First Day at Camp Magic Macguffin

26 05 2012

When my parents first sent me away to summer camp I was less than impressed. I cried for two weeks beforehand but even my 13 year-old antics made no difference. I was still sent – and I really can’t blame my parents, I needed to get away from some of my friends at the time! I didn’t send a single letter home in the two weeks that I was away – my poor parents had no idea what to expect when they picked me up and, I suspect, feared the worst. Luckily, I loved it and returned for at least 10 more summers! I am hoping to send more letters “home” from Camp Magic Macguffin this summer.

I have just caught up on this week’s Daily Creates that deal with photos. Videos should be an upcoming cabin activity!

These critters have nightly pool parties in our pond and are often available for a photo-op. This photo was taken with a borrowed htc One phone – its not nearly as clear as my iPhone pictures.

20120526-233407.jpg

I know that I was supposed to trace my face but all my attempts were really pathetic so I resorted to using the sketch effect in the free photo editing app Be Funky.

20120526-233513.jpg

Finally, here’s my representation of the moon photo. Funny how all cameras have flashes but I find pictures taken without a flash are much better. I’m hoping that the snow effect looks like stars or space debris!

20120526-233539.jpg





Back to Blogging Day

5 10 2011

The only way to resurrect this blog is to write so I have decided to start using it to reflect on my day and see where we go. So, what’s happening in my little corner of the world?

This morning I spent some time with our Librarian to see all that was available on her new subscription to teachingbooks.net What a great resource! I think that our students are going to love all the video book trailers and interviews with authors. I also think that the website will be a great resource for teachers and the fact that it will link with our new online Library search will make using it very easy. If the creators of the website happen to be listening, my only request would be an additional interface for young students. They would love to access the content on their own!

Next it was off to help our grade 1 teacher do some video reflections with her students. They are wrapping up a Unit of Inquiry in which it we hoped that the students would learn that “co-operation nurtures relationships”. We showed them how Photobooth works and gave them 10 minutes to play with it. We then had them think about how they would complete this statement “I think that co-operation nurtures relationships means ________ because __________.” We encouraged them to imagine that they had to explain it to an SK student. The students had a chance to practice what they wanted to say and videotape themselves so that they could collect their thoughts and get used to seeing themselves on camera. They then went to their teacher and made their official recording. This will serve as their summative assessment before working as a class to do something related to the topic that will make a difference to their lives or the lives of others (i.e. taking action). We consciously decided to not make this a writing task so that we could gauge what students really knew about the topic without the writing process hindering them. Any students who were not very explicit will have a more formal interview with their teacher after the action project.

The remainder of my day was spent at a cross-country meet. Much as I was dreading the hour-long bus ride to take part in a 15min run, it was great fun – as always! Just some of the many things I do in a day as an ICT Integrator and PE Teacher…!





What makes a great administrator?

22 03 2011

I started this post a while back, as a bit of a rant in response to something that was going on at school. I am no longer in full-on rant mode but thought I’d finally post this anyway…

Full disclosure: I have worked in 4 different schools and never been a full-tme administrator. I have held an administrative role (Curriculum Co-ordinator) and non-teaching roles (Admissions Counsellor) but have spent the majority of my career as a teacher (both classroom and specialist).

I currently work in a pretty amazing school: there is a real sense of collegiality between teachers, parents are supportive, students are keen and we have no lack of material resources. We have much freedom with our curriculum and we are not constrained by frequent standardized testing. Still, there has recently been a noticeable shift in morale when it comes to how teachers view the administrators.

En route to school a few weeks ago I wondered why there had been so much recent grumbling about our administrators. Coincidentally, when I arrived at school that morning someone else asked me how I would define a “world-class administrator” and that got me thinking…

Much has recently been in the media about evaluating teacher performance. In fact a whole edition of Educational Leadership recently focused on this topic. Perhaps I am looking in the wrong places, but I have seen relatively little written about evaluating administrator performance.

So, I’m putting it out there… What makes a great administrator?

I see that on Connected Principals they have grappled with this in the Principal Quality Standard

What we know about teaching and learning has changed tremendously in the last “few” years. Yet, in the 17 years since I began teaching, I have seen very little change in how schools function as institutions. To me, it feels as though we are trying to apply our “21st century learning” models in an industrial age building with an industrial-age structure.

By way of example, I would say that, on average, my colleagues receive about 30 emails a day from students, parents and colleagues. Compared to the business world, this is very little, but compared to the age of handwritten notes and the odd phone call, when are teachers supposed to deal with these? During their supposed “prep time” rather than planning? At home rather than spending time with their family? During meetings rather than focusing on the issues at hand? During classes rather than teaching? The odd communication used to fit within the structure of a day. Now we need to think about how we manage communication.

From the 21st Century Learning Initiative

 

What’s An Administrator To Do?

