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Showing posts with label eportfolio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label eportfolio. Show all posts

Monday, April 23, 2012

Connected Learning


The Essence of Connected Learning from DML Research Hub on Vimeo.
We are living in a historical moment of transformation and realignment in the creation and sharing of knowledge, in social, political and economic life, and in global connectedness. There is wide agreement that we need new models of education suited to this historic moment, and not simply new models of schooling, but entirely new visions of learning better suited to the increasing complexity, connectivity, and velocity of our new knowledge society. Fortunately, we are also able to harness the same technologies and social processes that have powered these transformations in order to provide the next generation with learning experiences that open doors to academic achievement, economic opportunity, and civic engagement. Specifically, we now have the capability to reimagine where, when, and how learning takes place; to empower and motivate youth to pursue knowledge and develop expertise at a pace, to a degree, and on a path that takes advantage of their unique interests and potential; and to build on innovations across a growing spectrum of learning institutions able to support a range of learning experiences for youth that were unimaginable even 15 years ago. We propose a new approach to learning -- connected learning -- that is anchored in research, robust theories of learning, and the best of traditional standards, but also designed to mine the learning potential of the new social- and digital media domain. Connected learning is a model of learning that holds out the possibility of reimagining the experience of education in the information age. It draws on the power of today's technology to fuse young people's interests, friendships, and academic achievement through experiences laced with hands-on production, shared purpose, and open networks.
DML Central Connected Learning

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Web 2.0 Foundations Joins the Canvas Revolution

This week Web 2.0 Foundation students break the mold of online and blended learning. Canvas LMS has arrived at Wiscasset High School.
Canvas Learning Management System (LMS) is more than a LMS, its an ePortfolio Builder, Social Networking and PLN hub, Google Apps integration, mobile learning and much more. Teachers see the stats on Canvas LMS HERE. Students see some of what Canvas has to offer: http://www.instructure.com/students

Sunday, February 12, 2012

High Tech High

What does WHS already do that mirrors this innovative 21st century learning community. What makes High Tech High so admired?


Standards Driven PBL: What the process looks like.

Monday, February 6, 2012

World Languages Opportunity via Twitter

Below is a message from Global Education Collaborative member Betsy Corcoran of EdSurge:

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Please join EdSurge this Wednesday, February 8th, for our inaugural #esinstruct Twitter chat on the best tools, tips, and techniques for language learning.

EdSurge is the fastest growing newsletter on the planet covering education-technology entrepreneurship. We've got our eye on the tools in development. We'd like to help educators find out what tools might work for them--and give educators a megaphone to share their thoughts and needs with developers.

For a start, we'd like to have a conversation about the most effective tools for teaching languages. We started down this path when one Oakland high school teacher we know asked for advice about what tools could help her Spanish-speaking students reach mastery level proficiency. Other teachers told us they, too, were searching for tools for teaching other languages. We're pulling together our research--but we think these teachers really want to benefit from your insights!

Please bring your thoughts and expertise to this conversation. All you need is a Twitter account. Then search for the hashtag "#esinstruct' between the times of 4:30-7:30pm PST. Tweet in: Let us know whether there are tools you use or tips you can share. We in turn are hoping to invite some teachers who have deep expertise and are willing to share with you.


We will follow up the chat by creating a newsletter that summarizes the highlights of the conversation and includes relevant edtech tools that we've found. If you'd like to get a copy, just drop us a note at feedback@edsurge.com and put edSurge-instruct in the subject line. There's absolutely no cost to signing up, no cost to taking part in the Twitter chat and no condo-like sales pitch on any product.

If you find this kind of chat useful, we would love to hear what other topics are worth exploring in the future. And if you're not familiar with EdSurge, please do take a minute to sign up for our newsletter at www.Edsurge.com.

Thanks & best wishes,
Leonard Medlock & Betsy Corcoran 

Recap: EdSurge's inaugural #esinstruct chat on language learning, Wednesday, February 8th, 4:30-7:30 PST

Friday, February 3, 2012

The Networked Student

Over this term you will be completing a Personal Learning Network (PLN). Being a networked student is vital for success in the 21st century. Please view the following video and read the basics of our assignment below. What are you looking forward to and what may be difficult? What will be your first topic of research?

