Thursday, December 19, 2013

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Annotated Bibliography: Repost link

Annotated Bibliography-BMS & Parent/Teach Communication

Just wanted to repost this link in case my previous link doesn't work. Thanks!

Flipped Learning Assignment: SAMR Model

I created this video to introduce the SAMR model to my teachers. I am hoping that this video will inspire them to integrate technology into their teaching. I couldn't get my presentation to load to youtube or Facebook so I'm trying the iCloud link. I've never worked with iCloud before...I hope it works!

Here's the link: https://www.icloud.com/iw/#keynote/BAL340XTmBBS0CyUtWOBEvgfksHmv8L8hpeE/SAMR_Model

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Blog #8: Assessment Practices and the Common Core

Links:

Article:
Heritage, M. (2010). Formative assessment and Next-Generation assessment systems: Are we losing an opportunity? Education Week. Retrieved from http://www.edweek.org/media/formative_assessment_next_generation_heritage.pdf

Sample Assessment Problems:


Early in the first quarter, my math teacher mentioned to me that she was writing standards-based tests according to the Common Core States Standards. We have a rigorous math program that privileges comprehension over rote practice and as such integrates well with CCSS math standards. I thought about the math teacher's assessments for a few days to figure out what was bothering me about her plan. I came to the conclusion that I was uneasy because it felt too much like the old way of doing things. As the math teacher and I discussed things, we agreed that the only way the potential of CCSS could be realized would be to completely change the way we assess. So, we knew that we wanted to avoid teaching to the tests, but we were not sure what to replace that type of teaching and testing with.

This week's links to articles and activities answered, or began to answer, many of the questions that my math teacher and I were left with. The article by Heritage (2010) made me say, "Yes!" It expressed my concerns so much better than I was able to, and it provided a solution to the problem: formative assessments.

Apparently, formative assessment is an educational term that has been around for a while now. However, it has come to mean something different in the United States compared to other countries. Here, it is discussed as a measurement tool whereas in other places it is defined as an active process. The difference between seeing formative assessment as a measurement device rather than a process has greatly affected teaching and learning to the detriment of U.S. students. In places where formative assessment has been integrated into daily teaching and learning, positive outcomes have increased dramatically.

We have just adopted Common Core in the Territory. It would be a shame to undermine our potential for success by neglecting to give teachers the tools they need to transform their classrooms into the learning communities that the CCSS are set up to help us achieve. Training in effective formative assessments could be invaluable.

The other links took us to sample problems from Next-Generation assessments. These would be summative assessments. Summative assessments, though not a valuable teaching tool, can be valuable measurement tools. The new assessments make use of current technology. This has the potential of making the assessments adaptive and it allows students to demonstrate understanding rather than just measuring performance as the old assessments did. 

After reading the article and visiting the sample assessment sites, my head is spinning. How do I train my teachers to incorporate effective formative assessment in their teaching? What do effective formative assessments look like? If teachers use formative assessments in the classroom, how does that get reported? There is so much to think about. But, I am happy to have found that others are concerned that we not undermined CCSS by reverting to our old teaching and assessments.

One of my instructors at ASCC shared a quote with me that I have often reflected on (I'll paraphrase): The person you learn the most from is not someone who teaches you something new, but someone who takes a problem that you've been quietly struggling with and expresses it in such a way that you gain new understanding. I totally did not do that justice, but I hope you get the gist of it because that is how I felt reading Heritages article.

Sunday, December 15, 2013

Assigment #10: Create a Website

Link: Ta'iala Teacher Resources

I'm really excited about the website that I have started. The site is a wiki-type collaborative site where my teachers can save and share the resources that they find online. EDCS 480 has opened my eyes to how useful the internet can be in our daily practice. Before this class, I considered the internet to be a useful research tool and a great way to keep in touch with people. How I wish that I had been better informed about the tools available!

As useful as the internet is, however, we all know that being online is like deep space travel: you think you've only been asleep for a few minutes but really, hundreds of years have passed you by. My hope is that the Ta'iala Teacher Resources site will save my teachers valuable time. Instead of spending hours on the internet trying to find something, they can turn to TTR and hopefully find that one of their colleagues has posted what they need.

I realize that it will take a while before the site will have enough on it to make it as valuable as I imagine it becoming, but I can already see it shaping up nicely. I will have my secretaries complete the directory and upload school forms and documents. Just having those things in a central location that the teachers can access at anytime will make a significant difference in our productivity.

I am also hoping that as the teachers add things and use things from the site, it will inspire them to use technology more often.

Go-o-o-o-o Titans!

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Annotated Bibliography-BMS & Parent/Teach Communication

Link: Annotated Bibliography-BMS & Parent/Teach Communication

I had a difficult time finding articles that address the use of technology in classroom management. Most of the articles I found were about how to manage the use of technology  in the classroom or how the use of technology (as a teaching/learning tool) affects classroom behavior. This activity helped me realize that we tend to get stuck talking/writing/thinking about things in a certain ways.

Action Research Project Presentation--Fourth and Final?

Melinda explained that the links I gave you previously wouldn't work because they were linked to my computer files and I still had to upload them to the internet. She also suggested that I try uploading to Google Docs. I followed her advice (I didn't even know that Google Docs could handle video clips) and here is the link:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BwFEGyycZPDrYm9MTEVxMWJKUzg/edit?usp=sharing

Thank you, Melinda, you're the best!

Action Research Project III: The Correct Link?

I'm sorry I wasn't online last night when y'all were trying to access my video. I just couldn't keep my eyes open any longer and ended up snoring away on the recliner in my TV room with my laptop perched precariously on my lap.

Here is a link to my video. I hope it works this time! I'm not embedding the link because I think that might have been the problem last night. Please copy and paste this into your browser:

file:///Users/teripeters/Movies/2013-12-09_1556.swf

Thank you! I'll be viewing and commenting on your videos today. I can't wait to see what everyone's been working on this semester.


Monday, December 9, 2013

Action Research Project Presentation II

UPDATE:

So, as soon as I posted my last entry, I double-checked the link to the video...and it didn't work! I almost cried. But, I took a deep breath and tried to find the problem. The problem is that when you click the link, the first "/" gets left out of the address. I tried to fix the link, but blogger keeps excluding the "/".

The Fix:

Please copy and paste this into the address bar: /Users/teripeters/Movies/2013-12-09_1556.swf

Action Research Project Presentation

Today, technology hates me.

I had a lot of fun creating my presentation. I drew all my "slides" and decided to photograph them and then use iMovie to capture the images and narrate them. I decided to use my iPad to take the photos because I don't own a camera and it was too awkward to use the laptop camera. And, I figured it would be easy to transfer the movie from the iPad to the MacBook since they're both Apple products. WRONG! It has taken me 11-1/2 hours to figure out how to post this video. I won't bore you with the details. I'll just say that today, the cost far outweighed the benefits.

Here's the link:

/Users/teripeters/Movies/2013-12-09_1556.swf

And, here are the works cited:

Englehart, J. M. (2012). Five half-truths about classroom management. The Clearing House: A Journal of Educational Strategies, Issues and Ideas, 85(2), 70-73. doi:10.1080/00098655.2011.616919

Epstein, J. L. (2010). School/family/community partnerships: Caring for the children we share. Phi Delta Kappan, 92(3), 81-96. Retrieved from http://www.kappanmagazine.org/content/92/3/81.abstract