Friday, August 31, 2012
My Blog has moved! Please visit me now at:
Yes, I have a new and improved blog site, and have moved all of my work to my "Making History" page. Please visit me there at http://teachersworkplace.org/. I look forward to your continued visit to my new page while I "Make History" in the classroom! Cheerio!
Thursday, August 23, 2012
The Technology-Integrated Classroom: Isn't it Already a Necessity?
Disclaimer: I understand
that not all schools have access to cutting-edge technology. This is a situation that must be
addressed, but is not the purpose of this particular conversation.
The importance of using technology in the classroom has been
an ongoing debate. One argument suggests that technology for technology's sake
is not productive for learning. Another
holds that technology, used appropriately, is just another tool to reach
students. I would suggest that technology-integration
in the classroom in the 21st century is a necessity.
About five years ago, I made the decision to go paperless in
my classroom. I had a small space
in which to teach so my storage space and file room were non-existent. The last year I used paper, it took me
an entire week to come out from under the mounds of paper that we had generated
in the class during the year—what a waste. Frustratingly, I noticed several stacks of unused papers (we
have all been there: we make plans
to pass out assignments that never get used for one reason or another), and multiple
stacks of various other things I had way too many copies of. I wanted to end that waste, so made the
commitment to go paperless.
It was an easy transition. I began using wikispaces for
all of my classes. Any documents
or assignments that needed to be handed out were uploaded instead. If a student was absent for a day or
more, she could access the class wiki and
find the discussion notes, reading notes, project information or anything that
she missed in class that day (no more, "I was absent and didn't get the
notes" excuses). The class wiki is even open to parents so they have
access to everything we do in class.
This is helpful, as well, for those students who don't have internet
access at home—their parents can retrieve all of the class information for them
at work, if necessary. Of course,
other arrangements were made for students who had no internet access at all;
luckily that happens at my school very rarely.
Wikispaces is not the only technology tool that has become second
nature for us in the History room, however. As budding historians, my students are expected to do a fair
amount of research using both primary and secondary sources. There are a myriad of
online databases that we use on a daily
basis. My students had already been blogging on an online current events website. In my History class we depend on technology for productive
learning, as well as on the countless tools of presentation that we use on a
regular basis.
The real proof that technology is essential to the classroom
came when our access to technology was restricted and we were forced to revert
to a classroom without integrated technology. This happened because my
colleagues and I set up in a temporary location as our building underwent
massive renovations. As the
"Perfect Storm" of bad-renovation Karma hit us, it became impossible
to outfit the temporary space with wi-fi internet access. On most days, we were lucky to have any internet access at all on the
teacher's desktops. Given that our
student laptops are outfitted for wi-fi, it was impossible for the students to
use the computers for anything other than word processing. Very frustrating.
With no access to technology, I had to completely rethink
how to teach. Those first few
weeks were difficult to say the least.
Thankfully, I had built up a respectable classroom library of history
research materials that had gone sorely unused for several years. Problem: they are all secondary sources, and I didn't have nearly
enough for every student and every subject they were interested in. We spent a lot of time in a public
library that fall. Imagine, for a
moment, going totally disconnected...What would you do? How would you teach?
The experience taught me that, yes, in my history classroom,
we need to use technology. (And, it is imperative to be flexible,
positive AND creative when things don't go the way I expect.) Some people warn
of the dangers of using technology for technology's sake, but that experience
got me thinking: why not use
technology for technology's sake? Students are immersed in it anyway, whether
we use it in the classroom or not.
If we teachers go out of our way to use technology in schools, we have
the opportunity to model for students all the cool and useful things that the
tools can do, and to use them in
productive ways.
We should try to reach our students where they already live,
and let's face it: they live in
21st century technology. Our
students are children of the 21st century, and we have a responsibility to
prepare them for life in the 21st century. I'm not suggesting that we disrupt
the progress of the classroom just to incorporate the latest technological
gadgets, but I do think that it is important for teachers to make an effort to
incorporate at least some technology that fits with the flow of the class while
modeling safe, appropriate and productive use of it for our students. Food for thought.
Resources for the Digital History Classroom
As an educator, I am committed to sharing the best of the web resources with my students. Here is a partial list of essential websites that my class cannot live without. I am partial to those sites that provide primary sources in a kid-friendly presentation. Location matters, too, so I support those museum websites that we actually frequent often in person (easy to do when located in DC). Many museums offer excellent online educational resources and lesson plans for teachers.
Please enjoy. These are just the tip of the iceberg:
- History News Network
- Center for History and the New Media
- Wilson Center
- National Security Archive at GWU
- Smithsonian for Educators
- Library of Congress Digital Collections
- National Archives for Teachers
- DocsTeach Primary Source documents
- National History Day
- National Geographic
- Newseum Digital Classroom
- Newseum for Educators
- Spy Museum Educator Resources
- Spy Museum Learn
- BBC World War II Resources including countless animated maps
- BBC animated map of Western Front 1939-1945
- WWII animated map of Auschwitz
- PBS The Great War interactive
- The Walters Museum
- The Bayeux Tapestry online!
- The Battle of Hastings interactive
- Battle of Hastings Essential Norman Conquest
- Boeing Learning Center at National Archives
- Digital History
- CNN international
- BBC News
- The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
- Political Cartoon Analysis LOC
- The Political Dr. Seuss
- History of Rome for kids
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
Use of Current Events in the History Classroom
Yes, I teach History. My classes and I spend about 20% of our time discussing current events. I think paying attention to news events is important to understand "current" history, but more importantly, I have never encountered a class that is indifferent to current events. Since I require my students to keep a current event journal, I allow them the opportunity to choose whatever news interests them to write about (well, as long as it's not celebrity gossip). Each grade level I teach has different requirements and expectations, and obviously, the complexity that I expect progresses from 6th to 8th grade.
I utilize a wikispaces account for communicating with my classes, and I upload the complete written instructions for submitting journal blog entries onto the appropriate wikis for my students to consult when necessary. I also use an infogram for each grade level so the students can see at a glance what work is required of them from assignment to assignment. I'm still working on the 6th and 7th, but here are the requirements for the 8th grade:
easel.ly
I utilize a wikispaces account for communicating with my classes, and I upload the complete written instructions for submitting journal blog entries onto the appropriate wikis for my students to consult when necessary. I also use an infogram for each grade level so the students can see at a glance what work is required of them from assignment to assignment. I'm still working on the 6th and 7th, but here are the requirements for the 8th grade:
easel.ly
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