This document discusses using technology to drive differentiated instruction in the classroom. It begins by introducing Vicki Davis, the teacher, and providing links to online resources. It then discusses using an educational network, wiki, personal learning networks, audio/video creation, and global collaboration to engage students with different learning styles. Specific tools that support different styles are outlined for each category. The focus is on giving students choice and voice through various technological means.
4. Included in
The World is Flat v3
Thomas Friedman
Taking IT Global
Collaborative
Project Contest
First Place 2007
ISTE SIGTel
Online Learning
Award Winner 2007
Included in
Grown Up Digital
By Don Tapscott
6. Revigator
“Restores lost element of
radio-activity. Creates
cellular energy and
removes cellular
poisons.”
“Treats and cures arthritis,
flatulence, senility, and
poisoning.”
17. Learning capital
• Created when you pilot or implement new
technology programs.
• Invest in people who can and will teach
others to simulate vicarious learning
(opinion leaders.)
18. “ Rather than dealing
with each technology in isolation, we
would do better to take an ecological
approach, thinking about the
interrelationships among different
communication technologies, the
culture communities… the activities
they support.”
Confronting the Challenges of Participatory
Culture, McArthur Report
27. The Classroom Car
Assembling My Class Framework
X
Social Student Personal
Learning Network
Educational Network Wiki
(Ning & Blogging) (iGoogle)
Audio File creation Video creation Global collaboration
28. Different = Different iated
Instruction
Our
3/23/2010 – Licensed Istock Photo
Classrooms
Vicki A Davis, Cool Cat Teacher -
http://coolcatteacher.blogspot.com
67
38. c. Links to Class Websites
Student PLN’s Include
3. Personal a. Their List (Remember the Milk)
b. Class Calendar (Google Cal)
Learning c. Links to Class Websites
Network (PLN)
39. d. Email
Student PLN’s Include
3. Personal a. Their List (Remember the Milk)
b. Class Calendar (Google Cal)
Learning c. Links to Class Websites
d. Email
Network (PLN)
40. e. Google Reader
Student PLN’s Include
3. Personal a. Their List (Remember the Milk)
b. Class Calendar (Google Cal)
Learning c. Links to Class Websites
d. Email
e. Google Reader (RSS reader)
Network (PLN) • Blogs
• Wiki changes
42. ISTE Nets™ Standards
4. Technology communications tools
Students use telecommunications to
collaborate, publish, and interact with peers,
experts, and other audiences.
Students use a variety of media and formats to
communicate information and ideas effectively
to multiple audiences.
6. Collaborate Globally
43. Audience is Important
• “Technology creates opportunities for
students to do meaningful work that has value
outside school, receive feedback on their
work, and experience the rewards of
publication or exhibition.”
Peck & Dorricott, 1994
http://caret.iste.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=evi
dence&answerID=9&words=audience
44. 6. Collaborate
Globally Phase one - Intra-connection
(within your own class)
Phase two - Inter-connection
Flattening (within school/ district)
your Phase three - Managed global
connection
classroom
Phase four - Student to Student
(With Teacher Management)
Phase five - Student to Student
(with Student Management)
57. Assembling the Framework
•How to Hyperlink
•How to Embed
•Digital Citizenship
•Rules for Use
•Automated Monitoring
•Leadership
•Self-Organization
•Empowerment
58. The Classroom Car
1 The Tools
(Framework)
2
Learning Styles
78. Digital
Storytelling •Script Writer
•Call Sheets
•Production
Schedule
•Asst Director
79. Digital
Storytelling •Script Writer
•Call Sheets
•Production
Schedule
•Asst Director
•Scene Scout
•Scene set up
•Storyboarding
80. Digital
Storytelling •Script Writer
•Call Sheets
•Production
Schedule
•Asst Director
•Scene Scout
•Scene set up
•Storyboarding
•Camera
•Editing
•Lighting
•Storyboarding
81. Digital
Storytelling •Script Writer
•Call Sheets
•Production
Schedule
•Asst Director
•Scene Scout
•Scene set up
•Storyboarding
•Acting •Camera
•Presenting •Editing
