Sunday, April 22, 2012

Team Education 2.0 Summary & Research


Summary
This week’s assignment sounds like I have to critique your postings. It says “discussant should provide a summary of peer-review to list the strengths and weakness of the “Development Procedure” It is hard and uncomfortable.
Nick stated “The U.S Government” as his big concept to be taught and clearly stated the sub-topics as Executive, Legislative and Judicial Branches. Is a good concept because it contains a lot that students can learn. Since concept needs to be understood, I think the three sub-topics could have included brief definitions of the three branches of Government to help students acquire information that will allow them to connect  to the next concept to be  learned. Number (2) of the development procedure, expects relationships to constitute the important dimensions to help students understand the big concept. The relationship listed under this section does not really bring connection to the big concept. It listed some provisions in the constitution which specifically does not relate to the U.S. Government. Concepts like the role of each branch of government  could have be taught to bring connection to big concept. The new relationships listed are very good. They related information that students need to acquire to completely understand the U.S. Government. The multimedia technology chosen by Nick are Videos and games and they are very adaptive for this concept especially “http://www.texaslre.org/branches_game/branches_game.html”. 
Katie’s big concept provided analysis and content analysis. The big concept is; Elements of Drama in MacBeth and went on to list the following as part of the big concept. 1) understanding basic dramatic elements found in the play 2)recognize tone, dictions, imagery and mood through interpretive reading. 3) compare and contrast modern day situation to themes in literature. Katie started answering question (2) with a statement which I found it to be very important, “understanding is something that has a growing knowledge base”. Relating it to development procedure (2), relationship should constitute the important dimensions of understanding, that is forming connections, making use of prior knowledge. Katie explained how students would establish relationships of understanding the big concept through inferential and interpretive reading, listening, and viewing. Katie listed the following as relationships that would be self taught by students trough reading of Shakespearean play, MacBeth; which include figurative speech, literacy devices, use of paradox, and story telling elements. She said that will solidify the knowledge by putting what they have learn into practice in developing their own story involving comparing and contrasting the modern thematic litercy element. Katie asserts that the use if images stimulates students’ interest and therefore listed the following media to helps students understand the concept as modern Mac’Beth movie and media collage.
Natalie stated “Microsoft Office” as her big concept listing Word, Excel, and Access as the three sub-topics. Considering Development Procedure (1), that requires analysis and content analysis, there should have been simple definitions to allow students the ability to connect prior knowledge to development procedure (2). Natalie showed relationships to the big concept, stating that students will apply word processing technology by identifying two other concepts that can be learned to help students understand this information (Word). For Excel, she stated that students will apply spreadsheet technology including  performing mathematical process and formulating and producing solutions to a variety of business problems. For Access, students will identify software to create database that will facilitate business decisions. Natalie listed opening a blank document as a concept that has been learnt and the following as new relationships that needs to be taught to help apply understanding 
of what have been learned already (prior knowledge); Add Sample Text, Indent, Paragraphs, Align Paragraphs, Create a Hanging Indent, Order of Operations,Standard ribbons, groupings, icons for Office Suite, Start and navigate the Access Window, Explore database objects, and Navigate the various views. Natalie chose the following as the best practice of using multimedia technology for each of the relationships, Video Clips from youtube and this very good site http://www.baycongroup.com/el0.htm.
Research
Understanding according to Smith (2006) “is an individual’s ability to connect a learned information or concept to other representations” This is where the individual learns a new knowledge and is able to associate it or apply to make meaning of something in relation to that information. That is the ability to use previous or prior knowledge to make sense, solve a problem or make an information meaningful. Let’s use Nick’s posting as an example; The student gets the first knowledge that the U.S Government is made of three branches. For understanding to take place, the student uses acquired knowledge to the next step; that is, the U.S Government is made of three branches, then each branch would have a specific role to play in our governmental system. Smith (2006) also asserts that, “understanding is also an individuals’s ability to answer questions correctly”. Why? Because He thinks as an information is understood, the individual should be able to recall the information and answer a question correctly. This is where memorization and understanding cross paths. He continues to explain situations that make understanding a failure ;1) When there are too few connections made, 2)Bad connections, therefore causing misunderstanding, 3) Nothing having an index  for retrieval, 4) wrong symbols used in an index. Christy (2005), approaches the meaning of understanding with a scenario, “you share information with a group of students, several of them do well on an assessment when it came to a time to apply the knowledge in a different situation, only a few were able to do that”. This is because some of the students just learned the facts of the concept and demonstrated their skills and knowledge instead of understanding the concept to be able to apply in different situations. This bring educators to a level where we have to teach students to understand a concept than just teaching facts.
During my research I came across this video and I think is worth to share.


