Showing posts with label googledocs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label googledocs. Show all posts

Monday, June 11, 2012

Thank you, Quebec Ministry of Education, for Beaucoup de cool student projects!

In Quebec, up until 2 years ago, all grade 11 students were required to produce, by the end of the year, a math project, called the Independent Assignment. It was to be based on their own interest, of course related to math somehow, and it was to be done mostly during class time, in 10 sessions, with guidance from the teacher. This was so that it would be good training on how to do a research project as well. (We were given some excellent scaffolding for implementing this.)

I griped and panicked about how I would fit these project sessions into my classes AND still cover everything on time, for this was pre-flip, when classes were all me, me, and more me yammering away. But I dutifully had my students do the project anyway for the first time in the school year 2009-2010. They pretty much all made powerpoints, which was fine. The projects were great, and even though they had taken up a lot of class time and energy, I found it was worthwhile having my students do something that interested or inspired them mathematically.

Then I went to ISTE in Denver, and I heard about all the bazillion other tools there are out there. And I heard a casual reference to something called "flipping the class" during a session about something called "Twitter." Hmmmm", I thought, "interesting," blissfully unaware that, in that moment, my entire world had just been rocked to the core.

Well, back to reality, the next year, Quebec dropped the project as a requirement, but I decided to keep doing it, partly because, I really wanted to have some PBL in my course, but also because I really wanted to try out some of the tools I had heard about. That year's projects were a tiny bit more varied, I think I had one or two videos and the rest powerpoints. It had still been a challenge to fit in the sessions. Plus I started flipping late in the year, when many of the projects were already well under way.

This past year was my first full year flipping. And just like that, there was zero issue about fitting in the sessions. Class time was all about what THEY were doing, not what I was saying! I could discuss with them about their topic, they could discuss with each other, show what they'd found, experiment....I even had a period at the beginning of the year that was all about investigating the various tools, which was inspired by Terie Engelbrect's brilliant blog, which I had found on Twitter. Yup. Rocked to the core.

Well, it's two years after the government started it all, and here is the latest batch of projects, just handed in after a year of working on them in and out of class. The variety alone is blowing me away - voicethreads, videos, glogs, googledocs, prezis, AND powerpoints! If, two years ago, in Denver, you had told me that my students would soon be producing these kinds of projects, uploading them to their blogs, and never mind the fact that I have a blog and I'm embedding the projects on it....I would have looked around and said "Me? You mean me?"

Most of these are embedded, but some you have to click on the link to see the actual project. Enjoy! I know I did, in fact, I have this math rap song stuck in my head now:

Arnold's rap video:


Brett's intro video to his project:
:
....and the guitar math voicethread:

Emilie's googledocs presentation:


Kaily and the End of the World:

Kaitlyn's stepdancing voicethread:


Katerina's sizes of infinity video....definitely channeling Vihart here! ;)

Laura's mathitecture glog:

Madison's origami video:



Olivia's snowboarding prezi:



Ricky's sizes of infinity slideshare:


Taylor's energy glog:


Melissa's hockey math:


Joey's drum math:


In my dreams

So now off they go to CEGEP, which is the Quebec equivalent to college. A small, selfish part of me hopes that at least one of these students will next year submit a project using one of these tools, or something equally cool, to an astonished professor, who will then ask:

"Who are you really, and what is this amazing thing you have done, and where on earth did you learn how to do this?"

And they will say, "Oh I had to pick a webtool from a googledocs list, and learn how to use it so I could embed it in my blog, for my math teacher, Mrs. McGoldrick."

The professor will eventually regain the ability to speak, then he/she will exclaim "BLOG? GOOGLEDOC? How have you come to know all these wondrous things?"

And then he/she will learn about all these wondrous things, from one of my students, who will get to be their professor's teacher, at least for a few minutes.

How cool would that be? Beaucoup de cool. Merci MELS!

