Thursday, April 28, 2011

Tagxedo--Julius Caesar text

This is my second attempt at this particular Tagxedo.  What's really interesting about this image is that Brutus' name is the largest word, and that will lend itself to a class discussion about Brutus' role in the play.  If the play is called Julius Caesar, why is Brutus' name the most prominent word?

Technology in the 21st Century Classroom

One of the most important things I have learned in this class is that you can never rest on your technology "laurels" because technology is always changing.  Instead of clinging to the overhead projector, one should welcome the Smartboard...and whatever will replace it.

...But what if I can't make it work?!?!

http://9gag.com/gag/101671/

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

A Vision of 21st Century Learning


This brief video makes a great point:  we are educating children using a 19th century approach, and that needs to change.

Using Technology in the Classroom--Web Quest


http://www.web-and-flow.com/members/shursey/separatepeace/webquest.htm

Web Quests look like the kind of interactive technology that my students would like.  My students are quite adept at searching the internet for information, but nearly all of them have difficulty evaluating the materials that they find.  With a Web Quest, I could determine the sites that they visit and vouch for the quality of the materials presented.  This would be a great activity to do in a computer lab.   Getting access to a computer lab for an entire class can be a challenge at PA, though.  Hopefully the construction of the Freshman Academy--which will have four computer labs--will make activities like this easier.

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

The object of education is to prepare the young to educate themselves throughout their lives. ~Robert Maynard Hutchins

SchoolTube - Narrative Reading Strategies - The Hand Modeled

SchoolTube - Narrative Reading Strategies - The Hand Modeled

I like how this video shows a teacher composing the first page of the reading journal.  She decides to draw an image from a dream in the journal, and admits that she is no artist, which I'm sure students would find amusing.  I also like her graphic organizer for reading strategies.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

My First Pixton Cartoon--click on the cartoon to see it!

The Story Behind the Cartoon--Teacher "Caught" Blogging About Her Students

Pa. teacher strikes nerve with 'lazy whiners' blog

AP
Natalie Munroe AP – Central Bucks, Pa., East High School teacher Natalie Munroe is seen while on hold during a phone interview …
FEASTERVILLE, Pa. – A high school English teacher in suburban Philadelphia who was suspended for a profanity-laced blog in which she called her young charges "disengaged, lazy whiners" is driving a debate by daring to ask: Why are today's students unmotivated — and what's wrong with calling them out?
As she fights to keep her job at Central Bucks East High School, 30-year-old Natalie Munroe says she had no interest in becoming any sort of educational icon. The blog has been taken down, but its contents can still be found easily online.
Her comments and her suspension by the middle-class school district have clearly touched a nerve, with scores of online commenters applauding her for taking a tough love approach or excoriating her for verbal abuse. Media attention has rained down, and backers have started a Facebook group.
"My students are out of control," Munroe, who has taught 10th, 11th and 12th grades, wrote in one post. "They are rude, disengaged, lazy whiners. They curse, discuss drugs, talk back, argue for grades, complain about everything, fancy themselves entitled to whatever they desire, and are just generally annoying."
And in another post, Munroe — who is more than eight months pregnant — quotes from the musical "Bye Bye Birdie": "Kids! They are disobedient, disrespectful oafs. Noisy, crazy, sloppy, lazy LOAFERS."
She also listed some comments she wished she could post on student evaluations, including: "I hear the trash company is hiring"; "I called out sick a couple of days just to avoid your son"; and "Just as bad as his sibling. Don't you know how to raise kids?"
Munroe did not use her full name or identify her students or school in the blog, which she started in August 2009 for friends and family. Last week, she said, students brought it to the attention of the school, which suspended her with pay.
"They get angry when you ask them to think or be creative," Munroe said of her students in an interview with The Associated Press on Tuesday. "The students are not being held accountable."
Munroe pointed out that she also said positive things, but she acknowledges that she did write some things out of frustration — and of a feeling that many kids today are being given a free pass at school and at home.
"Parents are more trying to be their kids' friends and less trying to be their parent," Munroe said, also noting students' lack of patience. "They want everything right now. They want it yesterday."
One of Munroe's former students, who now attends McDaniel College in Westminster, Md., said he was torn by his former teacher's comments. Jeff Shoolbraid said that he thought much of what Munroe said was true and that she had a right to voice her opinion, but felt her comments were out of line for a teacher.
"Whatever influenced her to say what she did is evidence as to why she simply should not teach," Shoolbraid wrote in an e-mail to the AP. "I just thought it was completely inappropriate."
He continued: "As far as motivated high school students, she's completely correct. High school kids don't want to do anything. ... It's a teacher's job, however, to give students the motivation to learn."
A spokesman for the Pennsylvania State Education Association declined to comment Tuesday because he said the group may represent Munroe. Messages left for the Central Bucks School District superintendent were not returned.
Sandi Jacobs, vice president of the National Council on Teacher Quality, said school districts are navigating uncharted territory when it comes to teachers' online behavior. Often, districts want teachers to have more contact with students and their families, yet give little guidance on how teachers should behave online even as students are more plugged in than they've ever been.
"This is really murky stuff," she said. "When you have a teacher using their blog to berate their students, maybe that's a little less murky. But the larger issue is, I think, districts are totally unprepared to deal with this."
Munroe has hired an attorney, who said that she had the right to post her thoughts on the blog and that it's a free speech issue. The attorney, Steven Rovner, said the district has led Munroe to believe that she will eventually lose her job.
"She could have been any person, any teacher in America writing about their lives," he said, pointing out that Munroe blogged about 85 times and that only about 15 to 20 of the posts involved her being a teacher. "It's honest and raw and a little edgy depending on your taste. ... She has a deep frustration for the educational system in America."
Rovner said that he would consider legal action if indeed Munroe loses her job.
"She did it as carefully as she could," he said about her blog. "It's so general that it applies to the problems in school districts and schools across the country."
___
Associated Press writer Dorie Turner in Atlanta contributed to this report.

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

The strength of the United States is not the gold at Fort Knox or the weapons of mass destruction that we have, but the sum total of the education and the character of our people.
--Claiborne Pell


Sixth Sense Technology Presentation--Pattie Maes & Pranav Mistry

This video just might blow your mind!  This is a way to interact naturally with your environment and technology.  So many possibilities for classroom use! 

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Technology Sentences

1.  The library at Pinkerton Academy is part of a WAN; this allows PA students to search the libraries of other high schools in the area for books and other research materials.
2.  The ISP (internet service provider) that I use at home is Verizon.
3.  Pinkerton Academy's LAN allows us to have centralized document storage.
4.  The servers at Pinkerton Academy are maintained by the IT department in a climate-controlled office in the Low Building.
5.  Video conferencing would be a valuable technology that the English Department could use to collaborate with other secondary English teachers in New Hampshire.
6.  Email is a tool that is used every day by teachers at Pinkerton Academy.  The days of hand-written messages in actual mailboxes is nearly a thing of the past.
7.  The protocol that I am most familiar with is http.
8.  The first time I have ever read the NETS-T was for this class.  At PA, parts of the NETS-T have been implemented and tied into teachers' evaluations; for example, all teachers have to be able to send and receive emails.
9.  The English Department at PA has its own web page on Edline, a CMS (course management system), where a discussion group is available.