Thursday, March 4, 2010

Michigan Merit Curriculum Online Experiences (say it five times fast!)

After reading the Michigan Merit Curriculum Online Experience Guideline Companion Document, I am very happy with the progress that the State of Michigan is making in the way of establishing educational technology standards.
My task for my CEP 811 course was to identify one of the technologies that qualify as an online experience (according to the guidelines), and discuss how I would incorporate that technology into my own teaching. While I believe that I will eventually use most of these strategies in some shape or form as I develop my craft, there are definitely some tools that I could implement tomorrow and some that would take time to implement. For example, while I would be more than able to technically support a conference with an expert (I would have no problem setting up the conference hardware/software) I do not necessarily have a contact that I would consider an expert at this point in time. In addition, I would love to take part in a collaborative lesson with a teacher/class on the other side of the world but I need to establish a relationship with that teacher before that reality is even fathomable. Thus, the strategies I must focus on in the short term are those technologies that I need not rely on any outside influences to establish in my classroom, but have the potential to expand into a global collaborative community so that eventually we’ll be able to tap into those resources.
What I want to do most is to have my students establish their own personal blogs, serving as a digital journal for class participation. I believe the blog to a diverse communication tool because it can be used by itself for students to reflect on their thoughts, or use it as the response element in tandem with another online instructional method.
For example, I recently completed designing a WebQuest that assigned each student a member of congress to profile. Students explored both the House and Senate websites in addition to votesmart.org. Instead of writing a traditional paper in Word and then submitting it to the teacher, students create a visually attractive blog post in the style of a political blogger. If I had each student set up their own RSS reader pages, I could have students easily comment on eachother’s blogs; establishing discussion and feedback loops.
I really like utilizing these tools in a inner-connected manner like this. I think it improves the lesson itself because the different tools each add their own pedagogical advantage and it models web 2.0 use for students with real interactions. I would also say that if the teacher was able to establish a community of active bloggers within their classroom population, it would be a good building block from which to branch out and plug into a more global learning community. Opening up the doors to some of the learning opportunities that I mentioned would be difficult initially.

3 comments:

Chris Turner said...

I agree that some technologies are definitely easier and more practical to add into our classrooms than others. As a social studies teacher there are many times where I wish that I could connect my students with people from the cultures we are studying but logistically it can be quite difficult, particularly since I each eastern hemisphere and our school times are a little bit different!

mcmicha7 said...

Jeff, You have to have the picture of Maggs. I am so ready for the season. As pertaining to technology, I do like the idea of blogging in the classroom. I am going to implimenting them into my classes next year. Maybe we should start a blog on Tigers baseball. This could be fun, as long as Bondo doesnt start for us.

Dude5983 said...

I guess you'd have to use the asynchronous tools to create the connection? It would be similar to the pen-pals they had back when I was in elementary but a little more interactive!