Monday, February 25, 2008

Talking About My Generation


"What technology would you like to see intergrated into the curriculum? How would this technology be helpful or beneficial to the classroom?

-labtops
-labtops
-cellphones
-more t.v.
-a car
-ipods
-xbox
-labtops
-labtops
-myspace

This is just a small sample of the answers that rangout in response to the above question. The difficulty came when students were asked to follow-up with the second half of the question "How would this technology be helpful or beneficial to the classroom?" Labtops was obvious, students would have easy access to great informational resources at the simple click of a button. The negatives seem just as obvious, the cost is big, students would have access to great classroom distractions at the click of a button, and the possiblity of theft or damage.

Cellphones was a much more interesting conversation. Students were creative with their responses. Students suggested that we use them similiar to the radio d.j.'s text your answer into your teacher for morning warm-ups or even school wide competitions.

I'm not sure where we can go with this idea, cellphones as an aid to education, but I think the important thing is to recognize the significance they play in our students' lives. Like it or not our students are tech savvy and like to use that technology to socialize.

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

I Love to Hate Technology




Last year I was asked if I would be able to teach a credit make-up class. Being the money hungry gung-ho teacher that I am, I agreed. I was already swamped with paper work and the idea of more made me want to pound my head against a wall. In addition, students came in and out of the class, based on their own agenda. The students are required to spend 34 hours of seat time with me. They don’t have to come everyday. They can stay for a half-hour or for the full hour and a half.

To meet the needs of the class, students, and my sanity I decided to center the class are the blogs. Students visit my blog at www.seventhhour.blogspot.com to see the assignments for the class. Each week a new assignment is posted. By the end of their 34 hours each student is responsible for completing 15 of the assignments at a satisfactory level. The students receive their feedback through the comments option, notifying them if they need to redo the assignment or if it was approved.

It looked like everything was going to workout just as I was hoping. However, last week the district changed the way in which server filters out websites. This entire past week my students have not been able to access their websites and I haven’t been able to log into my own blog to post assignments and our comment on theirs. Recently we’ve switched to students emailing their assignments to me, I hate it. My email box is flooded and it just doesn’t have the same flavor. What the kids enjoyed was making their blogs reflect who they are. I’ve contacted the district and they’ve told me it isn’t a problem on our end, I have to disagree.