Sunday, June 7, 2015

Thing 30: Final Reflections & What’s Next?

Strangely, I learned how important it is for me to teach technology skills in general, not these skills specifically.  This year, with third- through sixth-grade classes, I taught the students to create their bibliography or citation list by copying and pasting.  There were lots of problems with just having the students log on because they do it so infrequently.  The labs usually have the computers on and set to the AIS or typing program that they are going to use.  You would have thought that I was a wizard when I taught the classes about CTRL-C, CTRL-X, and CTRL-V.  They were absolutely amazed!  It is such a simple thing and one that many schools can assume that their students already know.  They LOVED learning it and it will serve them well for years to come.  With the sixth graders, I tried to use GoogleDocs and GoogleSlides to give them a taste of the future.  They were excited, but the logging in was again a huge hurdle.  Having to enter "@schoharie.k12.ny.us" doesn't seem like such a big deal, but it really was.  I have a SMARTboard, but my computer doesn't look exactly like either the laptops or the Chromebooks, and that is a larger problem than you would expect.

After the SLO post-tests were done this year, I made new lessons for grades 1-3.  We used computer resources so that I could remind the students that they have access to these 24/7/365 from any device with web access.  The students loved it.  They were very engaged and they were using the skills that they had learned in the earlier classes to find and locate information.  I sent every one of them home with a reminder of how to access the resource they used (database or ebooks).  Hopefully some of the students will use the eResources over the summer.

I have been telling my colleagues about tools that I think that they could use.  I should spend time before school starts in the fall making a catalog of sorts of useful tools.  I really hope to create a Symbaloo for my DestinyQuest home page since my GoogleSite won't load there.

I admit that I didn't do a good job at expanding my Personal Learning Network or making new professional connections.  Perhaps there should be a specific thing next year to connect with another participant somehow.

Time management is always one of the biggest challenges.  I would love it if the "workshop" started earlier in the school year.  Personally, mid-November and December are a blur and I am recovering in January.  I would love to get more done earlier so that I could apply more to my classroom.  My other biggest challenge is that my right wrist was injured when I took a bad fall.  My sisters have been trying to type for my posts for me over the last few weeks.  I even tried out my phone's microphone feature to dictate one of my posts.  It was somewhat successful, but some of the words that they substituted for the words I used were incredible.  Still, a dictation tool is worth investigating in case of future injuries for me or my students.  

I didn't have trouble with any of the Things in particular.

This entire process emphasized the problems that my district has with technology.  Our technology is old  and we don't have much.  The students don't all have devices, nor do they have adequate web access.  

I like learning this way, but I wish that we could front-load the Things so that when we have time we could work instead of waiting for new things to come along.  I'm very glad for this opportunity and I hope that we will have the opportunity in the future because there are so few technology-related PD opportunities, in my district in particular.  So many are so expensive or they are held right after the traditional school day.  Schoharie is 30+ minutes from most of the region, so a class that starts right after school requires us to leave early!    I hope to get more people in my building involved if it is held next year.  I am also on the PD committee and hope to be a mentor-coordinator, so I should have a lot of opportunities to advertise the program.  Assuming the 100 PD hours for everyone is a done deal, I think the program will get much more popular.  I hope that SLS's will still let people who have already participated continue because we get so much out of it.

Are you ready for next year, Polly?!

Thing 29: Student Response Tools

Over the last week, I have gradually been examining the student response tools to explore.  I read the article on 5 Fantastic, Fast, Formative Assessment Tools.  I couldn't believe that a high school teacher would fall for two students claiming that it was easy to direct her actions with the entire class.  Wow!  Has she ever heard of peer pressure?!  Of course, the students would claim that they understood.  Who wants to be the "dummy" who doesn't get it?

Lacking the 1:1 technology to use these methods, I use more traditional formative assessments.  I explain, I demonstrate, I have EVERY student answer at least one question successfully, then they do it themselves to demonstrate what they have learned before we move on to the next concept.

I need to work more over the summer to investigate these tools, but here are some comments on what I learned and saw:

