Wednesday, May 30, 2012

QR code


In case you also enjoy running outside, here is a great technology for mapping and planning routes around my hometown!

3 more education technologies

Last week, I posted about educational uses for iPads, as well as descriptions and uses for certain applications in the classroom.  I chose the iPad off of the "top 100 tools for learning 2011"list compiled by Jane Hart, and, today, will discuss three more technologies from this collection with educational applications.

Prezi





Prezi is a software for developing presentation, which differs from presentation interfaces such as Microsoft PowerPoint in its use of "Zooming User Interface."  In presentations on Prezi, users can pan and zoom in and out of different areas of their virtual presentation, which can consist of text, images, and/or videos.  The relative size and arrangement of each area of the presentation is controlled by the presenter.  Prezi's goal is to set itself apart from other presentation software by providing a more interesting, intuitive method of presenting through a more dimensional visual display.

Audacity


Audacity is a sound recording and editing software with various digital effects and plug-ins.  It can import and export sound-bytes in most formats, including mp3, wav, and aiff.  It provides clear recordings of normal speech, music, and singing and allows for sound filtering.  Audacity could be a great tool for pre-reading and/or pre-writing students and students with reading/writing disabilities or difficulties.  It also could serve the education application of being used in speech therapy.


Storybird



Storybird is a story-creating software that centers around artistic expression.  Students start a story based on a chosen picture.  The technology encourages creativity, while giving users a starting point from which to formulate their stories.  Its online format makes editing and sharing easy, and its vast art collection makes it fun and idea-inspiring, particularly for school-age children.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Reflection 5/29

We're not even halfway through class for the night, but I already have something to reflect upon.  We started class tonight by getting an introduction to html code.  Here's what I did:


<html>
<title> Allie's Intro to HTML </title>
<body>
Welcome to this introductory page.

I'm going to experiment with the color <font color="red"> red. </font>
<div>

I'm going to experiment with the color <font color="red"> red </font> and <font size=+16> size.

</div>


<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Llama" target="new"> A llama </a>
<BR>

<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Llama" target="new" height=200><img src="http://fordlog.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/llama-smile.jpg" height="200"></a>
</body>
</html>

Looks like gibberish, I know, but when opened in Chrome, it's a goofy llama picture hyperlinked to a wikipedia page.

I could definitely see using this knowledge in the classroom.  Rather than walking students step by step on their computers through a computer activity, such as a research project, I could create a website with the instructions hyperlinked to the pages they would need to complete the activity.  This way, most students would be self-sufficient in completing the assignment and could work at their own pace, exploring the links on the webpage I created for them in the order and timeframe that best serves their learning ability. Successful beginning of class, thus far!

Keyboard Shortcuts for Mac Activ Inspire

Here's a nifty table of keyboard shortcuts for Mac computers for those of you who use Activ Inspire for Promethean Boards:
ShortcutWhich Means Press These KeysEffect
Command + Athe command key the A keySelect All (everything on the Inspire screen)
Command + Bthe command key the B keyBrowsers (reveal them or hide them)
Command + Cthe command key the C keyCopy (that which is selected)
Command + Dthe command key the D keyDuplicate (that which is selected; if a page is selected in the page browser, it duplicates the selected flipchart page)
Command + Ethe command key the E keyEraser (invoke the eraser tool)
Command + Fthe command key the F keyFill (invoke the fill tool)
Command + Hthe command key the H keyHide the Application (click the Inspire icon to make it reappear).
Command + Jthe command key the J keyEdit Profile
Command + Mthe command key the M keyMedia (Choose Media To Insert Into Flipchart - such as audio or video)
Command + Nthe command key the N keyNew (create a new flipchart)
Command + Othe command key the O keyOpen (open an existing flipchart)
Command + Pthe command key the P keyPrint Flipchart
Command + Sthe command key the S keySave Flipchart
Command + Tthe command key the T keyText (invoke the text tool)
Command + Uthe command key the U keyCustomize Toolbar (Edit Profile - Commands)
Command + Vthe command key the V keyPaste (whatever was copied, such as with Command + C)
Command + Wthe command key the W keyClose Flipchart
Command + Xthe command key the X keyCut (object has to be selected)
Command + Zthe command key the Z keyUndo what has just been done.
Shift + Command + Athe shift key the command key the A keyDesktop Annotate (click Desktop Annotate on Toolbar, upper left icon, second down, to return to flipchart)
Shift + Command + Cthe shift key the command key the C keyConnectors (invoke the connectors tool)
Source:  http://prometheanboardsbound.pcsstn.com/mac-activinspire-keyboard-shortcuts

