Saturday, March 1, 2014

     You know how sometimes you just don't have enough hours in a day? I've had that problem recently. In addition to subbing (and hoping and praying to get a full-time teaching position!) and freelance editing work (which this project is much more indepth than what I've been doing for the last several years - which is good, but more time and thought consuming) and taking two online classes for my computer endorsement, I just began another telecommuting job which has had a very steep learning curve. Not the technicalities of telecommuting. The jargon for the job. Not to mention that my three teenagers and husband actually expect fed, taxiied, laundered, loved, etc.
     So, through all of that, I've been reading many online articles about what technology skills teachers should have. Not so that they can "keep up" with their students. Today's students have grown up with technology and inherently know so much more than we do and do not have inhibitions about hitting the wrong key. But, skills that will help us help them succeed. We don't need to give them content. We need to give them structure to find the content that interests them and ways to apply the content to meet (and exceed) the standards. Used well, technology has the potential to allow students of all levels excel beyond their wildest dreams. We, as teachers, need to learn how to help them with that.
     Therefore, I have developed a checklist, per se, of skills I would like to work on for the rest of this semester. They are diverse. Some will be easier than others. I'm pretty sure I will not get through all of them. But I feel that all of them are important for different reasons. They are mostly drawn from a couple of articles by Chris Riedel who is a frequent contributor to the Journal: Transforming Education Through Technology. His three articles, 9 Tips for Creating a Sense of Community for Distance Learners, 10 Major Technology Trends in Education, and 10 Tech Skills Every Educator should Have, combined into the following checklist.
     I'm still working on the timeline for parts of this. I think some of them will integrate better than others and I will probably learn that as I go.

1   Memorable introduction to course material.
2   Have students create own spces for learning.
3   Interact in different digital spaces - become familiar with a variety.
4   Investigate ways to provide additional mechanism for learning.
5   Utilize video in lessons.
6   Utilize audio in lessons.
7   Don't just supply content, connect the lesson.
8   Allow time for students to explore on their own.
9   State clear expectations. Rubrics are great
10   Investigate community stats on access to devices/internet
11   Online portfolios for class presentations and homework
12   What applications can be used on mobile devices and on desktops - limit homework?
13   Encourage students to utilize different tools for different tasks
14   Learn more about digital footprint
15   Investigate options for online learning for different levels of students and types of learners
16   Investigate the role of gaming in education - how can it be used as a vehicle for learning?
17   Role of social media in school - Google Apps, facebook, twitter, instagram
18   What devices are most common in schools? Per students and per teachers
19   Search the web efficiently
20 x Mastering Office and Word Processing
21   Be willing to learn new technology
22   Connect with social media - twitter, instagram, pinterest, goodreads, podcasting, videocasting
23   Share and collaborate via youtube and blogging
24   Learn more about the cloud, skydrive, pearltrees, dropbox
25   Learn about digital citizenship
26   Serve as the model for establishing the societal norm for behaviors and actions in the digital world
27   Learn more about cyber bullying
     All that said, apparently I should add learning how to import a table into a blogger post. For now, we will leave it at that, since this is about a week late, anyway. Thank you!!

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