Thursday, September 5, 2013

"Ms. Ellis, It's Just Like the Show Catfish!"

This week has been so busy! I just hate 4-day weeks because there's so much to do with so little time. Well one of our poor teachers was sick this week. I felt so bad, but she's back to feeling better. She had a sub and I was asked to help the sub at the end of the day. I tried to think of an activity that would keep the students engaged for the rest of the day (2 hours!). I had been looking into the 1:1 digital citizenship lessons from www.commonsensemedia.org.  The first lesson for 6th grade was taking a look at the Acceptable Use Policy. So I hurried downstairs to grab some copies and headed into a 6th grade class that looked like they were ready to eat me alive with a paper full of small words with major meaning. I explained to them the purpose of the lesson and the desired outcome. The desired outcome was that each student or group of students would create a kid friendly iMovie explaining the guidelines of our district's AUP.

I expected to get through the AUP in 30 minutes. OMG! The students were so engaged and couldn't believe the guidelines that were in the AUP. They were in shock. They were making some major connections. Then we reached the rule of not falsely representing yourself. The students talked about being able to "hide" behind a screen on Facebook which leads to internet bullying and fights, pretending to be a different age, and one student took it to that unexpected high in any lesson. "Ms. Ellis, it's just like the show catfish on MTV." That's when I knew they understood! She talked about how that show can ruin peoples lives and they told me to watch it that night. Ummm, weird show and it's kind of scary!

Their ability to make connections to those guidelines and see all of the expectations of them even though they have their own iPad really opened their eyes to their connection to the world right at their fingertips. What really hit home is when they truly understood that they have no privacy. Once you put it out there on the internet, blog, Edmodo for people to see, you can't always take it back. They were blow away that even I, as a district employee, have to follow the guidelines just like them.

I can't wait to keep working with this class on digital citizenship. One student told me "Ms. Ellis, you should send our iMovies somewhere." So my district's Director of IT has no idea, but I will soon be blowing up his email with AUP iMovies (guess, I will warn him by sending him this blog post ha!).

We have to take a different approach then telling students what they shouldn't do on their iPad and they have no idea why it important or for their safety. That only makes them want to "test the waters."  I really think that one lesson went a long way with those 6th graders. Many people think that digital citizenship shouldn't be taught and that you address is as it comes up but sometimes when it comes up, it's too late and being too late can bring you to a bad episode of Catfish! Check out an episode below.

http://bit.ly/MTVsCatfish

Sunday, September 1, 2013

Making Time with Educreations!

A teacher's number one phrase = "There's never enough time." When I was in the classroom, I always felt there was never enough time. As a coach, I KNOW there is never enough time, but I sympathize with teacher's in my building as they try to get through everything and time gets in the way.

Two weeks ago, I had a teacher come to me with a math concern. Her students needed to get started with double-digit multiplication, but after giving the pre-test, she realized that they didn't even know how to add double-digit numbers. The concern was not only the fact that her students weren't where they should be, but the time crunch of getting everything in that needs to be done by the end of the first quarter.

There's so much to get through in one day! If only we could add a few more hours. So after some brainstorming, we decided that maybe we could "flip" math. Out of about 20 students, only 4-5 had an understanding of double-digit addition with regrouping. I think this caused the "time crunch" panic of "I have so much to get to and its going to take forever to get to where we need to be." So I made a goal that it would take no more than a week for the students to gain mastery and I started to plan.

Because its the beginning of the year, I did consider the "summer loss." So I decided to use Educreations to create a re-teaching instructional video to use as morning work. It was my first experience of actually creating a video myself. Tip: make sure your kids are asleep! I definitely had to stop numerous times because of my son talking. Thank goodness for Educreations' updates and the undo button. I tried to make the video personal and talk to the students. I started with a good morning and shared our objectives.  Check out my video here.  The students also had a quick check sheet to work out their problems along with me. We did the sample together in the video and then they tried 2 problems on their own as a pre-test for me. I wanted to analyze the common mistakes and misunderstandings.

Common mistakes and misunderstanding: place value understanding, what to do when the answer in the tens column is more than 9, regrouping in general, lining up of numbers

I entered the class first thing in the morning. I gave a short intro to what we would be doing and why. My video was about 7 minutes long. Let me tell you....that was the most quiet 7  minutes I've ever experienced. The students were engaged in the video. The end of the video told them what to do next so I never had to personally tell the students what to do next. I could just see them going through the steps and it was awesome. I thought of how beneficial that would be to overall time as a teacher. I thought about how it could allow a teacher to pull intervention groups as students worked. I was never interrupted while that instructional video was playing. It was just plain awesome!

