Podcasting in the Classroom
I love the idea of using podcasts as another way for students to publish. Oral reports, poetry that they write, interviews, and other assignments can be podcasts in their final form. This is then easy for parents to see what their students are up to, and for relatives even far away to hear their loved ones voice.
I think teachers can also create podcasts, and use podcasts that others have created to enhance a lesson. Being able to hear the words of someone who actually fought in Vietnam, could be very meaningful. As could hearing a teachers voice giving a test review, on an iPod, while driving somewhere with mom and dad.
See this post for more information, and for a podcast I created.
Using Images in the Classroom
It is important that as a future teacher I understand how to legally use images, and then require my students to use images legally.
Joey and April Working on Keyboarding Skills
by Extra Ketchup (Flickr)
For example, this image was found using a creative commons search on Flickr. Creative Commons is a way to reserve some rights of the things we create without keeping others from using them all together. This is an easy way to find images that it is okay for anyone to use, as long as they follow whatever requirements are set by the creative commons license.
This week in the classroom, I needed to explain to the class what the big dipper is. It came up in a story we were reading and students did not know what it was. I immediately did a google image search (and used the smartboard in the classroom so the students could connect the dots and make the shape of the dipper). After, I thought back to the discussions I had in CEP416 about using images. I did not republish the picture anywhere, or even use it in a powerpoint, so legally I was fine just showing the students this website. But, I modeled using google images to find an image without thinking about what the students would pick up.
Sometimes it is great to be able to take and use your own pictures. Other times, there is a place or phenomenon that we want our students to see that it is impossible to take pictures of ourselves. There are thousands of images available that can give our students the experiences we desire. We can put them on a
Download, etc. etc.
Online Calendars in the Classroom
There are many benefits to using online calendars as a part of classroom management. These calendars will be useful to me as a teacher, my future students, other members of the school community including other teachers, family members, etc.
As a teacher, I can quickly and easily add things to my google calendars. I can set up different calendars for different classes, along with personal, and other calendars. This can also help me communicate with students and parents about what assignments are due, what is happening in class, and what special events or birthdays are coming up. The principal can subscribe to my class calendar and then know what days would be good to visit.
I remember in elementary school getting calendars all of the time. There was a lunch menu calendar, a class calendar, a school calendar, a district calendar, and more. Using online calendars, such as google calendar, can make these all available online, and easy to organize in one customizable place.
Using Bookmarks in the Classroom
The internet is an amazing resource for classrooms and students, but it can be overwhelming. Not knowing where to go or how to consume the internet poses lots of potential problems from viewing inappropriate materials, to simply not learning anything from the experience. As a teacher I can use a social bookmarking site, such as del.icio.us, to organize the internet for myself and for my students. Having all of the useful sites I use in one place is what makes this appealing, but what could make it extrememly effective is the tagging and bundling features. I could tag things by a date I want students to visit the site, with unit names, as homework, and endless other ways to make them easily accessible to students and parents.
View my bookmarks.