Friday, February 3, 2012

Start with the students

Here's what I've been doing since my last post, wow, almost a month ago, just shows how productive I've been, if I do say so myself:
  • got student blogs going
  • got class blog set up, and all of their blogs are linked to it
  • tried out and LOVED in-class live collaborative editing using googledocs
  • fixed it so that during this live editing we can all see each others' names next to our cursors (instead of "anonymous user")
  • added students as googledocs contacts, in groups by course (that was how to do the above)
  • set up "form emailer" - so that as soon as kids submit something to the checklist, they will receive an email listing everything they checked off/said (got that from the script gallery at gdocs, my new favourite shopping place)
  • started using my gmail account finally - mainly because it's the only one my groovy new smartphone will allow me to look at for now
  • geogebra - made tons of new worksheets, including ones with sliders and conditional colouring
So now I have to post in more detail about all this, in case there is anyone out there who wants to know how to, or just see how all these things look and feel. That should take.....a while. But here goes. Starting with the blogs:

Student blogs and class blog:

Before I could set this up, I had to get a big picture. Like some sort of structure of the blogs, who do I want linked to whom, how would it look, how do I start....I got really hung up on that. Then my fabulous fellow online teacher Paul told us about how he did it with his history students, and it all became crystal clear. Start with the students. Have them create their own blogs first, if they don't already have one. This is just a sort of pictorial representation of how it all looks in my wee head:



More detail to come, but feel free to comment or give feedback, either right in the voicethread, or here!

Monday, September 19, 2011

Googledocs will you marry me?

First of all, a word about posting. I am not going to apologize for not posting in so long. The simple fact is that I haven't felt inspired to post until today. Yes, yes, I have been busy and tired etc but let's face it, that just doesn't cut it. The fact is that last year, I was always exhausted and busy but found the time to post anyway. I needed to. When you gotta write, you gotta write, am I right? And today, for the first time in a while, I feel that way again. I think it's because I have learned something, who knew? So here goes.

My ongoing affair with googledocs:

It is just unbelievable how much info I can keep track of with googledocs. And I did NOT have to get any training or spend huge amounts of time in order to get the payoff. I just follow the help instructions that come with a google account, that's it! My googledocs checklists make it possible for me to know, on any given day, who is behind, who needs help, who is ahead, who wants to redo a gizmo....and the quantitiy and quality of info they generate just keeps evolving. Here's the stage I'm at now:

The evolution of the quantity of info: It's in layers now!
  1. Layer one: At the beginning of each week, I create a checklist for each class, using googledocs "create new form" feature. Just in case you're wondering how long that takes, not long. To demonstrate, I plan to do a video post about this soon - WITH MY FABULOUS NEW CAMTASIA STUDIO! (see later in this post!)
  2. I share it with each class, and remind them to check things off as the week goes on.
  3. I check the lists once a day for latest updates. Looks like this at first: (if you need to zoom in, click on the pic)
  4. Layer two: Next I shade all entries for that day the same colour, so that I can quickly see the different days. Here's how it looks after three days: yellow day, green day, and orange day:
  5. Layer three: Just by using the data > sort feature, I can now sort all the entries by name, so I can see each individual student's progress during the week:
  6. Layer four: Scan entries for anything that needs my attention (like "need help" or "not happy with my results, please reset") or just the complete absence of an entry, and shade it red:
  7. Layer five: Insert comments as needed, like "gizmo has been reset". This is also just a right-click feature on the googledoc. The comment pops up when your cursor hovers over it:
  8. Next class, go through one kid at a time and discuss. Like "Wow you're burning through this stuff, let's check that you're really getting it." or "If you find this too easy, then check this out" or "You needed help with this, let's go over it".
  9. Repeat from step 4 the next day. More colours get woven into the spreadsheet as the week goes on. It gets really pretty!