If you would like to see how the lesson played out and next steps (small group instruction involving QR codes), feel free to make a comment! I also made my goal of mastery within a week. It only took 3 days and ended with the students making their own instructional videos on Educreations to show double- digit addition with regrouping. They even created a success criteria list for themselves to assess their own Educreations instructional video. It created time during the math block for small group instruction to meet the needs of all students. The re-teaching and pretesting was already done as morning work so we were able to use that data to guide small group time during the math block.

Here are some tips on creating instructional videos that I think helped with the success of mine with students:
  1. Be personal
  2. Encourage the students
  3. Have them complete tasks along with you on the video (it helps with engagement)
  4. Share objectives, expectations, and goals
  5. Be clear in your explanations
  6. Leave time for students to practice and self check during the video (the students loved hearing whether they got the answer right and were allowed to give themselves a smiley face)
  7. Talk clearly with good volume
  8. Let the students explore Educreations themselves
  9. Have fun and be creative!
My video was very simple and the kids watched my video over and over when they were creating their own. Beginning of the year success story #1.

Educreations = Just Plain Awesome!

P.S. Because we are a 1:1 iPad school, we used the app. Educreations is also a web-based tool. It can work in any classroom.

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Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Why I Started Blogging

In December of last year I was in desperate search of winter break. I was exhausted and had no clue what I had done from August up to that point. I knew I did some good things but I was so busy that it was hard to remember EVERYTHING. To get back in the groove of things after winter break, I began letting teachers make goals for the second half of the year that I could support them with. Then I thought, I need to make a goal for myself to keep pushing myself as a coach and learner. I knew that I needed some kind of outlet to track my thoughts, things that I had done, and the awesome things that teachers had let me work with them on.

I decided to make my goal to start my own blog. I had no intentions of making my blog public domain (ha). Then one day my tech coach tweeted one of my posts for the world to see! Let's just say I went from 12 views to 412 overnight! If that wasn't motivation to keep posting, I don't know what is!

So here I am some months later with a back to school goal of blogging at least once a week. I've been able to keep up with it so far (only by putting it on my calendar). Many times before I make a new post, I read through what I wrote in the past.

It has been a wonderful experience. Of course I will make another goal in regards to my blog during Christmas break. I'm so excited to see where my blog goes over the next few months.

Working in a tech school, blogging is taking off. We have students who are beginning to blog. Their voices can be shared around the world. That is so inspirational. I'm not quite sure if they know how big that is quite yet, but I can't wait to see where they go with their blogs and share them with the world.

It all started with a need to release my thoughts, a computer, a tech coach who loves Twitter and here I am, an official blogger!

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Students as School Leaders #leadershipday13


      Happy Leadership Day! Leadership is so important. Often we look to the teachers and administrators, but there are other leaders in the school that make a huge difference. These other leaders can come in big or small sizes….they are OUR STUDENTS.  So many times WE as educators talk about how wonderful our schools are, but what if our students could take our “talk” away and represent our “talk” daily?  I work in a 1:1 environment at a technology magnet school as an instructional coach. Often times, my work is way bigger than me. Let me share an experience that was way bigger than me.
       Last February, I hosted some of our fifth grade students at a technology conference for students and by students. The teacher and I practiced with them but they made their own handouts, samples, and instructions for their attendees. I had no idea what to expect and neither did the students. We were all extremely nervous. We hopped on a bus on a Saturday and headed to the S.I.T. (Student in Technology) Conference in Bloomington-Normal, IL. The kids got all set up and in walked educators, students, and parents ready to see what our students had to say about creating with iPADS. I so wanted to walk around and give these people background information on our school and these students, but then the unthinkable happened! The students “spoke” for the school. They answered all questions and taught people who had never touched an iPad before how to create a quality iMovie. The teacher, principal, and I didn’t have to say a word. We all looked at each other, smiled, and started snapping as many pictures as possible.
      The moment that I will never forget is when a technology coordinator from another district said, “These kids are wonderful. You need to take them out more. To the school board, to your community, everywhere! They are such good representatives of your school. I can’t believe they are 5th graders!” That moment gave me chills. I couldn’t be more proud. This wasn’t about taking kids to present at some technology conference; it was much bigger than that. It was about letting students shine as leaders of the school.  Allowing them to show their greatness.
      Those 5th grade students have presented to their classmates and other classrooms and to our district coordinators and instructional coaches. Every time the message is very clear, students CAN BE and ARE leaders in our schools. We have to let them be. We are growing as our district’s premier technology school. As we grow, we can never forget to grow our students with us. It’s all about them. Let them be the voice of our schools. Let them lead.

Are your students leaders? 


Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Back to School Goal Making

Today is the big day! It's the first day of school. Today was extra hard for me because my son started Kindergarten. So excited for my little guy's educational journey. I have set goals for him such as bedtime, homework, and dinner time. As I think of him and all of the goals that I have set for him to have a successful school year, I have taken the time to make some goals for myself. I need to do more with my blog, so my goal is to blog at least once a week. I need to keep up with my professional learning, so my goal is to block out some time during the week (we will see how long this one lasts). The BIGGEST goal I have for myself is to be respectful of my OWN time. This year made me really reflect on last year, my first year as an instructional coach. I find it very odd that I really don't remember anything that I did before Christmas break. It was probably because I was running around like a chicken with my head cut off trying to keep up and figure out the world of coaching. So here I am making a goal for better time management. I want to be an effective coach but overworking is just not healthy. Many nights I would crash at 8pm and then wake up 3am to work until it was time to get ready for the day. That was ridiculous! So on the first night before school, I went to bed before 11pm and I didn't wake up!  I know more goals will come along, but for now I'm just shooting for hard work, better blogging, great time management, memories, more time with  my little guy
, success stories, and 8 hours of sleep! What's your goal?

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Summer Splash 2013

Howdy everyone...I'm back! I've taken a break as my grandmother passed away at the end of the June. That little lady had a special place in my heart and I just needed time to let reality set in. No better way than with planning 3 professional development sessions for my school district! Let's just say I'm a walking zombie because the work sessions until 3:00am the last 3  days along with working summer camp everyday have finally caught up with me.

Back to Summer Splash 2013. Today our district's instructional coaching team hosted Summer Splash. It was an all day professional development day for our district employees. I loved the title because everyone could get a "splash" of different topics. We had one hour sessions on all kinds of topics: writing, reading, differentiation, technology, etc. The timing was perfect. It wasn't to close to end of the school year when teachers are burnt out but also not to close to the beginning of the school year when teachers aren't able to reflect in enough time.

I facilitated a session on Assessing Digital Work. Many of our schools have iPads and are diving into a lot more technology based products. In working in a 1:1 environment, it takes instruction to a whole new level. My group was wonderful! They were so thoughtful and really connected well with one another. We discussed rubrics, checklists, and storyboards. We've heard about rubrics for years but with the increase of technology it is important to really consider rubrics. A great discussion that came about was allowing students to peer review one another using rubrics and how a teacher can build a safe classroom environment that can be honest and offer critical criticism. It was wonderful to see that many of the people in my session were interested in allowing their students to peer review one another.

I couldn't have been more pleased with Summer Splash. I really things its somethings we should do more often in the school year. It also provides teachers a great opportunity for collaboration with other teachers they may not normally see or work with during the school year. It was great to see a variety of grade levels bouncing ideas off one another when normally teachers are divided by grade levels for professional development.
 
Summer Splash 2013=Success!

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Last day of School = Tech Fair Report Out!

I can't believe that today is the last day of school! I've been missing a few weeks as I told you that we were preparing for our first annual technology fair. It was a blast but boy did it keep me busy for most of May. Because this was our first experience with pulling off a technology fair, the instructional technology coach and I thought about the best ways to support the students and teachers. We came up with what we called "Media Time." Media Time was 30-45 minutes times periods where we both (along with the teacher) went into all classrooms and taught the "media" or in this case "app." Some teachers wanted us to work with their students on research skills, searching for appropriate images while following copyright rules, putting the project together, and using a rubric/checklist to create projects. I had a blast. It really helped me look at ways to better support the technology instructionally. I had a blast in all of the classrooms. It was extremely interesting seeing all of the finished projects. We had visitors complete a feedback form using a Google form and we got great feedback. Visitors (district administration, other coaches, families) were able to visit each classroom and check out projects and technology in action in all classrooms. We were extremely pleased by the family turn out. I couldn't be more proud of the students and teachers. They worked extremely hard on such a short notice. I would highly suggest trying a some kind of fair that is out of the norm of the science fair. I have heard of reading fairs in the last couple of years.

I told you that I would show you my oversized bulletin board. We are obsessed with QR codes. It was awesome to see our visitors whipping out their phones and iPads during the technology fair to check out QR codes. They linked to student work, summer reading programs, family resources, blogs, and so much more. I loved that it could link to Google Drive where we can always drop new things. This makes it easy to use the same QR code all year long and just add or change student work. I am actually presenting on QR codes in the classroom at the IETC in November. Come check me out!

I hope that you have had a wonderful school year. I can't believe that it has gone by so fast! I have officially completed my first year as an instructional coach and I absolutely loved all of the stress, fun, professional learning, moments of panic, moments of confusion, and celebrations. Keep checking in over the summer!

Happy Summer Blogging,
     Rida