Perkins (1993), made the following to help teachers with how best we can teach for understanding, as make learning  a long-term thinking-center process, provide for rich ongoing assessment, support learning with powerful representations, pay heed to developmental factors, induct students into the discipline and teach for transfer. 
Personally, I have a problem with the way we state goals and objectives to teach understanding. For example “ students will understand the principles of Government”, “ Students will understand factorization”. I see this to be vague.
A question for team members, How best can we state our objectives to make understanding measurable.
References
Christy, J. (2005). Teaching for Understanding. Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of the Educational and Professional Publishing Group of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.,
1221 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10020.
Perkins, D. (1993). TEACHING FOR UNDERSTANDING. American Educator: The Professional Journal of the American Federation of Teachers; v17 n3, pp. 8,28-35, Fall 1993.
Smith, D.A. (2006). What Is Understanding?

Summary and Research by: Merriam Oliver

Individual Summary -

Becky chose the four business cycles: prosperity, recession, depression, and recovery.  According to TEA, students are required to understand supply, demand, employment, gross domestic product, and prices along with their correlations between all factors.  Students will acquire how to evaluate high/low unemployment, basic laws of supply and demand, calculate GDP, and factors dictating business and consumer confidence.  Becky feel that Scratch can be used to identify the correct business cycle, Xtranormal can develop animated scenarios of the cycles, and use YouTube.com to demonstrate the basic laws of supply and demand.

Kimber chose to go with the main topic rate of change explained by examples demonstrating slow and fast change.  Students were to observe big rocks breaking down into smaller rocks, demonstrate how water and wind move nonliving things, and sort, group, and classify Earth materials according physical observations.  Kimber used TEKS to describe student expectations for the kindergarten and first grade.  She felt student could best grasp these concepts by using video clips, geocaching, and virtual field trips.

Lauren’s concept was precipitation and what it is, its cause, and the types for second graders.  Students are to have prior knowledge of heating and cooling of materials (liquids especially) along with the different states of matter.  Teachers are to begin with states of matter, heating and cooling of objects, the water cycle, and the breakdown of precipitation.   BrainPOP would be best used throughout the entire lesson including all the subtopics.



Research:
1.  After reviewing my teammates digital programs to use during or with their curriculum, I began thinking of the validity and/or rigor of content standards offered by these programs.  I have no doubt that the use of Scratch, video clips, and BrainPOP would be used as a tool to enhance my teammates proposed lessons; however, there are those teachers that use these tools as a “babysitter.”  So, how do we measure the validity of program content in the digital world?

2.  
Schaffhause, D. (2012, April 9). Maintaining content standards in a digital world. the Journal, Retrieved from http://thejournal.com/Articles/2012/04/09/Digital-quality-content-standards.aspx?Page=1

Teachers have typically built their lessons around what's in the textbooks. But in an environment where the individual instructor can get onto a website and download a learning object to teach a concept, what happens to that vetting process? Who ticks off the checklist of standards that are met? Who defines and makes sure quality is maintained? And will teachers be teaching what our children need to know?  Some things you can trust and some things you can't. You don't know who in the world is presenting what. You don't know what their credentials are. So you've got to be very careful with it.

Hart, M. (2012, April 18). Navigating a digital world. the Journal, Retrieved from http://thejournal.com/articles/2012/04/18/navigating-a-digital-world.aspx?sc_lang=en

This article describes how our lives are so entwined with the digital that if you’re going to be a good citizen, you have to be a good digital citizen.  It is important for teachers to be aware of netiquette and to teach students to be good digital citizens.