    I just want to emphasize that I AM NOT THE ONE FILLING THIS OUT! That's a HUGE time saver! That's been my major mistake all these years, keeping lists, checking things off, and I inevitably couldn't keep up. Now they do that part, which is good for them too, because it makes them take ownership of their own work ethic. But it's the combo of their entries, plus my layering of colours and comments, that provides the background I need to give them what they need. Truly, this is huge. And that's why I got so inspired to blog!
The evolution of the quality of info: It's about feelings now!

Another thing that has evolved is the choices I give them for each item. Last year, it usually looked like this:


Their only choices for response were kind of digital in nature - yes or no. Now it's more like this: (I made it extra big to make it easier to read white-on-black):


Now I want them to tell me not only what they did, but how they felt about it. The beginnings of self-evaluation, and I'm hoping self-awareness.

And now for my new love: Camtasia!

I don't know what is more exciting, that I have Camtasia now, or that it is SO FUN, or that it proves to me how flipping is really a more human way to teach and to learn. When I first tried to record, I found that I had to listen to the videos at techsmith first. Then I found I had to listen to a few of them more than once to really get it. I was thinking that if I were learning this in a class where everyone had to learn at the same pace, I would have gotten lost really fast. So it really is nice, in fact, perfect, to be able to control the speed of the lesson. Hmmm sounds familiar...... now where have I heard that before?

And now for the Camtasia. OMG IT IS SO AWESOME! I don't know how to do much yet, but I can just imagine the possibilities. Captions, sound effects, who knows what else.So excited to learn how to use this.

I made my first recording, but to embed it here, I apparently have to first upload it at either screencast or youtube, but then people there will see it, and it's just not good enough for that! I think I might become the Rebecca Black of teacher tube.....and I don't mean that as a put down of that poor girl, only of the reaction to her first video! Soon, though, I will have something to embed here, probably the googledocs demo.


 Man, learning is so good for you!

Monday, July 25, 2011

How could we have been so foolish?

Parents used to smoke right next to their kids. Raw sewage used to be dumped straight into rivers and lakes. Gasoline used to be available with lead in it, as did paint. Doesn’t it make you gasp, and shake your head, and think, “How could they have been so foolish?”

When I hear things like this, I can’t help but wonder what we do, all of us, right now, about which one day, people will speak and shake their heads in disbelief. I’m pretty sure they’ll shudder at what cars did to the atmosphere, and how many trees were cut down to make room for more cows, destined to become burgers, and at how much water we wasted everyday.

What's this got to do with education?

Well, if we’re all lucky, they will also talk about the way we used to teach. With everyone doing the same thing at the same time, the teacher doing all the talking, learning only one subject at a time, and spending the year with a goal of writing down what you’ve learned during a three-hour exam. Yes, one day, I hope, they will shake their heads in profound disbelief at that. I hope they’re doing it now!

But the thing is, change is so tricky. Even those who want to change can be misguided about how to do it. Take me, for example. Being a technology enthusiast myself, I thought for a long time that the technology would change everything. Many times I would start by hearing about a certain tool and trying to force it into my class, just because it seemed cool or because someone else was all enthusiastic about it. Like voicethread – I first heard about it 3 years ago, and I had no idea how I could use it in my class, but I kept trying to make it fit. Googledocs, same thing, even though I had a better idea of how it would fit, like with online quizzes. I had a bit more success fitting the class blog in, but it still felt like I was forcing them to do it. And it was all very exciting, but it didn’t feel like a cohesive way of teaching or learning.

I was always starting with the tool or technology and trying to hammer it into the same old class model.

Then I tried the flipped class model, and that was the turning point.

My own breakthrough:

Once I adopted that model, the tools just lined up and marched into place to support it. I didn’t have to hammer anything in. Since the flipped class starts out based on ideas like: students need to move at their own pace, have some control over what they learn, and have access to a variety of people and resources, it just happens to work great with tools like voicethread, googledocs, and classblogs. It still seems an incredible coincidence how the flipped class opened everything up to make room for the exact tech I had been trying to fit in.