  • Flipgrid -neat idea, but death by subscription costs.  I'm not sure that the reward is worth the cost.  Also, what will we record the students on?  We only have one video camera in the school.  The students, by and large, do not have phones, nor are they supposed to bring them to the elementary school if they have them.  The teachers and staff are not supposed to use their phones in the presence of the students.  Finally, what time are we going to have to record videos?  With students coming to the library less than 30 class periods a year, I'm not using days of teaching time to record videos.  Still, I'll keep the name in case a teacher is interested.
  • Padlet, Primary Wall, and TodaysMeet - I suppose I could use one of these to track why the students came to the library on a pass, but that would require dedicating a computer to it.  That seems to be a waste of resources when a pad of paper could work just as well.  I'm not teaching in a 1:1 environment, so the kids can't use it during the average class.  I'm also not sure what is to be gained from this that a Google Doc or a Google Form  or a Wiki couldn't do.  Is is just the neat backgrounds on Padlet and Primary Wall?  Primary Wall in particular was SLOW!  The lack of security is huge! 
  • Plickers and SeeSaw are iOS apps, so I can't use them at home or at school.  I have an Android phone and school has neither Android nor iOS devices (except for a VERY small number in one or two SpEd rooms).  Are there comparable Google Apps???  I'd LOVE to have option of a Plickers-type app, but I would need permission to use my phone in view of the class.
  • AnswerGarden -looks cool, but I don't think that there is any really valid information gained by using it.  It seems like a conference tool so that you can show cool-looking results.
  • GoogleForms -great tool.  I wish I could use it more than I do.  I will be trying out Flubaroo.  Now I wish that there was a more-useful add-on for aggregating non-assessment data.  I use Google Forms to learn about student reading interests so that I can do a better job of purchasing what students want and presenting books that they might be interested in during book talks.  They like having a voice in the process.  I also use it to target books to reluctant readers.
  • RemindChat - I can't see myself using this.  
I plan to read articles from More to Explore during the coming months.

I think that Formative Assessment is VERY important.  In my ungraded, library classes, I do more formative than summative assessment.

Thing 28: Emerging Tech: Scanning the Horizon


Thing 28 :  Emerging Tech: Scanning The Horizons

First, I read the New Media Consortium Horizons reports.  I read the K-12 report in which they said that schools should be providing ways for students to continue to engage in learning activities, both formal and non-formal, beyond the traditional school day. I think that most schools, including my own, already do this because we offer ebooks, databases, and web links, not to mention books, to help our students continue learning beyond the school day. These tools are generally available 24/7/365. The reports also say that there is going to be a shift in deep learning approaches and that you need to connect the curriculum with real life and have the students brainstorm and implement solutions to pressing local and global problems. I can see this working in grades 6 through 12, maybe grades 5 through 12, but not in the earlier grades.  These students are too young, they don't know how to read and write, add and subtract, and they don't know how to sit still or think critically.

The reports talk about using hybrid learning designs which enable students to use the school day for group work and project based activities while using the network to access reading videos and other learning materials on their own time.  This leverages the best of both environments.  There are many problems with this, first of all not all students are willing or able to put in the time after school especially in high poverty areas. Students are also involved in other things after the school day. Of course, sports are always a common conflict as are jobs and family responsibilities for older students. Its Little League time now and the students go to practice right after school.  But, the biggest problem is that there is little or no broadband access in many places in the state and in the country.  Even many of our teachers, who live in our community, don't have broadband because Time Warner doesn't really service their area. Time Warner will run lines to the area at the customer's expense but the high cost, like $10,000, often requires them to ask their neighbors to help shoulder the expense.  Such costs are not really realistic for much of America.  Many Public Libraries have a very limited number of hours and are not within walking distance for most of the children, including those in our district.  For these reasons, the idea of the students doing readings, watching videos, and using websites at home on their own time is just not feasible in the environment I work in.  I can see that there are environments and particular classes where it might be feasible, but that is not across the board. 

They also discuss how schools need to enable students to move from one learning activity to another more organically by having a learning design that better connects each class and set of subject matter to each other. The first idea of allowing students to move more organically is what the Montessori approach is all about.  Personally, I'm very interested in that approach, but there certainly are limitations to following the Montessori method and trying to fit it into a public school setting.  Connecting learning activities between classes is very doable I think for elementary schools in general.  In middle schools, they may be able to do more connecting between subjects but I think it becomes very difficult.  In high school, the curriculum and skills that we expect to be taught in math and science do not necessarily relate to each other and do not necessarily relate well to the goals of other subject matter like English, Social Studies, Technology, Foreign Language, etc.  I think that it would be fairly doable for high school English and Social Studies to work more collaboratively but that require time for those teachers to do so which is not always built into the average teachers day.

The reports then discuss incorporating real life experiences, technology, and tools that are familiar to students, and interactions with community members into the learning opportunities. I think that may be an ideal, but I don't know if it was possible. Regarding technology in schools that are already familiar to students, we have a lot of students who are not familiar with much technology beyond the video game consoles.  Most community members are at work and not available to come in during the school day. The article talks about personalized learning where students have a say, where learning is self-directed in group-based learning that can be designed around each learner’s goals.  This makes me think about one particular student who has no goals.  Despite my having a conversation with her at least monthly, she says that she's not going to graduate from high school, she's never getting a job, doesn't need to graduate or do well in school, because she's not going to college.  She is going to stay home like her mother.  I don't think she understands the dire financial straits her family is in but, of course, I cannot bring that up to her.  The other kids try hard to convince her that she should work hard.  They let her know she should work hard to do well in high school so she can get to go to a good college.  They tell her to go to a good college so she can get a good job.  We, the teachers and other students, just not getting through to her and have not been able to counter her family situation.  Frankly when someone has given up at 9 or 10 years old, despite attempts by others around you, I doubt she's ever going to have goals.  We also have students in elementary school, who said that they don't need to know how to read because they are going to be farmers.  We explain that you need to know how to read so that you feed the right food to your animals or plant seeds that you want planted.  I would have to say that the idea that all of our students have goals of being surgeons or lawyers is unrealistic. Many students just don't have role models to support of life goals like that.