Rath, D. (2012, March 27). Technology moving teachers from front to center of the classroom. Retrieved from http://thejournal.com/articles/2012/03/27/technology-moving-teachers-from-front-to-center-of-the-classroom.aspx?sc_lang=en

Teachers shouldn't have students sit in front of a computer all day; technology does not equal a teacher, you have to take the time to learn the technology, but you have to maintain your role as an expert on the subject matter and tools. Technology should be use to allow educators to get to know their students better, differentiate their instruction, and create digital learning materials together.

3.  It is difficult for me to choose any one article to point my teammates to read, all three are very insightful and I encourage them to research and be familiar with this current topic as we all do, or in the near future, will be faced with the same dilemma.

4.  To ensure that digital resources, programs, etc., are used as tools during instruction instead of “babysitters”, do you believe that teachers should begin to include ISTE NET-S in lesson plans along with TEKS and student expectations?  Should teachers be required to be certified in technology as they are for their content area and pedagogy?

Tech Grads- Summary & Research Week 10

 Summary
Individual group members chose concepts from geography, math, and literature as their major topics of study for an interactive website. Stephanie’s focus is the five themes of geography. Christa’s focus is quadrilaterals, while Rachel’s focus is plot development. Each member identified several key concepts that would need to be addressed by the interactive website. Stephanie’s website would help students understand how landforms, climate, vegetation, and resources contribute to movement and human-environment interaction. Christa’s website would enable students to identify and make conjectures about the distinguishing properties of the polygons that make up the quadrilateral family. Rachel’s website will explore the relationship between elements of fiction: plot, theme, setting, characterization, conflict, mood, style, tone, point of view. Group members plan to use various technology tools. Interactive online maps, podcasts, video clips, mind-mapping software, and programming software like Scratch and Alice were all ways that team members plan to use multimedia in their interactive websites.


Research
The group proposed using various types of multimedia so I wanted to look for research supporting the use of multimedia to increase learning. I was surprised to find that not all research supports the use of multimedia to increase learning.

1. The authors of Creating Interactive Multimedia-Based Educational Courseware: Cognition in Learning propose that there are several principles that should be considered when developing educational multimedia to ensure that is pedagogically sound and will meet the needs of various learners. Some of the major principles include:
·        Multimedia principle- make use of 2 modes of representation
·        Split-attention principle- make us of text and graphics together rather than separately
·        Modality principle- verbal information should be presented as auditory speech not on-screen text
·        Redundancy principle- learners learn best from animation and narration  without added text
·        Coherence principle- eliminate extraneous information
The authors believe that applying these research based principles will facilitate the design of multimedia that fosters active learning.

L., M. S. (2005). Creating interactive multimedia-based educational courseware: cognition in learning. Cognition, Technology & Work, 7(1), 46-50. doi:10.1007/s10111-004-0171-1


2. Kimberley Ketterer explains the difference between technology infusion and technology integration in simple terms with examples. She suggests that it is possible to have technology infusion without technology integration but once technology infusion is reached professional development for technology integration is a must.

Ketterer, K. (2007). Infusion or Integration. Learning & Leading with Technology, 35(2), 17. Retrieved from EBSCOhost


3. Hastings and Tracey’s Does Media Affect Learning: Where Are We Now? focuses on an old debate about the use of media in the classroom. In 1983 Richard E. Clark stated that “media are mere vehicles that deliver instruction but do not influence student achievement any more than the truck that delivers our groceries causes changes in our nutrition” (p.445). Other researchers responded that media does in fact influence learning. The authors summarize both sides of the argument and suggest that developments in media and computer use in education warrant a revisit to this debate.

Clark, R. (1983). Reconsidering research on learning from media. Review of Educational Research.53 (4), 445-449. Retrieved from http://www.uky.edu/~gmswan3/609/Clark_1983.pdf

Hastings, N. B., & Tracey, M. W. (2005). Does media affect learning: where are we now?. Techtrends: Linking Research & Practice to Improve Learning, 49(2), 28-30.



