Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Easy Ways to Incorporate Technology into Lessons

Find or create a simple WebQuest

Provide Web resources to explore

  • Does your text book publisher provide any online resources? If so, how can you integrate them in the course to promote learning and retention?
  • Do your own research using Google to find online resources.
  • What do you want your students to do with these web resources?

Have students create email accounts

  • Have students sign up for a gmail email account: http://www.gmail.com
  • Send students a weekly tip or a synthesis of a discussion item from class.
  • Send website links for them to explore and later discuss in class.
  • Send them reminders about quizzes, tests and reading assignments.
  • Ask them for feedback as a formative classroom assessment technique.

Use Jeopardy for in class exam reviews

Monday, September 17, 2007

Effectively Managing Discussion Boards

So, you came up with a great idea to have an online discussion with your class. Wonderful! Just make sure to have some of the basics in place before this molehill turns into Mount Everest....

Things to have in place when requiring a discussion board in your course:

  • Points should be assigned to every required posting
  • A rubric should be developed and communicated with your students
  • Explicit posting procedures should be communicated to students:
    • Naming conventions for posting
    • How many classmates they should reply to
    • Types of replies that are required
  • Be explicit about what students should expect of you in the discussion board
  • Summarize and close each discussion once the due date has arrived
  • Have students and/or student groups moderate & summarize discussions

Blackboard tools to use:

  • Set up threads or forums so that you can grade postings directly from the board.
  • Have students rate other students’ responses using the Blackboard star system as well as reply to postings.
  • Use the Collect tool to easily combine and read all posts related to a single thread
  • Use the Search field to easily find threads with keywords

Question crafting ideas:

  • Select an interesting topic, one that gets them thinking and wanting to read other responses.
  • Think about questions/discussions that are difficult for student to spontaneously answer/discuss in class.

….And be sure to….

Log into the discussion board daily in order to keep abreast of new postings.

Resources:

Moderating & Facilitating Online Discussions

Developing Discussion Board Ideas for Your Class - worksheet

Discussion Board Rubric

Another Discussion Board Rubric

Getting Started with Discussion Boards in Blackboard

Doing More with Discussion Boards in Blackboard


Monday, September 10, 2007

Plan B....the hiccups of technology

One may laugh at me using the term "hiccup"...thinking that Blackboard must be drunk by now, but I assure you these issues are temporary. However, in the meantime, what is an instructor to do when they have 20, 30, 50, 100+ students biting at the bit to access course content online? Well, I'll tell you.....

Create a Blog

Create a blog that can host class material and facilitate class discussions, have your students create blogs too. Add your student’s blog links to your page so that everyone has access to each other’s blogs. This creates a classroom community.
  1. Go to http://www.blogger.com/
  2. Follow the steps on the Blogger.com page to create an account
  • If you have a gmail account, use that login information to create the blog.
  • If you don’t have a gmail account, use the email address you would like students to

Create a Wiki
Create collaborative web pages for you and your students to edit, post, and comment about topics using “wiki technology.”

  1. Go to http://www.pbwiki.com/
  2. Fill out the information in the "Get Started for Free" area.

Paper-Based and/or Excel Gradebook
If you use Blackboard to track your grades, think about:

  • Setting up a back-up spreadsheet in Excel that will store and calculate your grades, OR
  • Track grades in a paper gradebook, or a simple notebook. This is a fantastic backup if all your technology fails!

Find Good Online Resources
If Blackboard is down, you can still have your students access the internet. Have a few websites that contain information they will be learning about for each lesson. If Blackboard is down, have the students go to these websites and discuss their findings in your new class blog!

Keep Student Contact Information “Offline”
Make sure to have current contact information for your students that is not “housed” in Blackboard. Keep a paper copy of student emails and phone numbers and one that is on your computer hard drive and/or a thumb drive. This will allow you to either email or call your students to inform them of your “Plan B.”

Always Keep Course Information in Multiple Places
You never know what technology won’t be working when you need it. Keep your course materials on a thumb drive, a CD, and on your computer. Make it a habit when you update your assignments or other course materials to also update each location that “houses” these materials. If you create a Google account: https://www.google.com/accounts/Login, you can upload documents and other course materials in the Google Docs area. This will allow you to access materials from any computer in any location.

Explore Additional Online Learning Environments
Make sure there are other places for your students to meet and learn online. These places should be in addition to Blackboard, not necessarily used only when Blackboard is down. Below is a list of free open-source online environments that have potential usage in the college classroom (please note that these environments can be private for only your class to see and interact within).


Who am I?

Most techy people boast about working with technology since technology existed...I'm not one of those. I came upon technology in education as a second degree when I was in my early 2os. I hoped it would make me marketable in a world full of English teachers (my first degree). I received my Masters in Learning & Instructional Technology from ASU in 2002 and looked straight to the community college realm for work. I enjoy working with technology as I see it fit in education. Other than that, I love my cell phone in which I text message and browse the internet feverishly and I also am addicted to posting pictures of my baby girl to my Flickr account...any other time, I never log onto my computer during my "me time." Shocking isn't it???