For example, I needed a way to record my lesson so that my students could listen and learn at their own speed. Aha – this is what I can use voicethread for! Then I needed a way to keep track of who did what when, and googledocs raised its hand and said “I can do that!”  It did it again when I needed self-assessments the kids can do to reassure themselves (and me) they’ve got the idea. And posting on the class blog became more of a natural consequence to the kids working at their own speed, rather than another forced assignment. They seemed to need to communicate with each other in the open forum that the blog provided, as you can see in this exchange:

I just listened to the Chasles Property voicethread. At first, I was a bit confused at where this was heading. But when I was at about half of the notes I got the hang of it! It’s pretty straightforward, like the rest of the unit.
Yesterday I also finished the EL activity C. I found it interesting that at the end, there was another connection to physics. These two subjects are decidedly very closely bonded!

Same here, I got confused at first, but then at the end it became clear. At first, I thought it had something to do with the magnitude. But then it wasn’t at all, just that the head(s) and tail(s) have to match! [=

Ya me too i was trying to figure out where this was going… i thought the law would be much more confusing then that! we already put it in practice without knowing it was a law!

Yeah, at first I thought they were going to give us an equation that we will need or a procedure leading to a law of physics, but instead it’s just a way to simply steps and expressions.

 It’s a law shown much more visually. I liked the four point theorem question, it showed me how Chasles Property is applied to find things that aren’t plainly shown.

Chasles Property is fun. It’s interesting when you have to think which way is the arrow and the tail should point. The four point theorem questions were also cool…

What's next:

The next thing I’m looking for is a tool for my online class that will facilitate the natural formation of workgroups during class, so that they can work together and be each others’ teachers. I don’t want to be the one always deciding who they will work with. It’s easy in the brick and mortar, not so easy online. I’m thinking maybe google+…we’ll see.

Just to be clear:

I’m not saying that anyone who wants to change has to use the flipped class model. I’m saying that you have to start with whatever model, or philosophy that suits you, and then let the technology support that. Chances are, there is something out there that does what you’re looking for. I think this is how real change will happen – start with ourselves, not the tools.

I’m also saying that “chalk and talk” will hopefully, one day, be spoken of with the same horror and incredulity as smoking around kids!

Saturday, July 16, 2011

Thanks again, Mr. Schwen!

I have been using googledocs for a while now, and thanks to Andy Schwen, I have some major upgrades to add next year. I had been making online quizzes last year, but I didn't know how to fix it so that they could be automatically corrected. Now, thanks to Andy, my kids will know right away what they got right or wrong, kind of like the explorelearning assessments, except I will create the questions instead of the nice folks at explorelearning. Not only that, but I will get the most GORGEOUS data - about each kid, or about each class, or about only one question...the data and the display are just amazing! This is all thanks to Mr. Schwen, who has already put all these features into some googledocs files, which he is sharing with everyone. You just have to follow a few steps to get it working for you and your students.

Andy very kindly put together instructions for how to do this, both in video format and text, which you can find at his blog http://mrschwen.blogspot.com/. I, however, being of a certain age and tech ability, (guess which is high and which is low), had trouble filling in a few blanks in these steps, so I decided, with his permission, to put my own step-by-step together.

Overview in a nutshell:
  • You will get 2 different files (from googledocs) that were created by Andy Schwen.
  • You will input class/student info into one of these files.
  • You will input quiz questions and answers into the other file.
  • Thanks to Andy's expertise, these files will automatically be linked so that each will get information from the other, in order to make your life easy!
Here's what will happen as a result:
  • Your students will access your quiz online, and answer the questions online. Here's a rough idea of how the quiz could look to them:
  • Your students will know right away what they got right or wrong.
  • You will also know right away what were the results for everyone who did the quiz. 
  • You will also get gorgeous infographic results by student, class, or question. Here is a shot of a sample supplied by Andy:
  • You will be able to make up new quizzes during the year, simply by inputting new questions and answers, and the whole procedure will repeat itself. Students do the new quiz, then they find out how they did, then you get to see all the results beautifully summarized. All the links will kick in and generate the data using the classes and names that are already there.
  • You will be able to give the same quizzes (or whatever type of assessment you want) next year simply by inputting new class/student info. Of course, you will probably want to change the questions every year, as any teacher would....no one ever reuses tests, right? Me, never......ahem.
Okay, now here's how you get all that happening:


Step One: Google account, chrome, and browser windows:
  • First of all, have two completely separate browser windows open, one which will always display these instructions, and the other which will retrieve the various docs or go to various sites. The window without the instructions should be a google chrome one, because I found things worked better that way. I am not enough of an expert to know why, but I found that not everything worked right when I used other browers. So you might have to download googlechrome, which is free, and lovely.
  • The next steps are all to be done in the chrome window.
  • Get yourself a google account. This is not the same as a gmail account. Gmail is an email account hosted by google, but the google account gives you access to googledocs, which is what you really need. You will be asked to supply an email address, and it doesn't have to be a gmail one. And it's also free.
  • Login to your google account
  • Click on "more" at the top of the screen, and you will see this:
  • Click on "docs". You will see this, except there will not be any files listed, since you don't have any yet. I, however, have several, because I am a big shot.
Step two: Getting your classlist template
  • Now you are ready to download the files created by Andy Schwen. At the top of the googledocs screen, there is a search box, next to which it says "Browse template gallery". Click that, then type, in the search field, "classlists". You will see:
  • Click "Use this template"
  • You will see:
  • This may sound strange, but you must now close this file. I do not know why. After you close it, go back to your googledocs homepage, and you will see, at the top of your file list, Copy of Classlist Template, like so:
  • Click on that, and you will once again see the excel sheet above. Now it's time to make a copy of it and rename it. Click file > Make a copy, and this window will invite you to give it a new name, my suggestion for which you can see here:
  • Click Ok. Give google a few seconds to save if needed.
  • Now it's time to put your students' names into the appropriate columns. If you're like me, you don't know them yet, so for now, just make up some names, so you can see how it all comes together. I put 4 names into the period one column, and 4 into the period 2 when I first tried this out. Give google a few seconds, or click save if you're impatient.
  • Once it's saved, select the part of the url address that is after the "key=" all the way to and including the "=en", like so:
  • Note that the highlighted text you see here won't be the same as yours, that's ok, you have different names than I do.
  • Copy that for use in a few steps. This will be the link between these two files.
Step three: Getting your assessment template:
  • The next file to download can be found using the exact same procedure as above. Googledocs homepage, search templates, but this time using "public assessment" in the search field, and you will see:
  • Click "Use this template" as before. You will see:
  • At the top right, click "See responses" and select spreadsheet view. You will see another spreadsheet, but this one's got lots of tabs at the bottom of the screen.
  • Make a copy and rename as before, this time calling it "Practice assessment template".
  • Click on the tab at the bottom right called "Setup and results" You will see:
  • in cell D11, paste the stuff you copied before from your practice classlist like so:
  • Again, remember that your code will look different, but it should end in the =en. I have no idea what that means.
  • Now if you click on the "all classes" tab, you should see your practice names, like magic! This file got them from the practice classlist file! Cool, no?
Step four: Making a quiz:
  • I was able to follow Andy's instructions for this part very easily, so you should check them out here. You will be amazed!
Thanks again, Mr. Schwen!


Monday, July 4, 2011

Flipping 101

I've been running into lots of teacher friends over the course of the summer, what with us all being on vacation, and as it turns out, lots of people are interested in hearing more about flipping the class. I'm also hoping to do a presentation about flipping at the next QPAT convention here in Montreal (if they accept my late proposal, that is), so hopefully this post will help me prepare for that. I'm sure someone else has already written something like this before, but here is my attempt nevertheless at outlining the basics of flipping, as well as ideas for more advanced flipping.

What is "flipping the class"?