4. In Media Will Never Influence Learning Richard Clark attempts to summarize his earlier viewpoint that media does not influence learning and respond to criticism for this viewpoint. His argument is that it is the instructional methods that lead to learning not the medium. He goes on to challenge researchers to prove an instance when a particular medium is shown to have an effect on learning that there is no other medium that would yield a similar result. Clark does acknowledge that media has an effect but believes its effect to be on the cost and speed of learning and then only when used with sound instructional methods.

Clark, R. E. (1994). Media will never influence learning. Educational Technology Research & Development, 42(2), 21-29. Retrieved from EBSCOhost



Question
It was interesting to read Clark’s article and think about it in terms of Instructional Design Theory which is showing us the principles of learning and teaching in any domain. If we are not using sound pedagogy  when attempting to teach content it really does not matter which multimedia tools we choose to employ. Read Hastings and Tracey’s Does Media Affect Learning: Where Are We Now?. Where do you fall in this debate? Do you believe that media is more than the truck delivering goods? Can engaging multimedia planned by experts with sound pedagogy overcome teacher deficits?

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Team Education 2.0 Week 10 Natalie Price


1.       Identify a big concept which can be broken down to at least three sub-topics (dimensions of understanding). This concept needs to be understood and delivered through the interactive website design
       Microsoft  Office

1.       Word

2.       Excel

3.       Access



2.       Pick which relationships constitute the important dimensions of understanding for that concept (Need References).

(5) The student applies word processing technology. The student is expected to:

(A) identify customary styles of business documents;

 (D) demonstrate writing techniques generating ideas and gathering information relevant to the topic and purpose, maintaining accurate records of outside sources.

 (11) The student applies spreadsheet technology. The student is expected to: (A) perform mathematical processes, including:(i) addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division;(ii) percentages and decimals;(iii) order of operations principle;(iv) estimation; and(v) prediction of patterns of data; and

(B) formulate and produce solutions to a variety of business problems, including:(i) budget, personal, and business;(ii) payroll;(iii)

i(6) The student identifies database software to create databases that facilitate business decision making. The student is expected to:

(A) explain the principles of data analysis;

 (B) explain the nature of tools that can be used to access information in the database system; (C) choose appropriate software;

 (D) define fields and type of data;



3.       Identify which of those relationships have not already been acquired by the learners, and list them as new relationships to be taught.



Open a Blank Document

·         • Add Sample Text                                                  • Indent Paragraphs

·         • Align Paragraphs                                            Create a Hanging Indent

·         Order of Operations

·         Standard ribbons, groupings, icons for Office Suite

·         Start and navigate the Access Window

·         Explore database objects

·         Navigate the various views



4.       Pick the best practice of using multimedia technology for each new relationship. (For example, Alice, Scratch, Video Clips…etc.)

Video Clips from youtube:




References:

Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (2010).  Business Information Management I (1-2) (BUSIM1)






















Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Tech Grads - Stephanie Godare


1. For CSTE5337 next semester, you will be working with a team to design and create an interactive website which should provide the learning tools to fulfill all of the 8 modules of Instructional Design Theories you learned from this course. Identify a big concept which can be broken down to at least three sub-topics (dimensions of understanding). This concept needs to be understood and delivered through the interactive website design. 

  •           5 Themes of Geography - Location, Place, Region, Movement, Human-Environment Interaction.

2.   Pick which relationships constitute the important dimensions of understanding for that concept (Need References).

High School World Geography TEK:


(6)  Geography. The student understands the types, patterns, and processes of settlement. The student is expected to:

(A)  locate and describe human and physical features that influence the size and distribution of settlements; and
(B)  explain the processes that have caused changes in settlement patterns, including urbanization, transportation, access to and availability of resources, and economic activities

(7)  Geography. The student understands the growth, distribution, movement, and characteristics of world population. The student is expected to:
(A)  construct and analyze population pyramids and use other data, graphics, and maps to describe the population characteristics of different societies and to predict future population trends;
(B)  explain how political, economic, social, and environmental push and pull factors and physical geography affect the routes and flows of human migration;




(8)  Geography. The student understands how people, places, and environments are connected and interdependent. 


