Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts

Thursday, May 28, 2015

Getting Students Where You Digitally Need Them


This post originally appeared in the Kent ISD Ed Tech Blog

If you have ever experienced issues getting students to and/or into a website or application, you know how frustrating it can be. I recently observed a classroom of 9th graders in which all students could login to laptops (using network logins they can’t change), but six students were unable to login to their district Google accounts (accounts they have had for over two years but can change). The teacher had to scramble to get them their logins and help them get to the site. It was more than 10 minutes before everyone was where they needed to be. Not good.

This is obviously a problem and certainly one that can be avoided. Here are some ideas that we have seen districts use to make tech use more efficient and fluid:

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Ideas for Supporting Common Core Literacy

Article used for this: Common Core and school media specialist

Crosswalk (blend of Common Core and 21st century skills- from AASL)
  • Matches CC w/ AASL benchmarks
  • Diff. language but similar set of skills
  • With the implementation of Common Core, advanced literacy instruction will go beyond simply providing resources and being a search specialist or helping kids distinguish between informational and opinion texts, says Meghann Walk, the library director of New York City’s Bard High School Early College. Instead, educators will be required to focus on helping young readers actively engage with informational texts—the sort of stuff that students will encounter in college and in their future careers.
  • Not enough to find a dusty copy of a Lincoln biography

Non-fiction shift
  • Kids shouldn’t have to get all their information from a single snippet of text—they need “access to multiple perspectives”
  • May have to do some ‘spring cleaning’
  • Media specialists need to hunt for databases and other online resources to supplement their collections
  • “Show the administration why those resources are needed,” says Aronson, “and finally, keep track of their usage to show just how well the money was spent.”

Helpful points from article
  • Take the lead and share your skills/ expertise.
  • Toot your horn, make yourself known

What if funds are not available?
  • Teachers could use help selecting content-area, leveled texts
  • Provide content area, web-based texts that teachers and students can access
    • School webpage or other online tool of your choice
  • Use Twurdy (sorts searches by reading level) and Sweet Search to find up-to-date, relevant, and credible sources
    • Teach teachers and students to do this