What gets flipped are the time and place that the teaching and the homework happen. The teaching happens outside of class time, and the work is done during class time, which represents the opposite of what most of us experienced in school.

In order to do this, a certain amount of technology is involved.  Flipping the class isn't about the technology, BUT how successful it is certainly depends on access to and facility with technology. For example, computers with internet access for your students are a huge advantage, if not absolute necessities. The most common vehicle of delivery of the lessons is via some kind of internet site, although some teachers provide their students with CD's, which of course would still require a computer to be viewed. Then there are the many tools that the teacher needs in order to make the lessons and keep track of their students' progress. I hope that doesn't scare anyone off the idea, because there is a TON of support out there for anyone who wants to have at it, including my own humble blog. You are reading the ravings of someone who does not know a lot, but has been able to progress nevertheless!

Why flip the class?

Well, it turns out that this simple idea produces some pretty amazing results. For example:
  • You no longer have kids saying to you "I couldn't do the homework. I understood it when you did it in class, but when I got home I just stared at it and didn't get it anymore."
  • You have more time to help kids during class, and I mean kids at both ends of the ability scale. Those that need help can get it from you OR their peers, and those that are interested in going deeper can do the same.
  • Your kids become more responsible for their own learning, by virtue of the fact that they control the speed with which they work through the lessons and the assignments.
How do you do it?

I have just started, so I am a relative newbie. I started in March of this past school year (2010-2011), so I will tell you what I have done, as well as what some of the more advanced flippers have done. Keep in mind that it's all a work in progress for me and, really, for everybody. I have chronicled a lot of my experiences in older posts right here on this blog, so if you are interested in how it all actually unfolded so far, please see the archives beginning in March. For now, here are the basics:

1. Give your students access to a recorded lesson.

You can either find one that someone else has already created, like for example, one of the 2000 or so free ones at Khan Academy, or you can make your own. I prefer to make my own because I want my students to hear my voice. Most of the teachers seem to prefer making their own, or teaming with other teachers at their own school, for the same reason - familiarity and comfort for our students.
  • What tools you use to make this recording is up to you of course - many use Camtasia, which I would love to try, but for now I am using Voicethread. Here are some of mine from the week of May 16:
  • Voicethread: In an earlier post, I talked about how I make, use, and share voicethreads, so if you're interested, it's all there somewhere. Yes I am lazy. Or you can find out more at voicethread.com. 
  • Smart Notebook Recorder: I would think that anyone with a smartboard would be able to use the built-in recorder to make their lesson recordings. Whatever you use, make sure your students can open it at home. As far as I know, the problem with using Smart Notebook is no kids have it at home, because it is SO not free. Maybe it's possible to export it to some kind of mpg format? Not sure.
  • How you make it available to your students - if you're creating a video you can upload it to a website, or give them a CD if they don't have internet at home. For voicethread, the recording is stored on the voicethread site, so I just give them a link to the recording. More advanced teachers have a class site like a wiki, to which they upload their lessons.
2.  At the next class, assign work for your students to do to process the lesson. 
  • For everyone who has listened to the lesson, you are now ready to give them something to do. You can just stick with the usual textbook problems, or worksheets, or you can get more creative. The point here is to get them to do something during classtime so that they have immediate access to someone - either you or another student - to help if they need it.
  • I  found very quickly that I was compelled to do more interesting activities in class, (see post "Flipping with Fun Audrey") as well as assigning them more creative tasks, like using geogebra, or getting them to generate questions for a partner. It just felt like such a golden opportunity to get them to do more interesting things than just drill and practice. You can see one such activity in an earlier post that I did - it's a doc called operations on vectors. Still lazy.
  • This is where you get to spend the most amazing time with the kids - individually or in small groups. You will find that the learning that happens is more authentic, because it will be tailored to the immediate needs or interests of the student. It will be a correction, or a suggestion, or an enrichment offered just in time.
3. Make it possible for them to go at their own speed.
This is why flipping has been called the magic bullet for differentiation. They can go as slow as they need to, or as fast as they want to.
  • Which means you have to have as many lessons and assignments as you can ready to go in advance so that the keener beaners can go ahead. This is quite a challenge for the first year that you are flipping, as it takes time to put together a recording that you are happy with. Some mixing of your stuff and other peoples' stuff will likely be necessary. Feel free to use any of my powerpoints/voicethreads, such as they are!
  • Next year, I plan to get them to watch a variety of lessons on the same topic, and get some critiquing from them. For the time being, I would still like them to start with me, then compare with other teachers. Maybe I am still a bit egocentric that way...
4. Check in with each student on a regular basis.
Of course you want to make sure they are working their way through the course in a timely fashion, and grasping it as they go, so you need to have some system of keeping track, for the purposes of evaluation and pacing.
  • Some teachers have a regular Friday check-in/evaluation routine. Zero for anything not done type of thing. I use an online checklist that I created using googledocs, mainly because I don't get to see my students face-to-face. Every few tasks in the checklist is something they have to hand in to me, so that I can mark it. I also include online quizzes for them to assure themselves that they are on the right track before they zoom to the next lesson. Some of these quizzes are found at explorelearning, and some I create also using googledocs. Here is a checklist from the week of May 16:
  • Next year I will be using the googledocs assessment system, created by Andy Schwen, about which I wrote in another post.
5. Share with other teachers who are flipping. Join twitter and/or the flipped teacher ning at http://vodcasting.ning.com/ 