   

Creating a PLN (Networked Learning Project)
Objective: develop and use networked learning to create a personal learning environment/network for 21st century research and design.

Preparation

  • Each learner selects his or her topic of study, (what you know, what you want to know), and establishes a research question.
  • Acceptable/Responsible Fair Use policy is discussed.

The project is positioned within the following perspective.

What if your teachers disappeared and you had to learn on your own? Would you give up on learning? Where would you begin? Why would learning be important? You are an empowered learner. You have the power to learn anything. How much you learn is up to you. How you manage your learning is up to you. How you manage your time is up to you. A big part of your success will depend on how well you are organized.

Introduction of Tools

Web applications are introduced one at a time to give participants the chance to master the tool within the context of the study topic. Digital literacy is integrated into these lessons as needed. The essential questions of digital literacy are presented.
  • Where can you go for good information?
  • How do you know if you can trust what you find?
  • How will you find subject matter experts you can trust to help you learn?
  • Why is reflection important when you are learning something new?
  • Why is it important to share what you’ve learned? How will you share?

Web Application (Components of the Networked Learning Environment for Research)

Social Bookmarking (RSS) "Delicious"and/or "Pinboard"

  • Explain Really Simple Syndication (RSS) and evaluation of Websites
  • Set up the account
  • Subscribe to each others accounts
  • Bookmark, read and annotate at least 5 reliable websites per week that reflect the content of chosen topic
  • Add, annotate and read at least 3 additional sites each week.

Note Taking (Information Management) "Evernote"

  • Create Evernote account
  • Begin content collection

News and Blog Alert (RSS)"Google Alert"

  • Create a Google Alert of keywords associated with selected topic
  • Read news and blogs on that topic that are delivered via email daily
  • Subscribe to appropriate blogs in reader

Personal Web Aggregator (RSS, Information Management) "Google Everything", "Symbaloo" and "Netvibes"

  • Introduction to Google, Netvibes and Symbaloo for Learning
  • Customize choice
  • Start by creating a Homepage
  • This will build as participants learn new tools

News and Blog Reader (RSS) Google Reader, Reeder RSS Feeds

  • Search for blogs and newsfeeds devoted to chosen topic
  • Subscribe to blogs and newsfeeds to keep track of updates.
  • Set up gadgets in Symbaloo

Personal Blog(RSS)/Mobile Blog "Blogger"

  • Create a personal blog
  • Post a personal reflection each day of the content found and experiences related to the use of Networked Learning Research Environment pertaining to project topics
  • Find bloggers with similar topics subscribe to blogs in reader

Internet Search (Information Management, Contacts, and Synchronous Communication)"Google Scholar"

  • Conduct searches in Google Scholar and Fogler library databases for scholarly works.
  • Bookmark appropriate sites
  • Consider making contact with expert for video conference"

Video (Research, Fun) "Vimeo"

  • Create and Account.
  • Create a Channel.

Photo Sharing "Flikr or Picassa"

  • Create and Account.
  • Upload Photos.
  • Share Photos.
  • Interest of Participants

Video Conferencing (Contacts and Synchronous Communication) "Skype"

  • Identify at least one subject matter expert to invite to Skype with you, group, family, community for your project.

Daily research, reflection, sharing (Ongoing during project)

Once the personal learning environment is constructed, the learner will continue to conduct research and navigate new content on a daily basis. Activities will be divided between introducing a tip or offering a research theme for the day, actual time spent conducting research will vary.
Synthesis- (Suggested at 1 to 2 weeks) "Google Site or Blog Page"
  • Craft a final synthesis of your work.

Other Networks

Covered with time remaining or interest.

Podcasts (RSS) "iTunesU" "Academic Earth"

  • Search iTunesU or Academic Earth for podcasts related to topic
  • Listen or view to at least 4-10 podcasts or lectures

Microblogging "Twitter"

  • Create and Account
  • Follow 10 Individuals or organizations you found during research.
  • Advanced use as interested
References|Attribution
  • Portions of this Project Design have been adapted from the work of Dr. Wendy Drexler with permission. 

