120 likes | 259 Views
Technology. In the service, not the stead, of content. Teachnology commonly in use. PowerPoint (this is a PowerPoint if you thought it was some kind of magic or a hallucination) Projectors (the thing in the cage clinging desperately to the ceiling above you, yearning for escape)
E N D
Technology In the service, not the stead, of content
Teachnology commonly in use • PowerPoint (this is a PowerPoint if you thought it was some kind of magic or a hallucination) • Projectors (the thing in the cage clinging desperately to the ceiling above you, yearning for escape) • Smart boards and air liners (Any who have used these tools will tell you: they are NOT SMART) • The internet (or the “tubes” depending on how trendy you are.) • Blogs • Internet based research • Wikipedia
Teachnology one the horizon • Social media • This refers to any collaborative tool commonly including wikis, YouTube, social networking sites, twitter, moodle, etc. • Podcasts/Vlogs • My first Vlog • Games • This refers to epistemic games like role playing games, historical games, and even MMOs
The risk • Technology, if used improperly, can get in the way of authentic, quality instruction. • “Orchard and Star Reading covers all of your in class standards. Just set up a test or a game and have take your students to the computer lab. Try to do this at least six times a quarter.” –Heath Dudley, Principal-- in a memo to English and Math teachers • “Really, you can add a module five minutes before you take your kids to the lab. This cuts way down on the amount of grading and planning you have to do.” Kelly Brown, Prentice Hall Representative
The risk Continued • “Those who wish to lead education into a technology-enabled future may have to cast off from their present organizational moorings and launch themselves into a risk filled environment.” Thomas Huges • “The internet is killing our culture.” Andrew Keen • My kids hated computer class from the beginning. The software was boring, and they were not allowed to explore beyond prescribed daily lessons. Kimberly L. Keith • “Technology will replace teachers.” Cecilia, a mountain sage known for her wisdom and penchant for cats
So what can be done? Technology in service of content
Hey guys, I found something cool! What Teachers Make Here’s another I Wanna Hear a Poem Hey, that gives me an idea!
Prompt How many cookies have you eaten in your life? Have you ever stopped to truly think about and experience a cookie? What do cookies remind you of? What sort of emotional after taste do you get from a cookie? • grandparent or a loved one? • Marcel Proust? • Perverted sexual undertones from gooey chocolate? (I’m looking at you April!) Take a moment and get Zen with your cookie. Try to experience your cookie with each of your senses EXCEPT TASTE!!! Be sure to jot down some notes.
Directions • Break off into your reader response groups • You may sit anywhere you wish (except the hallway, behind the teacher’s desk, or the ceiling.) • Write a poem or micro fiction about your cookie. • Include sensory details and metaphors/similes. • Be sure to tie a feeling, a memory, an idea, or an emotional aftertaste to your description • When you have completed your masterpiece, share with your group and make whatever revisions you feel you need to. • Your final product will be collected and assessed (by me.) • I will pass around student examples to help you if you get stuck.