In that same section, it talks about using more adaptive learning enabled by intervention-focused machine intelligence that interprets data about how a student is learning and responds by changing the learning environment to meet their needs.  Supposedly, we already have this in the NWEA and i-Ready programs that our school has used or is using.  They claim to provide this kind of service but it’s fake.  When all the program requires students to do is to click a button making a choice of a, b, c, or d, they just click a button.  They may not even think about what they are clicking.  We had kids do their “hour” test in 10 minutes because they just go click, click, click.  You make a student retake the test, you can make him wait longer in between clicks, but you can’t make him think.  In the final analysis, there is a 25 percent chance of getting any question correct.  These kind of programs often make people think that students have skills that they've not really mastered.  We have had special education students, who are barely verbal or literate, using these computerized learning programs and the reports act as if they are above grade level on everything, when, in reality, they can’t spell their last name!

Another one of the difficult challenges that they mentioned was complex thinking and communication.  The author says that communication skills must also be mastered for complex thinking to be applied in profound ways.  The article says that the most effective leaders are outstanding communicators with a high level of social intelligence.  Their capacity to connect with other people using technology to collaborate and leveraging data to support their ideas requires an ability to understand the bigger picture and make appeals that are based on logic, data, and instinct.  This requires us to use tools beyond technology.  You can't learn to be an effective communicator if you're only communicating with a computer.  You can't learn to have a high level of social intelligence if you're looking at your screen for long periods of time.  The traditional teaching methods of classroom discussion and small group work are much more effective in teaching people how to connect with other people, to care about what other people think and feel, than technology does.  So to me, this particular challenge is one of going beyond just using technology. Technology is sexy, attractive, and popular but not necessarily the best way to give all education. 

Finally they discussed increased privacy concerns.  They say that school leaders want to use data to improve learning outcomes but parents are apprehensive and suspicious about collecting data from K-12 students.  Of course, the parents are not apprehensive and suspicious about their school collecting, analyzing, and using data in house.  The problem is that there is a big push to use big data firms.  In order to try to keep student information unique to that student, the large data firms rely on student identifiers such as Social Security numbers, ID numbers, and names when this data is out on the Web. Recent events, like the IRS records being hacked, should have taught us that any information held in the cloud or on the web is hackable. Student data should not be on the hackable cloud or web-based technology.  The only way to make it un-hackable is to have it not connected and I think the parents’ concerns are very valid.  If people's personal information is in other people's hands when they are five years old, it could haunt them for their entire lives.  It could be used prevent them from getting job opportunities, ruining their political ambitions 40 years from now, not to mention of course ruining them financially.  It’s just insane to think that student data should be in the cloud and on the web.  There should be sufficient time for this data to be looked at in house, stored in house, not on a network.  If we have to go back to the old teacher gradebook, then let's go back to paper as an old paper grade book can be easily destroyed while electronic records and ones on the web are difficult, if not impossible, to destroy.

Next, I looked at Joyce Valenza’s Top Tech Trends, where I looked at the expanded version with infographic. The infographic was difficult for me to read; I guess it's too small. She talks about social media, that if it is blocked in your district or school, you should get it unblocked. I don't know how she expects that to happen.  If you have parental support to unblock it, perhaps it would work, but frankly I'm not risking my job just to see that 10 year old elementary school children can go on Twitter and Facebook.  It's just not that important to their education.

Number two is transparency is the new platform.  It is about using things like Google classroom to collaborate more with our students and teaching.  Again, the lack of appropriate technology and broadband service affects the ability to use these products.

I know that whoever is reading this has heard many times before but the technology at my school is terrible.  My computers were all cast offs from the state years ago.  Our laptop cart is does not have enough laptops on it anymore to serve an entire class and many of the keys are broken.  We do have a set of Chrome books, which are reasonably usable for upper grades, but try to put an entire class of first graders on Chrome books and the first 20 minutes will be spent trying to get the students logged on.  This results in a severe loss of teaching time. 

