Thursday, March 19, 2015

21st century Literacy

Technology enables students read and write with more creativity. In my class of Instructional Technology this week, my students are required to create their own virtual classes on Edmodo.
The classes are created based on lesson plan with google doc, outline with cacoo.com, presentation with voki.com as an audio introduction and slides with powtoon/prezi/google slides/storybird, self-designed assessment and a survey of the class teaching for students with google form.

The outline created with cacoo.com is new introduced recently. Students had made a couple outline/diagram with it last week, the attached is one example:


Another fresh product is the audio introduction with voki:



users can select characters from available options, change backgrounds and edit words with typing or speaking through microphone. For the spoken language, there are many options of languages, English, Spanish, Chinese, Japanese, Korean so on and so forth, besides the various languages, users can also choose accents and gender of speakers. 

Sunday, March 15, 2015

Flipping Classrooms

This week I used educreations.com to create a class of "Chinese Spring Festival", the link is attached below:

https://www.educreations.com/lesson/view/chinese-spring-festival/29910413/?ref=link



This is a lead-in part of my lesson. By viewing the educreation video, students are encouraged to make their own project with shadow puppet or show me to introduce a holiday of their cultures.
While they are creating the projects, I am able to facilitate them.



Friday, March 6, 2015

Digital Citizenship

On the website of Digital Citizenship, it lists eight topics of Scope and Sequence. One of them is "Information and Literacy", under which students are capable to search pictures online based on descriptions, conduct online conversations with typing language, make their perspectives, make photos, learn about fair use and copyright, so on and so forth.

To embed the features into my classes, we implement an app called Heads Up or Charades and a website called Pedlet (pedlet.com), which is an on-line collaboration tool, in my class on Mar 4.

At beginning, students tried to play the word game with Head up, but it didn't work well while my iPad mini connecting with Apple TV, we switched it to Charades. The popularity of this sort of app was out of my expectation. my students were obsessed with it and insisted playing it after we have done three-round two-group competition. Hence, I let them work within their groups on a padlet to list what advantages of using Heads Up or Charades in the class, what are the disadvantages, how to apply this kind of app into their own classes in the future and how to deal with the disadvantages. And here are their padlets:



I really enjoyed the process that students played Charades, which, as they depicted, is an ice-breaker.
As to the use of padlet, it allows students to calm down from the fun and think about how to utilize  engaging apps into their career. This is just a start :)


Tuesday, March 3, 2015

Shadow Puppet Experience

This is my first try with the app "Shadow Puppet" with a 2nd grader in Rousseau Elementary school. Thanks Mrs. Kutilek and Dr. Trainin for giving me the opportunity.

The two pictures attached below are the app Shadow Puppet.


I was assigned to help a lovely girl make her animal introduction with  "Shadow Puppet". She likes dolphin and had done a writing about dolphin earlier. We collaborated to select pictures and record the voice together.



"Shadow Puppet" allows us to select pictures from website, which is convenient comparing to some apps only allowing pictures from photo library. Further more, we can edit texts and emoticon on each picture and make animation effect of them, which interests the student I helped with. As we record the voice, we can pause and move to next picture whenever needed. The girl I helped with had a good rhythm control after we finished recording at the first time and could pay attention to the instructions from Shadow Puppet. However,  when typing the text, Shadow Puppet breaks down relative long words in two lines according to the width of pictures, such as conclusion-> concl+usion, which will confuse the audience.  I am thinking of using it for a higher level study and ELL students as it is a great tool for a combination of speech practice and writing practice.