CoETaIL Course 5 Project Final Post

As our CoETail certificate course comes to an end, as does our final project post.

As mentioned in previous posts, our whole 5th Grade team willingly took on a Science/Social Studies technology rich project for our Sustainability Unit of Study.

Using iMovie, every 5th grade student, either in a group, pair or individually, created a Public Service Announcement (more commonly known as a PSA) to demonstrate their knowledge of a problem of sustainability, how that problem continues to be a problem if we don’t take action, and how we can take action.

Overall the PSAs were a huge success.  The technology piece was, at times, frustrating for different classes, but the quality of the PSAs and my student’s ability to express what they learned and how they can made a difference, impresses me.

Now it’s time to reflect on my role in this project.

The rubric used for the teacher in this project can be found here.

I feel that I’m meeting the redefinition criteria of the rubric in all areas.

Preview

One particular strength I have, is being able to use “just-in-time” learning during any use of technology. I use the strengths of students to help other students and my class knows that I do not know everything – we all help each other.  Hanging in our classroom is our Tech Experts Chart.  As we use particular tools during the year, students have the opportunity to volunteer as experts for that tool.  They are the “go to” people when you don’t know how to do something, not me, them!  This works brilliantly and would have to be one of the best things I have ever used in the classroom.

Another strength that I personally believe you need if you are using technology in the classroom is calmness.  We don’t panic or get stressed out when things don’t go quite right.  I am a firm believer in modelling this to your students at all times, so that they in turn model calmness when things don’t work out the way they want.  We’ve dealt with “lost work”, corrupt files, the spinning colour wheel and a raft of other things that often go wrong when using laptops in the classroom.  Nobody ended up in tears, nobody tore their hair out and everyone successfully completed their PSA and has it uploaded to YouTube.   (You can watch all 12 of our PSAs from here).

The Sustainability Unit will be getting some tweaks here and there as we reflect on the whole unit as a team.  There’s already some things I’d like to add to make it easier for next year but that’s for another post!

Sustainability – Taking Action (4)

(Reflection Post 4 CoETaIL Course 5)

Today we spent a 45 minute session watching and peer-reviewing each others’ completed PSAs.  Unfortunately, due to two days of closure right before our Songkran break, we needed to export our iMovie projects to a finished product BEFORE a peer-review.  I would be extremely hesitant to export again before a peer-review.   The conversations and feedback that were taking place in the classroom during this session was awesome and I could see the realisation of mistakes on student’s faces – it was disappointing for me and for them in not to be able to give them class time to go back, refine, reedit and re-polish their projects.

Before this session, we had watched all of the PSAs, on the big screen, as a showcase, clapping and cheering, with no commenting or reviewing – just for sheer celebration of hard work and a finished project.  This I recommend as it’s fantastic just to enjoy the finished product and take a breather from all the hard work without the creators feeling that their work is straight away, under the microscope.

I created a google doc and shared it with my all of my students prior to this session:

sustainability_psa_peerreview - Google Docs

This was a brilliant idea!  All our feedback was on one document.  We went through the document first and talked about answering the questions based only on what you saw and heard in the PSA.  We also decided that you need to watch the PSA at least 3 times – each time concentrating on a different section (content, polish or copyright) at a time.  We also went through, group by group and added the title of the PSA and the peer reviewers names to their section of the document first.  This was so that everyone was adding their feedback in the right place.  Each group of 4 had two laptops – one with the google doc open, the other with YouTube open to watch the PSA.

PSA Peer Review

http://www.flickr.com/photos/room18tis/4558788981/

We had groups of 4 (either made up from each pair of creators, or two single creators teamed up with a pair of creators).  We had 4 individual projects and 8 pair projects to review).

Today, each group reviewed 1 PSA each.  In our next review session, we will probably review one more, with some groups reviewing two more.  I expect that the reviewing will be much quicker as they will all know what they’re looking and listening for.

Sustainability – Take Action

(Reflection Post 3 CoETaIL Course 5)

We’re almost at the end of our Grade 5 PSA making adventure for our Sustainability Unit – Time to take action!

Our proposed timeline was:

  • 1 x session to Investigate
  • 2-4 x sessions to Plan  (invest the majority of your time in this stage – the better prepared your students are in this storyboard phase, the better the creation process will be)
  • 1-2 sessions to Create
  • 1 x session to Peer Review
  • 1 x session to Reflect

In reality it looked a lot different! (But in a good, learning curve kinda way!)  Sessions were generally 45 minutes long.

