Saturday, October 27, 2012

Blog 10: Critical Thinking


Even though I am not a classroom teacher, I do teach critical thinking skills to students who visit the media center. One of the biggest skills I teach is finding credible sources when students are conducting research. Students must be able to understand why a particular source is a good choice for them and if the source contains accurate information. This skill is important because everyone will use it in his or her lives someday. Being able to think critically about things allows someone to make a judgment call or dig deeper into the meaning of something important to them. One thing I would like to work on more with this skill is getting students more involved and practicing this skill in the media center. I do not have many teachers sign up for a class about this skill. I typically am working one on one with students who happen to come to the media center for research. So, trying to get teacher buy in is something I am constantly working on. Also, finding good lessons to teach these skills can be a challenge sometimes. I would like to have a good resource of lessons for myself. Any thoughts about good lessons?

Saturday, October 20, 2012

Blog 9: Telecommunication Projects


When I think of telecommunications, I think of people using technology to communicate with one another. The most common type that I think of is video conferencing, however, I believe it applies to any type of communication made with technology. Here are some projects I have found that could possibly be used with students in my school.

Where in Pennsylvania
This is actually a project I cam across while searching for examples for my project. In this project schools from different areas within a state or county learn about each other’s region through telecommunications and research. Students work together as a class to create a presentation about their city or region without giving an exact location. They present their presentation using video conferencing software to another school and the other school has to guess what region or city they are talking about. At the end of the presentation and searching the exact location is reveled to the other school through a videoconference. To learn more about this project visit:


Down the Drain
In this project students collect date about the usage of water amongst their friends and families. Students will work together to find out the average amount of water a person uses and then compares that to other people around the world. Through this website, teachers and students can submit their data and then compare their results with other classes around the world. A discussion board can also be found on the site.


The Great Bean Race
Classrooms from different countries compete with each other to grow the tallest bean plant. They create  a controlled experiment to try and grow a bean plant. Classrooms communicate with one another through emails. At the end of the race the winner is announced to everyone. This particular site has many different kid friendly and safe projects dealing with telecommunications.


Sunday, October 14, 2012

Blog 8: eLearning


Being a student in the IDD program at UGA has allowed me to become more familiar with eLearning. All throughout my school years and undergraduate years at college, I never really experienced the eLearning setting. Everything I did was face-to-face and if technology was used in the lesson, it was not true eLearning. In chapter 8 Egbert discusses how with eLearning the teacher and the students have to understand the differences between traditional formats of teaching and eLearning styles. She mentions that eLearning is not just moving a traditional format into a new medium. I think often, teachers who are not familiar with eLearning practice that method simply because they have not educated themselves what a true eLearning environment is. An eLearning environment is student-centered, so I also think teachers have a hard time giving that much responsibility to their students, including myself at times. However, we are living in a digital age and our students are growing up understanding technology better than us, so we need to be practicing this type of teaching. One point I thought was interesting from this chapter was mentioned by Setzer and Greene (2005); “High-poverty districts are among the most ardent supporters of using eLearning to provide services that the district cannot otherwise afford to provide to students”. After participating in eLearning courses for my graduate degree and reading about this style of learning, I can see how this situation can be more affordable. Not only can it be more affordable, but I think it is also more effective in those situations. From my experience, many times, students who come from poverty, have a hard time focusing in the classroom and completing assignments. I think eLearning is a great solution to get them more involved and make the learning more about them.

Sunday, October 7, 2012

Blog 7: Communication


Communication is very important when it comes to collaboration. As a media specialist it is very important for me to collaborate with the teachers to understand where their students are and need to go in their learning. I am able to support the classroom teacher with classes I offer and resources they can use in the classroom if we are able to communicate effectively. This tends to be a challenge many times to be able to sit down in collaborative meetings with the teachers since I do not have a clerk in the media center. I tend to have to be creative when it comes to communicating with the teachers. Many times I have to collaborate through email, in passing or while eating lunch with teachers. This seems to work okay for the most part; however, I wish that I were able to be able to truly collaborate through meetings every week with the teachers.

Not only is it important for teachers to collaborate with one another, but also it is important for students to have an opportunity to practice collaboration skills amongst each other. For my project this semester, the students have an opportunity to work together and collaborate with one another on their projects. They are able to practice these skills by researching together and discussing the best way to depict their Native American tribe through Photo Story. While reading I thought it was interesting how Egbert described cooperation and collaboration as different terms. She (2009) stated, “cooperation generally implies that students have separate roles in a structured task and pool their data to a specific end, whereas collaboration means that students work together in different ways from the planning stage on” (p. 69). I have never really thought of the two as different terms, but this makes since. The students I am working with will be practicing collaboration and not cooperation for this particular project.  However in future projects it is just as important to practice cooperation skills, so this is something I would like to revisit one day.