1. Support Collaboration

from Jiheffe/ Jean-François Schmitz's flickr photostream

In our inquiry-based school, we recognize that collaboration between students yields deeper understanding. We know that the processes of both inquiry and collaboration take time and can’t be rushed. Why then do we assume that the odd 30-60minutes of “common planning time” is enough for teachers to deal with all the communication above, collaborate on unit planning and plan day-to-day activities? A great administrator needs to have some creative ways of creating extended meaningful opportunities for collaboration between teachers.

2. Honour Expertise and Time

from purplemattfish/ Matthew's flickr photostream

Every administrator I have ever met says that they appreciate teachers’ expertise and values their time. I don’t doubt that this is what they truly believe. The challenge is in demonstrating this belief to teachers in a tangible way. By creating that time for collaboration, teachers will believe that administrators honour teachers’ time.

Similarly, when was the last time an administrator asked teachers to help solve scheduling issues or other tasks/ problems? Those “in the trenches” often have the most realistic solutions to problems and don’t want to create additional work or other problems for their peers…. By asking for help from teachers when solving problems, teachers will believe that administrators honour their expertise.

3. Command Respect

from Heliøs/ Davide Taviani's flickr photostream

Other than coaching a team, few of the administrators at my school currently teach and so there is a disconnect between their notion of best practice and teachers’ notions of best practice as well as between the current “most important issues” in the school. Administrators who continue in a teaching role, no matter how minor, see things more authentically from a teacher’s point of view. Teaching administrators will automatically be more connected to best practice, will have the same pressures to communicate with students, parents and colleagues, and will be a part of collaborative planning. Part of “us” and not one of “them”.

4. Understand Best Practice

from aaron schmidt's flickr photostream

What can an administrator who knows less about current best-practice in teaching and learning than their teachers do? Honestly, in order to be respected by your teachers, get thee to as many workshops as you can. If you can’t speak the language your teachers are speaking and you are excited by something that is new to you (but was new to your teachers 5-10 years ago) then you appear as a tourist in your own land. This is clearly not a good position for the leader of the land. You don’t have to know everything about everything but a general understanding is essential. We expect teachers to know their subject matter – ditto for administrators. If you are short on time, get really up to speed in best-practice for one subject area – it can probably be applied to other areas effectively.

5. Be Aware of Tradition vs Stagnation

from magical-world/ Vera & Jean-Christophe's flickr photostream

While much can be gained from having a sense of tradition and much can be learned from past experiences, if you have only ever done things one way and you keep doing them that way simply because that’s the way they have always been done, you are missing out on the opportunity to see things from a new perspective. Interestingly, most of my current administrators have never taught at another school yet we require that all teachers have at least 2 years of experience before coming to us – preferably at international schools. Why? I have always assumed that it was so that teachers would have the perspective of the many ways of accomplishing the same task. Why don’t we expect the same from our administrators?

My Advice: Play to Your Strengths
Much can be forgiven. Interestingly, the best administrators I know are great at just one or two of the above. If you can do more of them, that’s fantastic but my advice to administrators is to determine what you can offer your school and then do your best to make that happen. Be that person who promotes and protects collaboration or be the teaching-and-learning guru or simply consult teachers for their opinions in a systematic way on a regular basis. Everyone will know where you stand and respect you for it.

I don’t mean to attack administrators at my own school or others – ours are lovely people who I enjoy spending time with on a social basis. As I stated at the outset, I am just thinking aloud as I try to understand why such discontent has begun to arise at my own school. While there is some agreement about best practice in the classroom there seems to be little tangible evidence of agreement on best practice for working as an educator in a school today (i.e. what it takes for schools to function effectively).

I believe that great administrators:

from opensource.com's flickr photostream

  • manage communication
  • support collaboration
  • honour teachers’ expertise and time
  • command respect
  • understand best-practice
  • are aware of traditions vs stagnation and try new things
  • play to their strengths

What do you think makes a great administrator?





Feeling like a Student Again

23 02 2011

Although I have been working in schools for the past 17 years, I have not been a student in the an educational institution since 1994. With ds106 I feel like I am constantly playing “catch-up”. I don’t recall feeling this when I was a student. I wonder if I am just “out of practice” or if this is how my students feel? Yikes!

Regardless, I have decided to finally start trying out the different assignments. It was easy to find my own bad picture to add helvetica text to… a la Visual Assignment 65. I altered the photo in iPhoto and added the text in Pages. It’s nothing tricky but it’s an effect that I’d like to use for other purposes.

This might be a fun assignment for kids at school as a response to reading – either fiction or non-fiction. I think that this could work at almost any grade level. Even our grade 1 students can import photos into a template and add text…





Re-capping the Daily Shoot

19 02 2011

Well, if nothing else, I became better-acquainted with how to use my camera…

I can’t say my photos were great but I did learn to never use my flash and to take advantage of the macro setting for anything remotely close.

I wasn’t able to take the photos every day but I did enjoy what I did and hope to keep this up. It also forced me to finally start using flickr and I will definitely keep that up.