Valenza talked about crowdsourcing and crowdfunding which I have tried on DonorsChoose.  Perhaps I didn't write a sexy enough project, but I ended up giving half the money myself so that I could get the half that was donated by an anonymous donor.   These sites ask that you send photographs of the students using the materials that were purchased for the project, but I had a very difficult time getting parents to agree to let me use their kid’s photos on a web based site.  It maybe just my community but they're very afraid of what those pictures were going to be used for.  In the end, I only got parents to agree that photos of their kids could be taken with them looking down or away from the camera.   Crowdsourcing seems like an unrealistic way to fund our public schools. Do we really want to put the funding of our public schools to the whims of crowdfunding so the sexiest project with the prettiest children is funded instead of effective data driven projects in schools with the greatest needs?    

Number 5 is the 1:1 model or mobile device is the new computer lab.  It is great if you or the community has the money to go to 1:1.  We don't even have the money to allow each teacher have their own computer.  The average classroom teacher does not have a computer that is dedicated to their use and all the computers are both students and teacher use.  In the high school with the rooms being shared, that problem is much greater than in elementary school. 

Joyce Valenza says that librarians musts curate for mobile as well as desktop devices and scout out the best the emerging mobile tools.  Well, I have an Android phone. I can investigate Android apps, but we don't have any Android tablets in the school district.  We also don't have any I-pads unless the teachers are using their own.  There are not a lot of mobile apps being used in our school.

I do like online professional development opportunities such as this one, and I think that they are an important trend, but again for some of our teachers the lack of broadband service makes even this type of project difficult if not impossible.  One of the teachers in my school, who used to participate in cool tools, moved further out in Schoharie County and she doesn't have sufficient bandwidth at home to participate and her family situation is such that she can't stay at school until 5 or 6 o'clock at night.  Therefore she's just not participating this year but she is so interested that she is hoping that I will share everything with her.   

Regarding the discussion about the maker movement, I think it is a great one. I do have some of the more traditional maker movement supplies available in my library.   The tech person that we used to have did let students take apart computers to see how they work.  The demands of the school day are increasing, making the free time that the students have smaller and smaller and smaller.  Our sixth graders no longer have any recess. If they participate in band and choir and are in a regular foreign language, they generally do not have any study hall time whatsoever.  They tend to be in the library when they can convince their reading teacher to let them come down and get books in between the times when one of their classroom teachers is doing a project in the library.  The current testing and APPR standards are such that teachers, in general, are now scared, so free time is disappearing. Even 10 years ago, it would have been a fantastic idea, but the time and money to back it isn't there like it was 10 years ago.

I, also looked at 10 technologies that will change the world in the next ten years and What Does the Next-Generation School Library Look Like?  The 10 technologies article just re-emphasized the haves versus the have-nots to me.  It also made me question the efforts to end global warming when one man thinks that it is okay, and perhaps even admirable, to have 38 always-on connections and more than 50 Mbps of bandwidth.  Think about how much just that one man is contributing to the global warming and the land-fill crisis!  It boggles the mind.  The author also says that by 2035 (20 years, mind you) “robots could completely replace humans in the workforce.”  All I can say is GOD FORBID.  The author must be young and naïve.  I’m still not driving the flying car that the Jetsons promised me, nor are we wearing the disposable paper clothes that my sister was taught we would be wearing.  I’m sure that I will see huge technological jumps in the rest of my lifetime, like I went from my first computer, a Commodore Vic-20, which used a cassette tape for storage to my Samsung Galaxy Note 3 that has more power than a thousand Vic-20s!  But robots taking over the workforce will take a LOT longer than 20 years.  And, when and if, they do take over, it will probably be the end of the human race, as Isaac Asimov predicted in his mysteries.  As we isolate ourselves more and more and we eliminate our purpose for living, life will become meaningless.  The future that Julie Borst predicts is grim indeed.

Regarding the Next-Generation library, I fully understand the difference between the noise of engagement and the noise of socializing and making noise for the sake of making noise.  My library is not always quiet.  However, I try to teach my students that they need to think about people other than themselves and act accordingly.  There may be others making up tests in the library, trying to study for a test, trying to put the finishing touches on their report or essay, or trying to finish the chapter of the fantastic book that they are reading before recess is over, not to mention autistic children who cannot tolerate a lot of noise.  All student needs should be considered, not simply the students that will make your library look busy. 


Everyone agrees that the ability to use technology will be the key for the future success of all students.  The largest obstacle to success in our school is inadequate broadband service to many geographical areas.  Also the high cost of technology and its rapid obsolescence creates major issues for families, schools, and their teachers.   Because of the huge demands being made on teaching other subjects, it will be necessary for teachers to develop ways to incorporate it in the other curriculum.  Politically, schools need parents, private corporations, and government to recognize the obstacle that a lack of broadband service and the high cost of maintaining adequate technology present to much of America, especially when schools are operating under a 2% tax cap!