Friday, January 27, 2012

Web 2.0 Foundations: A Course in Participatory Technology

"So the coin of the realm is not memorizing the facts and figures their going to need for the rest of their lives; the coin of the realm will be, do you know how to find, validate and leverage information; do you know how to analyze and synthesize that information; and can you problem solve, collaborate and communicate with it...." - Ken Kay [1]

Hello all,

Web 2.0 Foundations: A Course in Participatory Technology

An Opening Vignette:

Technology is a word we often confuse with computers, programs, and myriad gadgets only.  If you dig deeper I think you would agree that humans have utilized technology in very innovative ways since the Middle Paleolithic (or for those numbers folks out there c. 200,000 years ago+-).  Be it friction fire, basketmaking, agriculture, irrigation, warfare, in-door plumbing, radio's or iPads there has always been a human driving the social use of these tools.  Elders, leaders, wise people....yes teachers have always enabled and proliferated technology at the core of cultures.  We need to never loose site that the young people before us are entering a radically different world than the one we came from.  Though pockets of traditional life ways exist (and may proliferate in terms of localization of food and economies), the connections young people have to the world and what the world needs are fundamentally shifting the narrative of their futures. We need a learning design that helps young people prepare for a world without borders.   So how are we responding? In 2008, Pearson put together this short video to make a few suggestions:



"We have to develop a narrative that sustains 21st century learning."

The 21st century imperatives for learning deal with information.  Do we enable our students to find, validate, leverage, analyze, synthesize , problem solve and collaborate with information on a regular basis?  What does this look like? 


Web 2.0 Foundations is designed to be a participatory venture between our school, teachers, learners and the community that moves students into spaces of dynamic individualized learning with new technologies while also helping the whole faculty move toward creating spaces (mental, physical and online) that enable these 21st century learners.

Over the semester I will post my designs for Web 2.0 Foundations: setting up an Learning Management System and expectations for networked learning, designs for extensive networked research, mLearning (Mobile Learning), project based learning, 360 degree assessment and more.  You will also see and be asked to view and give feedback on  student research and online creation.  In the end, via a capstone project I will ask students to take an assignment (two....) from a teachers class and transform it using Web 2.0 Foundations.  This experience is meant to make learning at WHS ubiquitous for the participants of the course and our school community. I look forward to working with you all and look forward to your comments and support!  Before the course "officially" starts here are a few important organizational tips for following this process.

We will tag everything we create with the following:

web2.0found (Social Bookmarking, this blog (Called Labels), student blogs (Called Lables))
#web2.0found (Twitter Hashtag)
web2.0foundtools (for specific tech tools used in the experience)
web2.0foundreading (for specific readings and research findings we like)

More on how to follow this tag stream soon!

I look forward to participating with you all in network!

Coming soon:

Step one: can our students find a syllabus, schedule, updates, discussions and expectations in asynchronous spaces online?.....

Google In Education: A New and Open World for Learning

Please  view and download this document.  It is worth your time.

Thursday, December 15, 2011

ePortfolio with Google Apps Series: Introduction

Google Apps ePortfolio Step-by-Step Process

In this post you will find a basic introduction to the ePortfolio process using Google Docs.  The hard work WHS has done in designing Portfolio assessment will have an easy and effective framework to use through this process.  This first post is the conventional view of ePortfolio development.  How we choose as a community to add to this process is up to us.  I will be offering a series of these posts with each step picked apart for training purposes.  In each of those posts I will give live examples from our ePortfolio Template for 2011-2012.

We all acknowledge that there are serious competing interests for our time this year.  That said, this is attainable! The hard work is done.... as a community you have aknowledged that Portfolio assessment is an integral part of learning at WHS.  Framing portfolios as ePortfolios takes accepting that 21st century skills are a cornerstone to our mission at WHS and some effort.  We are an amazing and versatile faculty and administration that has talents in technology that far surpass so many in Maine. Using this community, asking questions and supporting the young people we teach and learn with is second nature here.  I will work hard to support the progression to uniform digital ePortfolios with my all and am looking forward to it! 