Because, as I said, a lot of technology is really necessary, and a lot of time needs to go into creating good materials, and hey, we're all in this together!

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Blipping report

Haven't posted for a looooong time mainly due to bad neck and shoulder pain, which is definitely related to being on the frackin computer all day. But I've been thinking of you, my little blog!

So I've been continuing the flipping with all my grade 11's, combined with getting them to blog, as well as getting them to indicate their progress on the googledocs checklist.

Interesting things: Blog posts/comments:
  • The blog posts/comments are a lot more interesting now, as a result of flipping. I adapted the scribe post model to reflect the fact that they are not all doing the same thing at the same time. They now can blog or comment on the lesson they're currently watching, or the activity they're currently doing, or anything else they want to share - for example, Stephen posted about his own work habits:
    Today I’m not going to blog about how I completed the task list then mention some complication I came across. Today I’m blogging about the task list itself.
    I find that the task is a pretty efficient tool when combined with the voice threads. Personally I prefer to work at my own pace, and the task list allows me to do so. I can run through the tasks on the list pretty quickly (as can most of us in the class I assume), so that gives me a lot of free time to work on other subjects that are a little more highly pressured at the moment, or even spend time getting ahead in review for the final exam.
    One of the best parts about the checklist is that we’re given a daily list that when followed, will have you finished by the end of the week. While most of us could get way ahead in the checklist and have much less math to do for the rest of the week, I personally find that I prefer to follow the daily schedule, so that I can balance out the work with my other subjects that might need a bit more attention, seeing that exams are coming up.
    However, I do think that it requires students who are willing to complete work without many checkups on our progress. You could say it’s more of a mid to end year thing, seeing that working like this at the beginning of the year could give you a habit of procrastination.
  • Blog conversations have more authenticity to them - check this out, after I showed them this youtube video (thanks to Kate Nowak for finding and posting about it!). An actual conversation ensued, and I found out that one of my students is planning to be a pilot:
Today in class miss showed us a video about cross-wind plane landings and I have to say it scared me quite a bit. Vectors can really be dangerouse. Ill wear a hemet next time i do my homework:P Btw: I really love when miss gives us videos to watch. I find it useful to see how what we are learning actually happens in real life.:):):)
Today, Mrs Mcgoldrick showed us a video about Scary Aircraft Landings.
Here’s the link if you might want to re-watch: (Not sure if the link will work…)
<a href=”http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5X_7Xt2ga-s”>The video simply shows an extreme scary crosswind landings. It is not just about how they approach to land but how the pilot balanced an aligned land on the runway to and on a better angle. Sometimes it also depends which way is the wind blowing.
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        kristopher says:  Yah it looks pretty scary of how the pilots come in sideways with crosswinds especially as a passenger on the plane or even an observer. The wind causes the plane to go sideways especially on landing when the plane is trying to do so many things. Even thought this looks scary, pilots are trained to land liek this in these conditons. Before they land they know the magnitude and direction of the wind. So if it’s a crosswind, then the plane shifts to the side. To counteract this, one of the things the pilots do is by using the rudder peddle, this shifts the rudder on the plane. This quickly turns the plane back straight just before they land. Pilots dont do it right away because the plane can over transistion. Pilots also have to follow different techniques while landing like change in flaps, speed and time of decent etc, but the main theing is the rudder peddles.:P The reason why i know this is because I want to be a pilot and I know a lot fo things and techniques of pilots:

