8.08.2009
Chat/IM widget for a class blog
I've added a widget to my class blog for Google Chat. This is an instant messaging service, and you can chat with me without being registered with Google. I was hoping to make myself available for an hour in the evening, once or twice a week. I am a little wary offering this online option for students, but I think I can set some hours, guidelines, and boundaries for students and maybe encourage some online interaction. I have thought about the comments of another student in my professional development class and his concerns about the separation of a teacher's "school and 'private' life." This would be an important issue to reflect upon and address with students *before* using a chat or IM application.
8.04.2009
Student Interest Survey
I thought it would be fun for the kids on the first day to do a Student Interest Survey on a fake Myspace template. I will use the same questions from last year, but I will just put them on a handout that looks like a Myspace page. (I just did a screen capture and used paint to erase and add some questions) I have found that many students are not interested in this activity due to their age and the fact they do it in each class. I thought it would be a good way to address cyber-citizenship from the beginning of class, as well. Click on the image to get a better look.
8.03.2009
Week 3 Reflection: Blogging Philosophy Statement
This week's professional development activity is to develop a "blogging philosophy statement." When I began the Web 2.0 class last summer, we were asked to begin a blog for personal reflections. I avoided starting a professional and personal reflection blog by instead creating a class blog for my ESL math intervention classes. So now I find myself reading other educators' blogs and considering my audience, purpose, and goals for both this blog and my new class blog.
Some of the top educator blogs given as recommended reading this week were familiar to me: some were blogs I already visit and some were from people I have started to follow on Twitter. I enjoy reading Twitter posts from @coolcatteacher and @tombarrett, and I got to investigate their ideas more in-depth on their respective blogs. Most of their Twitter posts are links to useful Web 2.0 applications for like-minded educators. With a blog post, though, they can still link to useful sites with social bookmarking tools, or reflect on a workshop, or consider the pros and cons of a web app, or question the meaning of life. The things that are hard to do in 140 characters or less. The audience for the blogs are mainly educators, but not at all limited to classroom teachers. As I read posts by educators, I could find comments by other classroom teachers, administrators, software engineers, students, and more. Which brings me to my point...
My blogging philosophy statement.
Why blog? I blog to communicate. On my professional blog, I try to share some ideas for other teachers to take and use for themselves. On my class blog, I update the content and language objectives (TEKS and ELPS) daily, along with recap/preview of class activities, links, and assignments. Students and parents can view summaries of the days activities, see homework assignments, connect to the home access point for grades, and find reteach/tutoring links for problem areas. Students and parents are the primary audience, but the blog also serves to communicate to administrators and fellow teachers, "This is what we are doing." (Disclaimer: I have to provide our school with a website anyway ;) In many ways, a wiki would be a much better way to communicate and collaborate with teachers, especially teachers at my own school. This would require some cooperation, though, and the blog does not.
I blog to reflect. A reflective teacher is an effective teacher. And as @loonyhiker describes in her fantastic post, Contributing to the Conversation, the more you blog and interact online, the conversations, questions, and answers help you formulate your philosophies, reflect on teaching practices, and feel "comfortable in your own skin." I need a structure and an impetus to my reflection, or I may avoid it altogether. You might even say I blog to remember. I like the idea of reflecting on one entire year of teaching, and my first as a "regular" classroom teacher. I feel I have not been a very reflective teacher in my first two years, and hope to reflect and adjust teaching practices as the year (and years) goes by from here on out.
Some of the top educator blogs given as recommended reading this week were familiar to me: some were blogs I already visit and some were from people I have started to follow on Twitter. I enjoy reading Twitter posts from @coolcatteacher and @tombarrett, and I got to investigate their ideas more in-depth on their respective blogs. Most of their Twitter posts are links to useful Web 2.0 applications for like-minded educators. With a blog post, though, they can still link to useful sites with social bookmarking tools, or reflect on a workshop, or consider the pros and cons of a web app, or question the meaning of life. The things that are hard to do in 140 characters or less. The audience for the blogs are mainly educators, but not at all limited to classroom teachers. As I read posts by educators, I could find comments by other classroom teachers, administrators, software engineers, students, and more. Which brings me to my point...
My blogging philosophy statement.
Why blog? I blog to communicate. On my professional blog, I try to share some ideas for other teachers to take and use for themselves. On my class blog, I update the content and language objectives (TEKS and ELPS) daily, along with recap/preview of class activities, links, and assignments. Students and parents can view summaries of the days activities, see homework assignments, connect to the home access point for grades, and find reteach/tutoring links for problem areas. Students and parents are the primary audience, but the blog also serves to communicate to administrators and fellow teachers, "This is what we are doing." (Disclaimer: I have to provide our school with a website anyway ;) In many ways, a wiki would be a much better way to communicate and collaborate with teachers, especially teachers at my own school. This would require some cooperation, though, and the blog does not.
I blog to reflect. A reflective teacher is an effective teacher. And as @loonyhiker describes in her fantastic post, Contributing to the Conversation, the more you blog and interact online, the conversations, questions, and answers help you formulate your philosophies, reflect on teaching practices, and feel "comfortable in your own skin." I need a structure and an impetus to my reflection, or I may avoid it altogether. You might even say I blog to remember. I like the idea of reflecting on one entire year of teaching, and my first as a "regular" classroom teacher. I feel I have not been a very reflective teacher in my first two years, and hope to reflect and adjust teaching practices as the year (and years) goes by from here on out.
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Math 2.0 is a collection of links, teaching ideas, and musings from me, Will Waghorne. I teach 7th grade math in Round Rock, TX.
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