(9)  Geography. The student understands the concept of region as an area of Earth's surface with related geographic characteristics. The student is expected to:

(A)  identify physical and/or human factors such as climate, vegetation, language, trade networks, political units, river systems, and religion that constitute a region


3.   Identify which of those relationships have not already been acquired by the learners, and list them as new relationships to be taught.

-Students must first understand landforms, climate and resources
-Then they must understand how landforms, climate, vegetation, and resources contribute to movement and human-environment interaction.





4.   Pick the best practice of using multimedia technology for each new relationship. (For example, Alice, Scratch, Video Clips…etc.1.   

- Interactive online maps with pictures will help students understand the difference between absolute and relative location. 
- Podcasts and videos will help the student understand region, movement and human-environment interaction
     i.e. video of people cutting down rain forests or the history behind why people migrate. 




Reference:


Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (2010). Texas Education Agency. Retrieved from http://ritter.tea.state.tx.us/rules/tac/chapter113/ch113c.html





Christa Tucker - Tech Grads


Identify concept and sub-topics:
Concept: Quadrilaterals
Sub-topics: a. trapezoids b. parallelograms c. kites

Dimensions of understanding:
Students will discuss polygons (quadrilaterals) by classifying them and describing attributes (properties) of the various figures they present.

Geometric structure:
(G.1) Geometric structure: knowledge and skills and performance descriptions.
The student understands the structure of, and relationships within, an axiomatic system.

(A) The student develops an awareness of the structure of a mathematical system, connecting definitions, postulates, logical reasoning, and theorems.

(G.2) The student analyzes geometric relationships in order to make and verify conjectures.

(A) The student uses constructions to explore attributes of geometric figures and to make conjectures about geometric relationships.

(B) The student makes conjectures about angles, lines, polygons, circles, and three-dimensional figures and determines the validity of the conjectures, choosing from a variety of approaches such as coordinate, transformational, or axiomatic.

(G.3) The student applies logical reasoning to justify and prove mathematical statements.

(D) The student uses inductive reasoning to formulate a conjecture.

New topics/relations:
In order for students to be prepared for the rigor in higher level mathematics courses such as AP Calculus or Pre-AP mathematics courses, the depth and breadth of 8th grade geometry TEKS should not be treated equally.  Therefore, the Dana Center has established clarifying activities on those TEKS in order for students to apply higher order thinking skills to concepts such as identifying and making conjectures about the distinguishing properties of the polygons that make up the quadrilateral family.  For example, which properties distinguish a kite from a parallelogram.

Instructional Technology:
In order for students to make conjectures they should use technology such as GeoGebra and Inspiration.  GeoGebra is an interactive geometry application with graphical features.  Also, student may utilized Inspiration Mind Mapping software or Inspiration Map iPad app to create Venn Diagram of the quadrilateral family.
 
References

Mathematics TEKS Toolkit (2012). Charles A. Dana Center at The University of Texas at Austin. Retrieved from http://www.utdanacenter.org/mathtoolkit/instruction/lessons/geo_quad.php


Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (2010). Texas Education Agency. Retrieved from http://ritter.tea.state.tx.us/rules/tac/chapter111/ch111c.html

TechGrads - Rachel Mallory

1. For CSTE5337 next semester, you will be working with a team to design and create an interactive website which should provide the learning tools to fulfill all of the 8 modules of Instructional Design Theories you learned from this course. Identify a big concept which can be broken down to at least three sub-topics (dimensions of understanding). This concept needs to be understood and delivered through the interactive website design.

PLOT DEVELOPMENT
a. Exposition
b. Rising Action
c. Climax
d. Falling Action
e. Resolution

2. Pick which relationships constitute the important dimensions of understanding for that concept (Need References).

§110.19. English Language Arts and Reading, Grade 7
(6) Reading/Comprehension of Literary Text/Fiction. Students understand, make inferences and draw conclusions about the structure and elements of fiction and provide evidence from text to support their understanding. Students are expected to:
(A) explain the influence of the setting on plot development;
(B) analyze the development of the plot through the internal and external responses of the characters, including their motivations and conflicts; and
(C) analyze different forms of point of view, including first-person, third-person omniscient, and third-person limited.