  • 3 x sessions to Investigate
    Thanks to my good friend Jamin who suggested we watch the model PSAs and build our own success criteria together! Fantastic idea – it worked a treat and really gave everyone some clear goals and guidelines plus ownership of what was going to be important in our PSAs.
  • 6 x sessions to Plan
    We broke the storyboard plan down into  3 parts:  3 images for what the problem was, 3 images for causes and effects, 3 images for Action Plan – this worked really well, narrow enough for some of the more struggling learners and encouraged more articulate learners to be concise and clear!
  • 4 sessions to Create
    We did not experience any problems during the create sessions but a few of my brave (because they took on this project with such commitment), and enthusiastic (because of the total willingness to take this kind of project on) colleagues experienced some heartaches and sheer frustration moments.  This part of the project, therefore will be reworked, so that next year some of those frustrations will be eliminated.
  • 2 sessions to Peer Review
    Our school faced 2 days of closure towards the end of our project – so I modified our review part simply because of time constraints – we exported our iMovie projects without the peer review and are doing the peer-review more as a feedback for the next time we do a project that involves multimedia.  I’ll share with you the google doc we used to collate all our feedback for each other, in my next post

We have our Reflection session still to complete – Each PSA will be posted on the creator’s blog and a reflection paragraph – based on the feedback received, teacher feedback and own personal feelings & comments, will be written.  This will probably be a homework assignment rather than a class session.

Overall I’m really impressed with the learning of iMovie that my students achieved.  I’m impressed with their overall products, even though a lot of them realise that they should have paid more attention to the polish part of their project.  For the most part, their messages were clear and concise and their action plans doable.  Let’s hope that their messages will be heard and differences will be made.

If you have time to check them out I’d really appreciate it and so would my students.  All 12 projects can be found on techcoachisb’s YouTube channel - plus we will be featuring one at a time on our classroom blog too!

Newsmap

If you’re a visual learner then this is the news site for you!

It’s called Newsmap and it was shared by Andrew Churches in his Project-Based Learning Session (blog post brewing) at ASB Unplugged 2010, in Mumbai, India.

newsmap

I think I love it because, not only is it colour-coordinated to the type of news it is, but you can also change the feed based upon the countries that you are particularly interested in. It’s interactive and visually attractive!

Immediately I’m thinking ways to use Newsmap in the classroom.

  • Students compare what news makes the headlines in which countries
  • Identify reasons why news may not make the headlines in other countries
  • Identify the top categories of news
  • Compare one country with another country in terms of top categories of news
  • Collect data regarding how long the top news, stays the top news

The list is endless really!  What a great find and an amazing resource for the classroom!

In The News

I was recently contacted by Shanthi Venkataraman, a student from Columbia University, Graudate School of Journalism, as my friend Silvia Tolisano (Around the World with 80 Schools skype project mastermind) had passed on my name as a teacher who had been using skype in the classroom for a number of years and had taken part in the Around the World with 80 Schools skype project.

Columbia News Service is staffed by master’s candidates at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. Articles are written by the students, then edited and vetted by professional journalists and professors. All articles are transmitted to New York Times News Service clients, but are also available for republication by any professional media outlet at no charge. Photos may also be downloaded from this site; multimedia links are also provided

Shanti was interested in hearing how Skype was used in Schools. We connected when our timezones were decent for the both of us via , yes, you guessed it via Skype. She just informed me by email that her article Skype Gives Students Window on the World was published.  Of course, Silvia was interviewed and Wes Fryer, was too.

Columbia News Service » Blog Archive » Skype Gives Students Window On The World

Sustainability – Take Action!

