it is a wonderful piece.

School Train

In contrast, School Train was annoying at best. Was it necessary for the students to make faces at the camera? What was the point of using whispered Spanish phrases? Again, I would need a rubric to grade this project. The music did not enhance the idea behind the metaphor, and I do not see that every child has proven their understanding of the metaphor from this clip.
In the Classroom:

epic2015

The introduction to this clip almost gave me a migraine. In fact, working on the computer too much makes me dizzy. As far as Podcasting and its impacts on my classroom, I do not think much of technology so it is hard for me to get into that mindset. I still do not really understand what exactly a podcast is. Even so, I would feel good about getting news specifically from the francophone world by podcasts to use in my classroom. However, I feel that the clip epic2015 told us that, overall, we would be getting a lot of half-truths and fake news from future internet sources. I might stick with more reliable, primary news sources.