•Lighting •Lighting
•Flow & •Storyboarding
movement
82. Digital
Storytelling •Script Writer
•Call Sheets
•Production
Schedule
•Asst Director
•Scene Scout
•Audio Editing •Scene set up
•Music Selection •Storyboarding
•Sound Capture
•Acting •Camera
•Presenting •Editing
•Lighting •Lighting
•Flow & •Storyboarding
movement
83. Digital
Storytelling •Script Writer
•Acting •Call Sheets
•Directing •Production
•Movie Ideas Schedule
•Vision Casting •Asst Director
•Scene Scout
•Audio Editing •Scene set up
•Music Selection •Storyboarding
•Sound Capture
•Acting •Camera
•Presenting •Editing
•Lighting •Lighting
•Flow & •Storyboarding
movement
84. Digital
Storytelling •Reflecting •Script Writer
•Status Reporting
•Journal
process
•Acting •Ideas •Call Sheets
•Directing •Production
•Movie Ideas Schedule
•Vision Casting •Asst Director
•Scene Scout
•Audio Editing •Scene set up
•Music Selection •Storyboarding
•Sound Capture
•Acting •Camera
•Presenting •Editing
•Lighting •Lighting
•Flow & •Storyboarding
movement
85. Voice Thread
quick project •Write comment
•Reflections
•Social aspects •Uploading
•AUDIENCE! photos
•Organizing
presentation
•Nature/map
•Audio related photos
•Music •Opinions on such
topics
•Posing •Photography
86. The Classroom Car
1 The Tools
(Framework)
2
Learning Styles
3 Interests
87.
88. The Classroom Car
•Hobbies
•Music
•Theater
•Sports
•Poetry
•Arts
•Public Speaking
•Reading
•Academics
•Themes!
•“Causes”
3 Interests
89. Personal Interest Projects
Deep Research “Invention”
projects projects
(proposed by
student)
Dramatic
Backchannels
Projects
Opinion
Oral Debates
“voice”
w/ follow up
opportunities
90. The Classroom Car
1 The Tools
(Framework)
4 Readiness 2
Level Learning Styles
3 Interests
91. Readiness Level in Subject
More ways to
excel past
the “100”
Not More
quite Ready than
Ready During projects Ready
spend 1:1 time Specific Rubrics Mentors for others
daily w/ student
Awards
(Hall of Fame)
Sit beside Self Track Rubrics
Competitions w/
other classrooms
Over the Shoulder
Make them “cool”
Check off rubric and Verbal
by teaching cool
items with student Reporting to
stuff
Teacher Daily
92. The Classroom Car
1 The Tools
(Framework)
4 Readiness
5 Content 2
Level Learning Styles
3 Interests
93. Content
• Classtools.net
Facts / Dates / • Flashcard Exchange
Timelines/ Events / • Group document creation on
Google Docs, Backchannels,
Definitions Group Notebooks
Details / • Wiki Group Projects
• Link sharing (Diigo)
Significant Individual • Creation of a Google Notebook
• Opinion Question Blog Posts
• Role Playing
Events • Video search and embedding
• Interviews of people who
experienced it. (Video)
94. The Classroom Car
1 The Tools
(Framework)
4 Readiness
5 Content 2
Level Learning Styles
6 Learning
Environment
3 Interests
(essential link)
95. “I never
teach my
pupils,
I only
provide the
conditions in
which they
can learn"
Albert Einstein
3/23/2010
Vicki A Davis, Cool Cat Teacher -
135
http://coolcatteacher.blogspot.com
96. Cooperative Groups Learning Centers
• Harnesses power of all • Equipped workstation Pit Crew
• Each has their own ID (and e-mail) (webcam, audio, headsets)
• Group cooperation, individual • Specialty centers Pit Crew
contribution (scanner, digital film, tripod)
Choice Boards Class Rules
• Wiki Assignments with choices
• Discuss Netiquette
• Question of the week with choice of
text response (blog post), audio • Student Contribution
response (podcast) or video • Safety
response (digital storytelling) • Administrative Support for Rule
Breaking Pit Crew
Materials/ Supplies/
Resources
• Functional Equipment Pit Crew
• Textbook Pit Crew
• Consistent ACCESS Pit Crew
• Knowledgeable Teacher
Learning Environment
97. The Classroom Car
1 The Tools
(Framework)
Process
7 (engine)
4 Readiness
5 Content 2
Level Learning Styles
6 Learning
Environment
3 Interests
(essential link)
99. Compare & Contrast
• Blog post question
• Wiki assignment (create a template)
• Photos on voice thread
w/ response
• Venn Diagram on
classtools.net
101. Apply
• Digital photos
• Digital storytelling
• Role playing
• A teaching wiki with
student demonstrations
and explanations
of how to complete
task.
