Stephanie has set forth a challenge: whoever keeps our school web page updated most regularly will be treated to a burrito by the other. This was Stephanie's prize suggestion. She had no idea that my life is measured in time spent between burritos. I am winning.
In other news, I haven't been using much beyond a photocopier and the overhead in my class the past several days. When we get back from vacation, though, I'll likely be using the digital projector a lot. My next unit is heavy on images and video.In the meantime, things are running fairly smoothly.
Thursday, March 20, 2008
Thursday, March 13, 2008
Video Goals
Aspects of my teaching that I would like to capture on my video for PACT:
- Attention to participation issues. Which students are participating? Which students are participating negatively? Which students are disengaged? How am I encouraging participation? Is it enforced, or is the lesson engaging? How is participation structured (hand raising, shout outs, etc). How do I switch between different types of participation?
- What kind of questions am I asking? Am I switching between asking for facts, interpretations, etc? How am I receiving answers?
- How clear is my instruction? Are students able to work independently or in groups afterward? How often do I repeat instructions?
- Where am I in the class? How am I resolving behavioral and logistical concerns? What behavior am I rewarding, and how?
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Online Community Reflection
Our assignment was to join an online community, so I'm going to talk about Facebook. I will admit that I was already a member of Facebook prior to this assignment; I've been desperately trying to keep my life simple and have thus ceased outward expansion. My horizons are wide enough (yes, I'm also gaining weight).
A friend just emailed me, saying: "The whole world is telling me to get back on Facebook. Should I resist?"
I replied to her: "You should get back on. Facebook has stopped being an 'internet community' and started becoming 'the internet.' It's like Wal-Mart." What I mean, of course, is that Facebook has expanded so much -- from its humble origins of trying to connect college students to students they might not know from classes they shared -- that it has started to duplicate the aims of several other sites. Music, games, classified ads, whatever the hell.
I continued: "It's also like internet dating (which you could probably also do on Facebook): the stigma's gone. Ha ha ha." (Please forgive me, this was hastily written and sent.)
Now, let's step back from my judgmental attitude and examine the not-so-hidden truth I not-so-revealed. Online communities like this are stigmatized. I always defend my participation in them with some less geeky sounding aim ("It's how I hear new music!").
It's late. I've not taken a break today. I won't bother trying to write a conclusion. GO A's!
A friend just emailed me, saying: "The whole world is telling me to get back on Facebook. Should I resist?"
I replied to her: "You should get back on. Facebook has stopped being an 'internet community' and started becoming 'the internet.' It's like Wal-Mart." What I mean, of course, is that Facebook has expanded so much -- from its humble origins of trying to connect college students to students they might not know from classes they shared -- that it has started to duplicate the aims of several other sites. Music, games, classified ads, whatever the hell.
I continued: "It's also like internet dating (which you could probably also do on Facebook): the stigma's gone. Ha ha ha." (Please forgive me, this was hastily written and sent.)
Now, let's step back from my judgmental attitude and examine the not-so-hidden truth I not-so-revealed. Online communities like this are stigmatized. I always defend my participation in them with some less geeky sounding aim ("It's how I hear new music!").
It's late. I've not taken a break today. I won't bother trying to write a conclusion. GO A's!
Thursday, March 6, 2008
My Big Fat Tech Disaster
There I was, the class at full attention, my instruction surprisingly clearer than usual. I was on a roll, students knew exactly what I was saying, no one was acting out. Time to transition: let's look at persuasive strategies in commercials. We were looking at streaming video online. Everything was thought out beforehand: each different website on different tabs, tested to see if they would work on the district server, run once to get them loaded on the computer.
BUT they didn't run during class. Of course they didn't. Think Haaaahder, doofus. And plan contingencies. We got nothing done in the second half of class.
BUT they didn't run during class. Of course they didn't. Think Haaaahder, doofus. And plan contingencies. We got nothing done in the second half of class.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)