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

iPads in the Classroom



As our first assignment, we are to look further into one of the technologies deemed the "Top 100 Tools for Learning" for the year 2011.  I decided to delve deeper into a technology available at the school in which I'm a special education assistant, but for which I have little expertise-- the iPad.
When it first came out, I remember thinking to myself, and perhaps aloud to fellow college students, "Isn't it just a glorified iTouch?" "Tablet" just seemed like a fancy word for oversized iPod that they could charge you hundreds of dollars for.  After my experience as an assistant in an elementary school and my research for my technology class, I can assuredly say that they price discrepancy between an iTouch and an iPad can be accredited to more than just a difference in size.


Given that you're reading my blog, you are probably technologically savvy enough to know generally what an iPad is. But, for the sake of adhering to the assignment's directions, I will define the iPad as a touch-screen tablet with wireless internet capabilities, built-in applications, and a store of purchasable and downloadable supplementary applications.


Now, how is it implemented in curriculum and instruction?


As it turns out, iPads are applicable and useful complements to most any classroom size, age, and activity. iPads have mathematical, scientific, linguistic, and literary applications, as well as those which help strengthen social and motor skills.  They are malleable products (not literally, of course), that can be extremely helpful in implementing differentiation.  To illustrate this, I will present a few apps I have used personally with my children at school and a few I have just now discovered through my research.


1. Dragon Dictation



 With this tool, students with motor disabilities or difficulties can dicate their stories, essays, etc. to the iPad, which, through the Dragon app, scribes it incredibly accurately.  The document can be emailed, shared, and/or saved right on the iPad.  I have personally used this app with an autistic student with motor skill impairment and have seen first-hand the change in his perspective on "writing" and Language Arts as a whole. He has brilliant, creative ideas that before the Dragon app were near impossible to get down on paper and be turned in for a grade.  Rather than relying on an adult to scribe his work, he can find a quiet space, dictate his thoughts, and edit the product of his dictation. 


2. Handwriting applications

There are a variety of handwriting apps that facilitate learning letters and sounds, to writing in cursive.  As evidenced in the picture above, these apps can be used by most any age child and can be useful tools in developing motor skills and correct penmanship habits. 


A specific handwriting app that I have not personally used, but have researched and deemed to be extremely useful in the elementary school setting, is iWrite.
iWrite not only helps children learn their letters, but it also teaches them how to write them correctly.  I've explored other handwriting apps that simply have the child trace their finger over letters, rather than show them where on the letter to start and which way to go once they begin tracing.  Without the arrow showing them where to begin and where to go from there and how many strokes to use to make the letters, the app is not really teaching the child how to write, but rather how to draw.  The objective is not having the child trace the letters, it is to have them understand the correct method with which they should write the letters once they need to scribe without the help of a letter to trace. iWrite also corrects for backwards letters and numbers, which is a prevalent error of most school-aged children of every elementary grade.


3. Educreations

This, thus far in my search for educationally applicable apps, is my most favorite. Though I have not used it directly, I can imagine the enriching effects it would have on a child's understanding of a concept from any subject area. The makers of the app call it a "recordable whiteboard" on which children can provide vocal, pictoral, and handwritten information for peers and teachers.  This app is used as more of a resource for reflection rather than acquisition of knowledge, as the child implements the app to re-teach the lesson he or she has already learned.  It's a way of consolidating the information in the student's mind by giving he or she the opportunity to take what they've learned and teach it to another.  The lesson is in their own language, and they decide what is written and pictured on the screen.  Therefore, they themselves choose what they see to be the most important parts of the lesson and work to teach it to somebody else.  This reflection and reiteration is not only good for review in its simplest meaning, but it is also a great way to enrich student understanding of concepts by developing a self-created lesson in a more accessible way because it's in their own words and pictures.






I have to stop myself from writing more about this wonderful technology since this post is looking a bit long-winded.  I only touched on 3 of thousands of applications available through this apple product, so, in a sense, the application of these apps in the classroom is virtually limitless and should be exercised whenever possible.