102. Synthesize & Summarize
• Microblogging (twitter)
• Group backchannel (instant assessment)
• Reflections
• Group wikis
116. What does the best education
in the world look like?
“What Makes Finnish Kids So Smart”
The Wall Street Journal
By ELLEN GAMERMAN
February 2008
3/23/2010 http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB120425355065601997.html
Vicki A Davis, Cool Cat Teacher - 158
http://coolcatteacher.blogspot.com
119. Process
Start
management Curricular
Involvement
blogging
Plan Next
Teach how to
Step
Embed video
Weekly blog
Monitoring Post with research
Peer review Admin
involvment
Weekly Comments
voting
Sample Teacher Flow Chart for embedding the framework
Today we’re going to talk about Driving Educational Excellence with TechnologyDifferentiated Instruction and Assessment with Technology Vicki Davis 5013 Spotlight Take a look at learning styles and today's most current Web 2.0 tools to understand what differentiation looks like in a technology enhanced classroom. Learn about the classroom structure that will reach all learners. Madera Wyndham Hotel
Press F5 or enter presentation mode to view the pollIf you like, you can use this slide as a template for your own voting slides. You might use a slide like this if you feel your audience would benefit from the picture showing a text message on a phone.
Classroom teacher. Some people know me as
, ”poster child for the beginner” Like my youngest son, who has just learned to read, I’m a relative newcomer to these technologies. In November 2005, I attended the
Georgia Educators Technology Conference in Atlanta with a commission from my curriculum director to bring technologies back to my classroom that would enable me to betterfacilitiate
Research based best practices such as
Authentic assessment
Cooperative Learning and
Project based learning. I must admit, I felt a little like this (pause)
Pause for them to get it.
And that is what I suggest for you to do today. Your assignment for this webinar today is to come up with your “Big Three” at the end of the webinar. Pick three things – start there!
In the 1920’s and 30’s radioactivity was “all the rage” and everyone assumed because springwater was radioactive that it must be good for you – so here comes the revigator. This revigator cured all kinds of things including arthritis, flatulence, senility, and poisoning. Over 200,000 people bought this clay pot lined with radioactive clay.
However when a team of researchers studied this, they found toxic levels of many chemicals including arsenic and lead from the pure lead spout!
But understand this – there is only one person you can control in your district and that person, my friends is YOU!
But, remember just as this child is climbing a very high rock climbing wall – that there are safe ways to do what some consider dangerous. This is being done. Get past the fear and learn vicariously through others by reading their blogs and watching their videos at the k12 online conference to let them prove it to you. If you’re a technology phobic person remember that you become like who you hang around – start letting yourself learn from what others are doing to move forward your creativity – you may also find that you’ll save money!
The technology misconception is that it is not about the technology.
The technology misconception is that it is not about the technology.
Programs like the 23 things are SO effective for teachers and librarians because it allows them to embed their professional development. Take time during the week.
Instead your professional development should be in small succulent bites – on a weekly basis through these global connections – reading our RSS reader. In fact,
Our professional development looks like this – we put so much into 10 hours that they cannot digest it all. It is too much and overloads them.
