Thursday, April 24, 2008

Final Blog Post

My Technology Inventory Plan cited that I would use the automatic live stock exchange in order to teach students about supply and demand.
We have successfully implemented this lesson fairly recently in my economics class. Students enjoyed first "buying" stock, and then graphing what's happened to their stock over the past few weeks. As we move more into the curriculum and they develop vocabulary, what the graphs mean makes more sense to them.
Looking at Grapplings Technology and Learning Spectrum, I would say this activity falls maybe somewhere between adapting uses and transforming uses. This activity falls towards the adapting uses because it was somewhat teacher centered- the graphs were on the one teacher computer and projector. In addition, it was interesting, but we still could have taught our curriculum without using live stock, and our learning and assessment practices were still the same.
However, this is also like a transforming use because my team teacher and I used these graphs as the sole basis and examples of teaching the curriculum to our students. We had no idea whether our live "example" would rise or fall, and based what we taught based off of what happened. We used the technology to construct our meaning about economics and the stock exchange. The students in essence created their own learning experience by "buying" or "selling" stock, and voting on who's company to "invest" in.

Friday, April 11, 2008

Technology as a Crutch?

Now that technology has become more and more a part of our everyday goings-on in the classroom, I wonder what purpose it truly serves. There are times when I'm overwhelmed and stressed out and find a website that works with what I'm teaching and I just think "Yea, we can just do this for today." How good of a decision is that really? Is that the easy way out and not at all what technology was intended to be used in the classroom for?
I know that deep down it should be a way to revoluntionize and enhance current teaching- not replace it. It should make us better teachers- not lazier ones.
Does every teacher face this dilemma from time to time?
At the same time, I know I'm going to seriously be downscaling in the technology department at my new school district. With all of these resources at my hands currently I want to take as much of it with me. Does that mean I print out as many sites as I can find and make overheads of them? Just the thought of working with an overhead with those dreaded markers again with sheets flying everywhere- I'm dreading it. Maybe things will up-scale before I get there in August. I doubt it... It's been such a struggle this year to accomodate my teaching life to having more techonology it will be hard to reverse the process again.
But good teachers don't care what they have to teach with, right?

Saturday, March 29, 2008

Technology Battle continues

I feel like my use of technology in my classroom has become slightly stagnant. The novelty has slightly worn off, and the thought continues in the back of my mind that next year I won't have any of this, so searching for more resources is in vain. There are so many other balls I'm trying to keep in the air, that something has to at least temporarily drop.
However, when I do come across a resource that I can't use now, but might be able to in the future, I'm not sure how to really organize it. Put the link and a description in a word document? Just save it to my favorites? Email it to myself? I have no idea, b/c I know that just trying to remember that it's there will never work.

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

New School, New Challenges

So I took a new position for next year in my home town, and as I was walking around the high school I realized that they didn't have nearly the resources that my current school does. As if I had a challenge already- now it's going to be reversed! No data projectors, no SMART boards, I think I saw a few overhead projectors... How depressing. All the hard work I did to incorporate movie clips and videos and current technology into my class is going to be completely in vain come next year. I was thinking, how could I take what I've already learned and apply it to what I'll be doing next year? Unless I start making overheads of every Power Point slide I have in lecture notes, I don't know how I'm going to do it.
It's exciting to be in a new place, but at the same time I already see challenges. This district boasts that it provides good salaries for it's teachers. But at the same time they hardly have any of the resources that my current district is fighting to get while keeping teacher salaries stagnant. I know I don't have a family or a lot of expenses at this point in my life, but personally I'd rather see that money go towards directly helping students in the classroom. I think that this district takes the stand point that if they have high salaries, they'll have good teachers, and good teachers don't need technology to be effective. Well, maybe not... but it does much better prepare our students. Hate to say it, but it seems absolutely everything always comes back to the money...

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Making Due

Things are getting better in the technology side. They kind of ebb and flow as the days go on. For example, the last of my 3 classrooms I use throughout the day JUST got their projector, which was promised by the beginning of school- ha! The problem now is, we don't have a screen. Well, we do but it's just on the other side of the room and although they've promised to move it (yea right) I'm not waiting around for them. So instead, my students and I took matters into our own hands and ghetto-rigged white paper to the wall so we could have a screen. It's fuzzy and bumpy, but for us, for now, it works.
But seriously, what a pain? We get to do cool stuff on it but sometimes it's almost like it's not worth the hassle. This technology thing isn't as easy as everyone has cited in the past. It takes a lot of coordinated effort and a lot of work.

Thursday, February 7, 2008

Absences and Technology

One thing I've found that really throws me and the development of technology in my classroom is when I can't be there. I am regularly gone for district reading meetings and Fellows release day (this results in at least 2 days a month), and this significantly impacts what my students can accomplish using technology on those days. Firstly, their routines are already thrown off because I'm not there, but in addition, class can't run as smoothly as it usually does because I don't know if my sub can or will handle all the maniuplation of technology that makes class possible. They could and in that event I would be set, but if they don't they either can't fulfil the plans or don't know what to do instead. Will this become less of a problem as time goes on?

Sunday, February 3, 2008

The Tech Battle Continues

So we are in the thick of the school year and technology continues to be a concern, but has lately taken a back burner. I consistently wonder if my use of technology in the classroom is truly helping my students to learn better, or if I'm just using it because it's there and I think I should. I don't know how to "revolutionize" my teaching using technology. It seems that other things continue to take precedence like writing IEP's, and pushing through curriculum
However, the social studies department has started to take shape. We have decided to take on all our old lecture notes and turn them into Power point presentations, with the thought that the program is much more interactive, and can help students to remember the concepts better and give better examples and points to remember using the technology it offers. I am now in charge of taking all the texts for our lecture and transferring it to the Program, Josh next door works on infusing examples using pictures, sound and video clips, and Steve melds it all together. Its small, and slow, and a grueling process, but having others to help me has really made a difference and has helped to bring more technology into our classrooms.