Glossary: Primary Responsibility for ePortfolio Component 

All School (AS)

Teacher (T)

Student (S)

Advisor (A)

Steps for using GoogleApps throughout the Portfolio Development Process

  1. (AS) Purpose. Decide on the purpose for the portfolio. What are you trying to show with this portfolio? Are there outcomes, goals, or standards that are being demonstrated with this portfolio? In this example, steps 2-4 represent an interative process, using a blog to provide formative feedback on student work on a regular basis.
    • Teachers, Admin and (eventually) Students: Set up templates for student work in GoogleDocs organized around outcomes, goals and standards?
    • Students: Customize a Google Sites page that will serve as the opening page/Introduction to the portfolio and to the portfolio developer (see Section 6 below). This page will include a section entitled, "All About Me."
    •  Students create a Google Sites Announcements page type, to use as a reflective journal (blog). Call the page "Journal" or "Blog." Create a first post that describes the purpose for developing this portfolio.
      OR: Students create a blog in Blogger (included under the GoogleApps domain)

  2. (S) Collection/Classification. What artifacts will you include in your portfolio? How will you classify these entries?
    • Students: Create a digital archive of work Using GoogleDocs. Offline, this archive would be on a hard drive, flash drive, iPod or local area network server.
    • Students: (Optional) Use a simple table or GoogleDocs Spreadsheet to list the artifacts, and assign (classify) each one to the outcome/goal/standard that the artifact will demonstrate. Use the table to keep track of artifacts that might be stored on one of the many Web 2.0 sites that you could use to store your work. See Dr. Barrett’s portfolio for an example (Artifacts in GoogleDocs Spreadsheet).

      Students will
      : convert all attached artifacts into web-compatible formats (JPEG or PDF) so that the potential reader will not need to own the original software in order to read it (i.e., Microsoft Office, Publisher, Inspiration documents could easily be converted into PDF and attached to a blog entry, or link to GoogleDocs).
      Web 2.0 storage:
      Video files can be saved on one of the video sharing sites, and use the Hyperlink or Embed code to include in your blog entry. Word, Excel and PowerPoint files could be uploaded into GoogleDocs. Other free websites that allow you to store documents: SlideShare, Scribd. Most of these Web 2.0 sites use an email address as the log-in name, so it will be easy to remember.

  3. (S, T, A)Reflection. Reflection is the heart and soul of a portfolio. Reflection provides the rationale for why these artifacts represent achievement of a particular outcome, goal or standard. Blog entries provide an opportunity for reflection "in the present tense" or "reflection in action."
    • Teachers: Provide students with resources to support their reflection activities. For each learning activity or artifact, what should be the focus of the students' reflections? (See Dr. Barrett's Google Site on Reflection for Learning)
    • Students: Write a blog entry (using Journal set up using GoogleSites Announcements page type, or in Blogger--Step #1 above) with a reflection on each learning activity or artifact (what is the context in which this artifact was developed? What did you learn?).
    • Students: Add your own classification using Tags
    • Students: Add appropriate artifacts (through hyperlinks) or as an attachment to the journal entry.

      Privacy Features: Students can limit who can read the Google Site through the More Actions ->Share this Site menu item.

  4. (AS) Connection/Interaction/Dialogue/Feedback. This stage provides an opportunity for interaction and feedback on the work posted in the portfolio. This is where the power of Web 2.0 interactive tools becomes apparent.
    • Teachers and Peers:  Use the feedback features of Google Sites or GoogleDocs, such as comments, to provide feedback on the work posted in the ePortfolio/blog entries. Guidelines should be provided to support more effective feedback.
    • Teachers often provide exemplars for different levels of achievement, and provide a rubric for evaluation.
    • Students should be given the option of updating the work, based on the feedback and the rubric.

      REPEAT steps 3-4 for each learning activity or artifact.

  5. Summative Reflection/Selection/Evaluation. At the end of a course (or program), students would write a reflection that looks back over the course (or program) and provides a meta-analysis of the learning experience as represented in the reflections stored in the blog/journal entries.
    • Students: Review the blog/journal entries for that category, and write a last "retrospective reflection" about the learning represented in the artifacts, selecting one or two examples that best represent achievement. This self-assessment should be the first part of a page set up in Google Sites.
    • Students:  Prepare a GoogleSites Page for each Outcome, Goal or Standard, and link to the selected "best" blog entries, writing a reflection on each page (by outcome/goal/standard) which should also have the artifact attached or linked.
    • Teacher/Advisor: Provide feedback and/or evaluation of the selection of work and rationale, using a WHS rubric.