So, I embed my learning and take 15 minutes 2-3 times a week to learn and explore new technologies and this, has been the thing that has led to the complete transformation of my classroom! But you don’t have time – you say.
There is too much information and you need to rely on your friends as your filter. Additionally, this isn’t just about lifelong learning but about lifelong renewal – we have to keep relearning or we FORGET!! As Socrates said, “we lose the remembrance of them.” Additionally,
The Flat Classroom project and the
Horizon Projects which have linked
The technology misconception is that it is not about the technology.
We don’t teach blogging, wikis, podcasting for their sake, but for what they let us do.
We’re on a journey. However, we need to know that
In that movie, the “precious” ring was evil. In our cases, we must know that
most technologies are morality-neutral. It is how you use them that determines its use.
How many of you think cupcakes are good! Are they?
What about when it is used to hurt someone’s feelings?
Or how about when a compulsion to eat them makes a person obese? What do we do?
Ban cupcakes? That is preposterous! We teach people to be kind and to use cupcakes in good ways? Shouldn’t we do the same thing with?
Cell phones
Cell phones
Cell phones
We don’t ban scissors and they could kill someone! We teach kids not to run with them! To use them well and our schools are full of other dangerous weapons such as
Pens, pencils, and even the human hand. Just thinking of that, they are completely full of the most dangerous weapon ever invented…
Man. Men, women, boys, and girls can do irreparable harm, and yet we don’t ban humans. Instead, we teach the humans in our school out to behave appropriately. That is what we do in school and
But the question remains, why do we need to change? My husband always says that the only people who like change are babies with dirty diapers and even then, they cry the whole time! (click on the baby for the Movie.)
Some people feel like this when considering merging their classrooms with another. But you don’t get there overnight. As you take a look at what I’m sharing with you today, remember this…
Just remember, the lesson of the watermelon as you consider today’s menu. How do you eat a watermelon?
If you eat it whole, you’ll choke.
No, the way you eat a watermelon is one bit at a time.
And that is what I suggest for you to do today. Your assignment for this webinar today is to come up with your “Big Three” at the end of the webinar. Pick three things – start there!
The technology misconception is that it is not about the technology.
People in our society are counting the cost of everything, so when we implement technology, we’d better make sure it is.
That the things we used in school are efficient, effective, and transport us to a better education for our kids.
That the things we used in school are efficient, effective, and transport us to a better education for our kids.
That the things we used in school are efficient, effective, and transport us to a better education for our kids.
We can implement technology but it better be for a purpose and not just to look cute, so today we’re going to talk about technology driven differentiation and the other things to make our schools successful.
The technology misconception is that it is not about the technology.
The successful are increasingly individuals who take risks, are good at what they do, and are persistent. This is what we need to create in our classrooms.
This is what our student must be. But what must our teachers be?
I’d like to ask you if Helen Keller were in your school today, would she become Helen Keller? It took one of the greatest teacherpreneurs of all time, Anne Sullivan, to reach and unlock this student!
We can implement technology but it better be for a purpose and not just to look cute, so today we’re going to talk about technology driven differentiation and the other things to make our schools successful, first we’ll talk about the classroom and then a few remarks about administration, which I call the “pit crew”
Tools, learning styles, interests, readiness, content, process and environment as it relates to technology that will make our schools more efficient and justify what we are doing with technology.
So, today in pursuit of excellence driven education, we’re going to assemble the classroom car as we differentiate with technology.
So, today in pursuit of excellence driven education, we’re going to assemble the classroom car as we differentiate with technology.
This is what our student must be. But what must our teachers be?