I wanted to put my Daily Shoot Assignment photos together here and decided to try out One True Story but I was foiled (again!) by wordpress.com. I can’t embed it easily. The best I can do for now with a free account is this link:
My Daily Shoot Assignments

Grrr. Getting my own domain is becoming more and more appealing…





Web 2.0 Coffeehouse

6 02 2011

Coffee is something near and dear to me. I often plan my day around where to get a GOOD cup of coffee. I don’t care about the caffeine content it’s all about the cup o’ joe. It can’t be just any ol’ coffee: it’s got to have flavour but not burnt taste, body but not acidity. And if it can be had in a really comfortable place to sit, chat, work or watch the world go by then all the better!

Instead of working this weekend I have been playing around with a visual that I really enjoyed creating. I remembered hearing how Mozart used to visit the coffeehouses in Austria. I did some reading and found that during the Age of Reason, coffeehouses were the place to be to get your fix of the news of the world, socialize with others, collaborate and/ or receive feedback on your work.

As I did some more reading I learned that the London Stock Exchange may have started in a coffeehouse and that games such as chess or billiards were common in European coffeehouses. That all reminded me of the Internet today and, particularly, Web 2.0. It’s certainly a place for socializing, playing games, being entertained, collaborating and getting feedback on your work.

Finally, my submission for Assignment 3b

Click on the picture to see the full Glog

 

The Web 2.0 Coffehouse was fun to create. I just used Pages and “instant-alpha-ed” the backgrounds out of the images I wanted to add. I wasn’t able to save that as a jpeg so, without losing too much detail, I first moved it to Photoshop (which I find too tedious to work with).

I thought that I’d like to add some sound and/or video to it so I decided to give Glogster a try. Glogster was pretty easy to use and set up but their default of publishing all personal information was really annoying. I thought about just adding cafe sounds but then I found a song and video called Media 2.0. The iMovie graphics aren’t great but the content seemed to suit the mood of the picture so I stuck with it. I didn’t have the patience to embed this Glog here (it requires Flash and frames which aren’t supported at WordPress.com - yes, I know, I should be Master of My Own Domain by now…) but you can link to it by clicking on the picture. Hope you enjoy-

Resources:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coffeehouse
http://www.weiner-kaffeehaus.at/geschichte.aspx
Original woodcut by Ferdinand Wuest
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Teenage_girl_texting_while_reading_a_manga_1.jpg
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Unibody_Macbook.JPG
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:DJ_ICE_MAN.jpg
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Plasma_Flat_Panel_Mounted_on_a_wall.jpg
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Steve_Jobs_at_Apple_iPad_Event.jpg
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Man_and_a_MacBook.jpg





Of Snow Days and Sick Days

4 02 2011

Since I have been within range of my couch for the past 3 days, I finally had time to get caught up on Assignment 3a for ds106.

In What Is Web 2.0 (2005) Tim O’Reilly summarized that Web 2.0 involves:

  • small sites and narrow niches
  • users who add value
  • perpetual beta
  • co-operation rather than control
  • access from a variety of devices and platforms

Despite the fact that this description sounds like my classrooms, it’s really so much more!

Web 2.0 Map

While reading I was struck by 2 things:

  1. How much I don’t know (I had to look up what Bit Torrent was)
  2. How accurate his predictions were from 6 years ago

One quote, in particular really matched my state today:

“If an essential part of Web 2.0 is harnessing collective intelligence, turning the web into a kind of global brain, the blogosphere is the equivalent of constant mental chatter in the forebrain, the voice we hear in all of our heads.”

The number of times I followed links to see examples of what was being discussed ended up filling most of my day. I had no idea about Alternate Reality Games – now I really want to try one.
Student using tablet

In Bryan Alexander and Alan Levine’s  article, “Web 2.0 Storytelling: The Emergence of a New Genre”, they described digital storytelling as a combination of micro-content and social software.

I  realized 2 things:

  1. You’ve got to do it to understand it - until I started this blog, played around with Prezi, tried After Effects and made actual notes in Diigo, I really didn’t know their strengths or weaknesses even though I knew what they did
  2. Similarly, creativity is key. There should be an element of art in what we ask students to do at all levels of education. Why not add an element of fiction to learning the water cycle? Why not tell the story in 5 frames?

“Some projects can be Web 2.0 stories, while others integrate Web 2.0 storytelling practices. Yet storytelling approaches can work on a smaller scale also. A single course blog, for instance, tells the class “story.” Considering the course blog as a narrative project, an instructor thinks not in terms of producing static content but instead in terms of capturing an audience, of adding an emotional hook to the content. Lecturers are familiar with telling stories as examples, as a way to get a subject across. They end discussions with a challenging question and create characters to embody parts of content (political actors, scientists, composite types). Imagine applying those habits to a class Twitter feed or Facebook group.

For now, perhaps the best approach for educators is simply to give Web 2.0 storytelling a try and see what happens. We invite you to jump down the rabbit hole. Add a photo to Flickr and use that as a writing prompt. Flesh out a character in Twitter. Follow a drama unfolding on YouTube. See how a wiki supports the gradual development of a setting.”

Alan Levine’s list of 50+ Storytelling Tools should be a part of all my future unit planner meetings.








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