§110.20. English Language Arts and Reading, Grade 8
(6) Comprehension of Literary Text/Fiction. Students understand, make inferences and draw conclusions about the structure and elements of fiction and provide evidence from text to support their understanding. Students are expected to:
(A) analyze linear plot developments (e.g., conflict, rising action, falling action, resolution, subplots) to determine whether and how conflicts are resolved;
(B) analyze how the central characters' qualities influence the theme of a fictional work and resolution of the central conflict; and
(C) analyze different forms of point of view, including limited versus omniscient, subjective versus objective.




3. Identify which of those relationships have not already been acquired by the learners, and list them as new relationships to be taught.

-Relationship between elements of fiction: Plot, Theme, Setting, Characterization, Conflict, Mood, Style, Tone, Point of View
-How setting influences plot development
-Points of view - first-person, second-person, third-person; limited vs. omniscient, subjective vs. objective
-How an author’s word choice influences mood, tone, characterization
-Relationship of a literary work to its theme

4. Pick the best practice of using multimedia technology for each new relationship. (For example, Alice, Scratch, Video Clips…etc.)

-Video clips can be used to compare and contrast mood and tone, track plot development, determine point-of-view
-Alice and Scratch may be used to allow students to create their own representation of relationships that must be understood in the concept




Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (2009). Texas Education Agency. Retrieved from http://ritter.tea.state.tx.us/rules/tac/chapter110/ch110b.html

Monday, April 16, 2012

Team Education 2.0 Week 10 - Nick Goodson


1. Identify a big concept which can be broken down to at least three sub-topics (dimensions of understanding). This concept needs to be understood and delivered through the interactive website design.
The US Government - Executive, Legislative, Judicial branches

2.   Pick which relationships constitute the important dimensions of understanding for that concept
8.15  Government. The student understands the American beliefs and principles reflected in the Declaration of Independence, the U.S. Constitution, and other important historic documents. The student is expected to:
(C)  identify colonial grievances listed in the Declaration of Independence and explain how those grievances were addressed in the U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights; and
(D) analyze how the U.S. Constitution reflects the principles of limited government, republicanism, checks and balances, federalism, separation of powers, popular sovereignty, and individual rights.

8.18 Government. The student understands the impact of landmark Supreme Court cases. The student is expected to:
(A)  identify the origin of judicial review and analyze examples of congressional and presidential responses;
 (C)  evaluate the impact of selected landmark Supreme Court decisions on life in the United States.

(19)  Citizenship. The student understands the rights and responsibilities of citizens of the United States. The student is expected to:
 (D)  identify examples of responsible citizenship, including obeying rules and laws, staying informed on public issues, voting, and serving on juries;
 (F)  explain how the rights and responsibilities of U.S. citizens reflect our national identity.

(21)  Citizenship. The student understands the importance of the expression of different points of view in a constitutional republic. The student is expected to:
(A)  identify different points of view of political parties and interest groups on important historical and contemporary issues;

3.   Identify which of those relationships have not already been acquired by the learners, and list them as new relationships to be taught. 
By 8th grade, students will be aware of the three branches of the government but they will be unaware of the  following:
  • Reasons for the 3 branches - historical events leading to this
  • How the 3 branches interact
  • Detailed information of the members of each branch
  • As they get older, their responsibilities as citizens
 4.   Pick the best practice of using multimedia technology for each new relationship. (For example, Alice, Scratch, Video Clips…etc.)

Streaming Video Clips:
Checks and Balances, Federalism, Individual Rights, Limited Government, Popular Sovereignty, Republicanism, Separation of Powers - http://www.texaslre.org/animation_station.html

Games:
Branches of the Government - http://www.texaslre.org/branches_game/branches_game.html


Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (2010). Texas Education Agency. Retrieved from http://ritter.tea.state.tx.us/rules/tac/chapter113/ch113b.html

Law Focused Education  (2012).  Retrieved from  http://www.texaslre.org/