Jun 04 2009

Adding an End of Course Survey

North Carolina Virtual Schools has an end of course survey that collects data about student performance, student perceptions of teacher performance, and ways to improve how NCVPS reaches the needs of learners across the state.  I checked it out.  It’s a nice survey. 

Because of the perspective of the survey though, it’s difficult to ask questions that are course specific and teacher specific.  There is valuable data to be gathered about our courses and about ourselves on an individual basis, and we have plenty of reasons to want that valuable data!  In English IV, we have consistent grammar, vocabulary, and writing assignments every unit.  Do you have some types of consistent assignments?  As part of the revision team, student perception on which types of assignments are working and which types of assignments aren’t effective would be incredibly valuable!

What’s more, students are very honest in these surveys.  They’ll let you know where you are lacking and where you excel.  If you can take feedback, and I encourage you to grow thick skin and seek feedback whenever you can, then you’ll love this method as a way to way to get valuable feedback.  The video below goes over my survey on the second day I rolled it out via a url in announcements.  At this time, there are only 12 responses, but I’m hoping more and more students complete the survey!

Shu

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May 29 2009

Knowledge Nugget I -File Extensions

   

file extensions connect files to the right programs by telling the computer which program to use to open your files!

file extensions connect files to the right programs by telling the computer which program to use to open your files!

When you hear things in trainings like ‘.swf’ or ‘.jpg,’ those are file extensions. Some have even become part of our regular vocabulary without many even knowing that they’re talking about a file extension! An .mp3, for example, is a type of file, even though now the word is becoming synonymous with ’song.’
    What is it, and what does it do?  This is important.  A file extension tells your computer what file type it’s dealing with so it knows what program it should use to open a file.  For example, can you imagine opening an .mp3 in Microsoft Word?  It just wouldn’t work.
    If you open a file in microsoft word, you’re opening a .doc file. It gets confusing when a program opens and uses a bunch of different file extensions.
    For example, why do we need .mov, .avi, .flv, etc… they’re all video types, right?  Why do we need .wav and .mp3?  They’re all audio, right?  Yes, but the difference is size in those examples.  A song in .wav is a different than the same song saved as a .mp3.  Imagine a piece of data is the size of a marble.  A file is made up of a bunch of data.  If you filled an entire classroom full of marbles and called it a song file, that would be size of a song as a .wav.  If you put a few marbles in a mason jar, you’d have the size of the song as an .mp3.  Now you’re seeing the advantage of using different file types, right?  File extensions indicate the file type -that’s important.
    How many file types are there?  Hundreds, so don’t bother trying to learn them all.  The good news is that there are way fewer that you’ll actually have to worry about, and most, you’ll find, you already know!  In the comments below, I’m going to start a list of common file types. I’m hoping folks will help out by listing file types they run into in virtual education with ’the skinny’ on each file type.  If we get a big enough list, I’ll compile it to a table and share it!

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May 28 2009

CoboCards -Collaborative, Virtual Flashcards

As an English teacher, I often have basic memory tasks for students to perform. They need to know the definitions of vocabulary words, and they also need to know titles, authors, eras, and origins of classic literature. It’s tough to just ask students to memorize a list, and here I have a new toy/tool for you!
Online studying via flash cards is no new thing. If you really wanted to, it would be possible to just create a series of questions and answers on powerpoint and send it to your students as a study tool. But what CoboCards.com allows students to do is create flash cards collaboratively and then actually study collaboratively.
There is a tool that allows teachers to see how many students have contributed to the flash cards library, and there is a feedback tool that tells students exactly how they’re doing on important concepts… especially valuable for those EOC classes!
Check out the tutorial below to see some of the basic functions of this impressive online flashcard site, and keep in mind that there are more in-depth tutorials on the site!

What do you think?
-Shu

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Jan 15 2008

The Ghetto Smartboard

Three years ago, I worked in Caldwell County. Caldwell is a small district, and I was surprised to find my classroom outfitted with a digital projector and a brand new laptop. It was my first experience with what I’d call toys in education, and I couldn’t wait to figure out some new, cool ways to use them. My goal is to not only ensure student learning, but to also capture their genuine interest and enthusiasm.

Other teachers drooled over these new technological tools with DVD’s in hand, looking forward to widescreen showings of documentaries, films, and shorts. Eh, not a lot of imagination, but it’d work. I wanted to go a step farther though. There was a young guy down the hall who brought his Playstation II on teacher workdays. Innovative and a lot of fun -but it wasn’t getting any student learning done. We played some pretty mean WWII flight simulations though.
As is often the case, my laziness sparked genius. Necessity is the mother of invention, and I figured out quickly that I didn’t need to lower that darn screen over my white dry erase board every time I used the projector. One time, with the screen still up and the projector shining on the slick surface of the board, I couldn’t find my laser pointer when I needed to point out an error in grammar. So, I grabbed a marker and stepped into the world of interactive projector editing. I wrote right on the board on top of the projected paragraph. It was genius. Within five or ten minutes, there were two teams of students, one with a blue marker, and another with a red marker. Each team took turns sending delegates to the board to edit a mistake-riddled paragraph written quickly in Word on the laptop. Kids were interested, they were interacting, and they were learning.

I looked into my collection of educational software to see what else I could find to use on this, what I now call, the ghetto smartboard, and I quickly discovered that the discs that come with Glencoe textbooks have almost every worksheet and book exercise in pdf format. Suddenly, these worksheets had new life and purpose. I had scoffed at worksheets in the past, disdaining worksheet-filled classes as inept busy-work centers. But now the worksheets became interactive games where students eagerly wrote answers on the board, stumbling into learning opportunity after learning opportunity.

A year and a half later, I saw a smartboard for the first time. It looked like a good idea, but I didn’t really think there was much it could do that I couldn’t do with my laptop and projector. The ghetto smartboard is more fun, because students can write directly on it. For some reason, students love writing on the board with those dry erase markers. Using the ghetto smartboard is cheap, which is great for principals who want their teachers to be innovative but don’t have the cash for more expensive smartboards. And, most importantly, it aids in student learning.

Hope that helps put something new in your toolbox,

-Shu