        shelley says:  Yeah the video was pretty awesome and scary at the same time! We really can observe how wind affects the trajectory of the plane. I certainly wouldn’t want to be in one of those planes in those situations

        fred says: Same here Kris I wanted to be a pilot but my eyes are to bad Also the pilots turn the plane so the engine thurst is aimed in a direction that will cause the plane to fly straight, while its side ways. They have to reduce the engine thrust so its low enough that the wind pushes the plane. This is just like adding vectors, the resulting vector would be or should be aimed straight down the runway. This can be dangerous because if the speed is reduced to much the plane can stall, which measn theres not enough lift under the wings to kepp the plane up. Also like Kris said if u give to much rudder the pilots can completly lose control of the plane. Its rough stuff
Interesting things: the googledocs checklists

  • The checklists continue to be an amazing tool for me. I found out that you can rearrange the results spreadsheet so that it shows you just one student at a time, and when I do that, I can see this:
  • Because it's in order by date, it's like a graph of the speed at which this child is working, as well as a simple checklist. I don't have to manually accumulate things.
  • If I am more interested in how many are done, say, activity A, than in who has done it, I can arrange the spreadsheet by simply going to that item, and selecting "done", and I get this:
  • .......so that I can know when it's time to process it together, or correct it.
  • I feel so absolutely empowered by this checklist! I realize now why I have suffered from being a wimpy teacher all this time. And by wimpy I mean not calling kids out on stuff that they really needed to be called out on. Like kids who don't do their homework - I can speak frankly to them about it because THEY have admitted to it in writing by virtue of the checklist! So that part of the discussion is done, which is the part I always had trouble with!
  • I have fallen into a pattern. First part of the class is about where the majority of the class is, and the second part is about individual students.
  • I start the class by discussing the work that the majority have finished, say activity A. Then they continue on their own, and I have individual talks, either initiated by them, or if not, by me!
Interesting things: Flipping
  • Really enjoying the private discussions. Because they are so much more authentic too. It's not only about the math, sometimes it's about how to use Microsoft Equation in Word, or about something that's happening in their lives, like a photography contest. And of course, sometimes, it's about them facing the music.
  • I am more comfortable with the silent class because: I can watch their progress via the checklists as they happen. I don't even have to refresh, it just constantly updates the spreadsheet.
  • I am also more comfortable because it actually isn't silent from my point of view, and that's because I am taking them one at a time into a breakout room (It feels like I'm a doctor seeing patients!)
  • What's missing in the online setting is the spontaneous collaboration that happens naturally in the brick and mortar setting. I remind them that they are allowed to work together, but that seems to only be happening with the kids who are in the same school, naturally. How to get it happening spontaneously between schools is a problem to be solved....
And I just found, through the flipping teachers ning, that you can also use googledocs to make up quizzes that immediately tell the student if they're right and then sends the teacher the results for the whole class. Why would google do that? Why are you so good to me google?