(Reflection Post 2 CoETaIL Course 5)
Grade 5 is using a google doc to help each other teach our students the technology skills required in order to complete the Culminating Project for our Environments/Sustainability Unit for Science/Social Studies.
In pairs or as individuals, our students will be creating PSAs (Public Service Announcements).They will need to analyze one aspect of their family’s environmental impact (i.e. electricity, water usage, garbage, paper usage, etc), research why there is such an impact and create an action plan with their own innovative ways to diminish that impact in order to create a preferable future. The PSA will make a compelling recommendation for change based on evidence (that includes written, oral and visual aspects) and that includes specific actions to take in order to improve their family’s environmental impact.
To help my colleagues help their students to successfully complete this project using technology, the following planning has been started on a google doc which we can all add to as we progress through the final stages of our Sustainability Unit.  The google doc will also serve as a reflection point for future reference when we are planning for this unit again.  Please add in the comments below anything else that may need consideration or documentation.  We’d like to share and learn from not just each other, but fellow educators that may be doing something similar or have done something similar –  wherever you may be.
Here’s what the project has so far by using the Understanding by Design planning:
Proposed Timeline:
  • 1 x session to Investigate
  • 2-4 x sessions to Plan  (invest the majority of your time in this stage – the better prepared your students are in this storyboard phase, the better the creation process will be)
  • 1-2 sessions to Create
  • 1 x session to Peer Review
  • 1 x session to Reflect
Tools Used:
  • Inspiration (optional) for brainstorming ideas
  • iMovie (PSA)
Investigate:
Plan:
Your Public Service Announcement will need:
  • 1st  min max = explain what the problem is
  • 2nd min max = why is this a problem? (causes and effect)
  • 3rd min max = what are we going to do about it (go further on something we’re already doing)
  • Research why the aspect you have chosen creates such an impact (it’s cause & effect on the environment)
  • Use a storyboard to plan out your PSA
  • Write a script based on the research
  • Find pictures, talk about research, citing sourcing, how to save and organize images
    Use: Compfight or Search:Creative Commons (both search flickr)
  • Find creative commons music for the video (no copyright probs)
    Use:  Jamendo
Create:
  • Create PSA in iMovie  (Book Tech Co-ordinator if you’re not familiar with the basics of iMovie – use your “experts” in class)
  • Subject the movie to peer review before final posting and make necessary changes
Evaluate:
  • Rubric – (generic digital storytelling rubric currently being tailored to suit this project)
  • Conduct class discussion of what could have been improved
  • Self-Assessment Rubric (generic digital storytelling self-assessment rubric currently being tailored to suit this project)
  • Students upload their PSA to their blog and write blog post reflecting on their personal experience with the project 
What did they learn? 
What was difficult? 
What was easy? 
What would they do differently next time?
What’s your thinking?  What are we missing?  What could be added?

Fireworks Animoto Style

I’ve written about Animoto before. It’s very intuitive, quick and easy as well as free to use when you want to create a 30 second video. For just US$3 per video or US$30 per year, you can make longer videos.
Some ways to use Animoto in the classroom:

  1. Teaser (introducing students to a new topic)
  2. Assessment (students put together the most important images about their learning)
  3. Highlights (highlight the best parts of learning)
  4. Discussion Starter (poignant images that would spark a discussion on a topic)

It took about 5 minutes to upload chosen photos, type some text, add music and render the video.  This video is the highlights of the fireworks set off at midnight on January 1st 2010, on Marine Parade, Napier, New Zealand.  The photos were taken from my balcony using the 55mm – 200mm lens.

VoiceThread – Digital Library

A while back, I submitted our VoiceThread as a Digital Portfolio for consideration for the VoiceThread Digital Library.  The Digital Library is a database of articles about successful VoiceThread projects. It is VoiceThread’s hope to create a resource that offers guidance and inspiration for people undertaking new projects.

I’m honoured to say that it was been accepted and is now part of a growing number of resources from inspirational Educators all over the world.  I’m so very proud of my 5th Graders from Room 202, 08/09 – they did such a fantastic job with their portfolios using VoiceThread.

VoiceThread - Digital Library

VoiceThread - Digital Library

You can read about the Digital Portfolio VoiceThread project here.

If you’ve not used VoiceThread before or you are looking for ideas to help you integrate VoiceThread into your classroom – then look no further: the VoiceThread Digital Library is brimming with clever ideas and resources – check it out!

And to the developers of VoiceThread – you offer such an amazing service and product to Educators – thank you for your continued generosity.

Sharing the Passion

Today is the first day of the last week of Semester.  It was a particularly hard day – I’m not sure why but it was.  The students were lethargic, unenthusiastic and as flat as pancakes.  (And that was at 9.30am!!).  The day didn’t get much better either.

I wish that I’d checked my google reader for inspiration during lunch today (I just had to get out of the classroom) because then I would have seen the gem of a video embedded for you below from Angela Maier”s post:  Capturing Classroom Habitudes and Sharing Them.  It’s gorgeous! Now I bet you can guess what I’m going to share with  my students first thing tomorrow morning!

What about you?  How do you keep your students’ passion going during that last week of term/semester?

Budding FoSS Scientists

(Cross-posted at Room 231′s Class Blog)

Our budding young scientists in Grade 5 have been learning about Variables and how to investigate them. During the investigations they have been learning things like how to use a two-coordinate graph, how to predict, how to identify variables and control them, setting standards and recording data. Fossweb.com | FOSS 3-6 Modules

To help them with their reflection and interpretation of data (we’ve done the what – so what?) we’d love you to click on the student blog links on the right hand side of our class blog and read our Measuring Capacity post.
Each student has posted their two-coordinate graph with a little explanation of what investigation they were doing and are asking other student scientists around the world two questions.
What do you notice? What would you suggest we do next?

Of course they’d be really excited if an experienced scientist left us a comment too!  If you can help us out please head on over to our classroom blog and click on the individual student blog links on the right hand side.