  6. Presentation/Publishing. The portfolio developer decides what parts of the portfolio are to be made public.
    • Student: Create a set of pages that highlight the best components of the portfolio, linking to specific entries in the blog. Add the evidence (through hyperlinks to blog entries or artifacts) to the appropriate sub-pages in the portfolio.
    • Students: Customize your Introduction page, which should contain an overview of the portfolio. It serves as a “letter to the reader” and provides an explanation of the overall goals of the portfolio. Provide links to other pages developed in the portfolio. Advertise this Introduction page as the initial access point in your portfolio.
    • Students: Create a page with Future Learning Goals (reflection in the future tense).
    • Teacher: When used for summative assessment, submit final evaluation of portfolio (assessed using a quantitative analytic rubric or a holistic rubric).

    Adapted under Free and Cultural Works with attribution to: Dr. Helen Barrett

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

ePortfolio Series




One of the things that makes WHS amazing is the work done already to integrate Portfolio assessment into the school culture and curriculum.  The work towards shifting portfolio assessment to ePortfolio assessment is not that difficult once the hard part of integration is understood.  In the next series of posts I will outline the ePortfolio process using our Google Apps instance.


Most of our work ahead in ePortfolio development is based on the deep research of Helen Barrett.  Dr. Barrett's work on  ePortfolios span two decades and she has become the preeminent voice in using Google Apps for ePortfolio development.  Many of the frameworks used before my time and those that I have built since are rooted in Dr. Barrett's thought. I will credit her many times over our time of integration.

In the next series of posts, I will start to outline the Google Apps ePortfolio Framework we hope to employ here.  Some of the posts will be big picture and some proscriptive and I hope all will be useful As always, please ask questions via comment here, in email or stop by 107 any afternoon for a f2f discussion.  




Monday, December 5, 2011

Musical Theater at WHS!

An amazing final product was released today in Molly Winchenbach's  Music Theater class! Molly and the students in her course worked hard over the last week as editors, critics, and technologists to realize this final product.




Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Welcome WHS 2011-2012

Hello all,

I continue to be inspired by WHS.  We are doing amazing work here and I look forward to whats ahead.   This blog uses Blogger which is available to everyone at WHS through our Google Apps account.  I will be giving tech updates here from this point forward so please do subscribe to the blog (via email see right hand column over the videos) to receive updates and announcements from the world of integration at WHS.  You can also add this blog to your Google Readers via RSS.  My goal is to post here about school wide technology and innovation topics (like ePortfolio's!), troubleshooting topics that stem from your questions and our work together, student project work, the Web 2.0 course and so much more. I hope this makes communication easier for everyone.

Updates and general housekeeping to date:


General (Label: general)

All systems are up and running as of Wednesday 5 October 2010.  Powerschool speeds and First Class additions are being addressed.

Website (Label: website)

Our website will be getting some major help soon! Prior to anything epic (and epic is needed:)), I will continue to find and change links to make things easier in the near term.  If you have a need for our current website feel free to email me.

I have also revamped some important sites that link from our homepage. The Parent laptop site (Now Parent and Student), along with the WHS Tech Resources websites have been updated, added to and changed to a more current and salient state for our activities and action this year. The pages within this Blog now contain this information on ePortfolios, PowerSchool, Google Apps, a Resource Library of software and online tools along with some video detailing media literacy and 21st century skills.  Please do visit each of these pages as they contain many new additions and I would like to hear your feedback on the media and resources now there.  Feel free to leave a comment or email!

Google Apps (Label: googleapps)

As I have mentioned I am an unabashed Google Apps adherent and will be encouraging you all to take greater advantage of this amazing resource we have. Please do take a look at the new tutorials I have embedded on the Tech Resources website and contact to me with Google questions of any kind.  As admin for our Google Apps instance I also encourage you to let me know if you need anything regarding your account.  I will give periodic Google Tools in Education tips and tricks, stay posted and please use Google Apps often.  The more you use them the easier they become.


ePortfolios (Label: eportfolio)

I am currently working on ePortfolio frameworks and look forward to your feedback soon.

My Schedule (Label: tcsmschedule)

I will be at WHS in the Tech Integrator capacity weekly this year.   I am working out both help desk request protocols (scheduling to see me for the routine and integration).  I am also excited about the possibility of working with the students in advisories on topics of integration, saftey and innovation.   More on this soon.


Morning seminars and "un-seminars" (Label: techseminars)

Next week: See the Integration Information Page