1.
Response to Mr. Dancealot
♦Mr. Dancealot teaches via PowerPoint for a physical dancing class
-Students appear confused
♦Mr. Dancealot give the students a practical exam in a course he has only taught through lecture.
-Students do not perform correctly
The central message of Mr. Dancelot seems to be that as a
teacher, it is your responsibility to coordinate your teaching style to the
subject being taught. One cannot teach a dance class in the same manner as an
arithmetic course and vise-versa. The author makes this case in numerous ways.
First of all, the author shows the viewer the confusion the students are
experiencing as the teacher begins the course with a power point based
syllabus. Secondly, the teacher failed to properly demonstrate the dance moves,
leaving the students with only the power-point to learn from. Last of all, the
teacher taught in lecture format the entire course and then provided the
students with a physical final exam. The students were unable to perform as the
teacher expected due to a lack of hands-on demonstration. I completely agree with the author’s
conclusion, as I have been in the student’s situation myself. I know that I
have a hard time learning without hands-on instruction, and I can see where
those students would have difficulty as well.
2.
Response to Teaching in the 21st Century by Kevin Roberts
Outline:
I.
Teaching facts only has become obsolete.
a.
Students can find information virtually
anywhere.
i.
Google
ii.
Youtube
iii.
Facebook
iv.
Blogs
v.
Ipods
vi.
Cell Phones
vii.
Wikipedia
viii.
Twitter
II.
Shouldn’t teachers be more focused on teaching
skills?
a.
Validating
b.
Synthesizing
c.
Leveraging
d.
Communicating
e.
Problem Solving
III.
Teaching how to use technology by using
technology has become almost a necessity.
a.
Teachers often think that teaching with
technology is the source of negative behavior.
i.
It is not.
1.
The lesson must be relevant, challenging, and
engaging.
a.
Engaging and entertaining are not the same
thing.
i.
Entertaining is passive, for enjoyment, and
provides short-term results.
ii.
Engagement is active, for learning, and provides
long-term results.
I firmly believe in Robert’s point regarding modern
teaching. The role of a teacher, and the method of teaching, as completely
altered of the course of many years. Teachers no longer teach just the facts,
as many students have access to the internet for all unknown answers. I feel
that everyone in today’s society needs to have some form of technology
literacy, and we as teachers, should start with that in the classroom. Teachers—that
have not already done so—should incorporate technology in any way possible. Not
only does it build on the students level of technology understanding, but also
provides a whole new level of engagement for the student. Students today are
constantly engulfed in many aspects of technology. Due to this, teachers should
adhere to the interest of the student to better engage them. I plan on
incorporating as much technology as I can into my lessons as a teacher,
especially in the elementary setting.
3.
Response to The Networked Student by Wendy Drexler.
♦Connectivism:
-Learning is based off of networking with a variety of sources through technology.
-Learning is based off of networking with a variety of sources through technology.
♦An
American Psyche student uses a series of networking tools to research for a
project.
-Blogging
-Commenting
-Podcasts
-ITunesU
-RSS
Reader
-Video
Sharing
-Voice
Threads
♦Information
management will be a challenge for the 21st century.
♦Why
does the student need a teacher?
-To
teach the student how to utilize his sources and information.
-How
to organize information gathered.
The Networked Student by Wendy Drexler is a video clip that
portrays how the modern day student in a textbook-free class can perform
research. In addition to the student’s method of researching, the video also
shows how a teacher, even when not teaching facts, is a necessity. The
Networked Student shows the path of a student who begins his research with a
search for a peer review, and summarizes it with classes via iTunesU. Upon
watching this video, I was honestly stunned. I have blogged before, and I have
also read peer reviews; however, I never would have thought to share my peer
review findings and use those shared by others. I did not know that networking
could be so useful. In the video, the
author asks, “Why does the student need a teacher?” The response of which the
author provided was that the student needs a teacher to not only educate the
student on utilizing his sources and findings, but organizing them as well.
This is very true! While anyone can Google information, not everyone knows how
to store the findings for later reference. This is an important tool that,
thankfully, I was taught by my teachers.
4.
Harness Your Students’ Digital Smarts by Vicki Davis
♦Westbrook
High School Class on technology
-Students
wrote blogs and created avatars for a digital program
-Connected
them to people across the world
-Connected
a rural town in Georgia to places like Qatar
♦Davis
believes students should be thinkers.
-Research
words they are unaware of
♦Students
enjoy using the technology
Harness Your Student’s Digital Smarts by Vicki Davis is a
movie that shows how technology in the classroom has become an effective method
of teaching. Davis, a teacher at Westbrook High School, incorporates blogging
and digital design into her daily lesson in order to connect her students to
the world. Davis believes that networking through technology is an important
aspect of society today, and it starts with students. Throughout her video,
Davis mentions that she expects her students to be thinkers,, and she expects them
to use technology for tasks such as searching a word for its definition. I
agree with Davis’ method of teaching, especially after hearing the responses
from her students. I enjoyed seeing students engaged in their work with honest
interest as opposed to doing the work simply to earn a grade.
5.
Response to: Who’s Ahead in the Learning Race by Dr, John H. Strange
♦Students in first grade classroom participate in technologically advanced activities that both undergraduate and graduate students have difficulty performing.
-Effectively using Google Drive
♦ Students in a Kindergarten classroom use technology to a degree, with undergraduate and graduate students performing at the same level.
-Voice recording and playback
♦Students in a third grade classroom successfully use Macbook Air's to create movies and perform tasks; whereas graduate and undergraduate students have a difficult time operating the devices.
♦Dr. Strange questions "Who is ahead in the learning race?"
-First grade and hird grade classes can successfully utilize more technology than students of undergraduate and graduate status can.
Who's ahead in the Learning Race, a movie by Dr. John H.
Strange, addresses the technological evolvement of elementary classrooms. I
believe that elementary students are miles and counting ahead of undergraduate
and graduate students in the field of technology. I believe this because while
we (undergraduate students) have the ability to learn these new innovations,
not everyone has the motivation. Additionally, even if we do eventually pick up
on each of these advancements, we will still have less time involved with them,
as elementary students are already incredibly savvy.
Response to : Flipping the Classroom:
♦Flipping the Classroom is the process of giving students virtual homework to prepare them for the following day's lesson.
-Students view a video at home about the lesson so that they may come to class with questions the following day.
♦Encourages students to become more engaged with their schoolwork
-Prepares the students for questions so that lesson time is not wasted the following day.
Flipping the classroom is the process of giving students a video to watch for homework to prepare them for the following day's lessson. This allows the student to come to class he following day with some knowledge of the subject to be taught in addition to the oppurtunity for questions to be answered. This specific classroom began to "flip" the classroom after weeks of tradiitonal lecture. Flipping the classroom is new in the sense that I have never
been in a classroom in the process of being “flipped.” I have been enrolled in
both blended (already flipped classes) and traditional lecture-style classes.
This approach is very useful and much easier on the student and parent than an
already “flipped” classroom. By introducing it to the parents after traditional
instruction has already taken place, it gives the parent a margin for learning
the process as opposed to jumping right into advanced learning. I do intend on
using this strategy as a teacher due to the lack of technology literacy in
society. This method will not only assist the students in becoming more
technologically involved, but the parents as well.