Please share what you’re doing while I share what we’re doing to network educationally at our school this year.Private Ning – My students and I.School Wide Ning – parents, students teachers – also private.Public Nings for
Some sort of field of dreams. Some states are building networks for their teachers and finding that the teachers are rebelling and don’t want to go there. In fact, I know of one organization that build a ntework for their IT directors and the IT directors built their own and refused to let the administrators in! Instead,
Elementary schools use private tools (free) tools like think.com to create private spaces for students to network all over the world. Cheryl Oakes from Maine works with this school and tells me she has enjoyed think.com for some time. In fact, my good friend Cheryl couldn’t be here tonight because she’s on Seedlings Bit By Bit on Edtechtalk.com right now – I hope that after tonight, you’ll listen to her new show at www.edtechtalk.com
Every course has a launch page on the wiki – the Google cal is embedded there. Also, if you paste hyperlinks into the description, the hyperlinks are live as well, but it has many more features as well.
For me, my RSS reader includes so much more than just learning but life management – in many ways it has evolved into a PLM – “personal life manager!”
For me, my RSS reader includes so much more than just learning but life management – in many ways it has evolved into a PLM – “personal life manager!”
So, the students in 9th grades and up haveigoogle pages, and after adding my google calendar to their Google Calendar, they can use the igoogle widget to show what the work is for that day (they can just show one class.) Also, when you do this, if you type in the hyperlink, they can just click from their igoogle widget to get to the assignment for the day. You can print lovely copies of your lesson plans for a manual or book if you have one. And if you need to move things around, you just click and drag it. Also,
For me, my RSS reader includes so much more than just learning but life management – in many ways it has evolved into a PLM – “personal life manager!”
For me, my RSS reader includes so much more than just learning but life management – in many ways it has evolved into a PLM – “personal life manager!”
For me, my RSS reader includes so much more than just learning but life management – in many ways it has evolved into a PLM – “personal life manager!”
Digiteen Island
So, today in pursuit of excellence driven education, we’re going to assemble the classroom car as we differentiate with technology.
So, today in pursuit of excellence driven education, we’re going to assemble the classroom car as we differentiate with technology.
So, today in pursuit of excellence driven education, we’re going to assemble the classroom car as we differentiate with technology.
So, today in pursuit of excellence driven education, we’re going to assemble the classroom car as we differentiate with technology.
So, today in pursuit of excellence driven education, we’re going to assemble the classroom car as we differentiate with technology.
Albert Einstein, a great mind and great teacher focused not on the facts of his textbook or theories but on the classroom environment and making it one in which students can learn.
So, today in pursuit of excellence driven education, we’re going to assemble the classroom car as we differentiate with technology.
Give students a starting point – all of your work must have a “home page” – one place to start online each day! Portal to the world.
So, today in pursuit of excellence driven education, we’re going to assemble the classroom car as we differentiate with technology.
If we look at arguably the best education system in the world, the Finnish teachers pick books and customize lessons as they shape students to national standards. "In most countries, education feels like a car factory. In Finland, the teachers are the entrepreneurs," says Mr. Schleicher, of the Paris-based OECD, which began the international student test in 2000.
Photo: - Today we’re talking about Teacherpreneurship to an audience of people I would consider teacherpreneurs. I’ve seen your videos and this is who you are, although you may not know it!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Loutherbourg-Spanish_Armada.jpg – Wikimedia Commons – Teacherpreneurs are to the floundering educational system what the English were to the spanish armada – the agile, deal creators and makers. Teachers must be agile, able to customize their environment to the students they teach.
We’ll start off talking about the classroom and then make a few points for administrators..
Tools, learning styles, interests, readiness, content, process and environment as it relates to technology that will make our schools more efficient and justify what we are doing with technology.
“Every day is a new day to a wise man.” Start now.
Do the things that sit at hand like Thomas Carlyle said. “Our job is not to see what lies dimly at a distance, but to do what lies clearly at hand.” Investigate your next three things.
So, when I came back to Camilla, I started using wikis with my students immediately and sat down in my classroom to begin blogging. I turned to a student and said, “I have to create a blog and I have to name the thing – what should I name it?” The students sitting there said, “Well, Mrs. Vicki, you’re cool and we’re the wildcats, so, why don’t you call it the cool Cat teacher blog
And that is what I suggest for you to do today. Your assignment for this webinar today is to come up with your “Big Three” at the end of the webinar. Pick three things – start there!